I’m very curious of which distro users loves the most that they have it on their daily hardware?

    • bruhSoulz@lemmy.ml
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      5 days ago

      Why are fedora and suse often not mentioned considering theyre not forks of anything? (as far as im aware)

      • lancalot@discuss.online
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        3 hours ago

        Historically, (at least for hobbyists/enthusiasts) Fedora and openSUSE have been a lot less popular compared to Arch, Debian and their derivatives. While not necessarily representative, Boiling Steam’s chart -in which ProtonDB’s data is used- does indicate to this as well.

        Just my 2 cents.

        • bruhSoulz@lemmy.ml
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          3 hours ago

          Kinda crazy considering fedoras perks and accessibility tbh. Dont know much ab suse tho as i have very little experience with it

          • lancalot@discuss.online
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            2 hours ago

            I don’t know why, but openSUSE has had difficulty garnering popularity overall (aside from Germany).

            A possible explanation, which also ties in to Fedora, is how both are the open source variants to corporate distros; SEL and RHEL respectively.

            Arch and Debian are more community-driven by comparison.

            For Fedora specifically, people couldn’t regard it as anything but a testing bed distro; especially if you see how back2back they were with adopting new technologies like PulseAudio, systemd, Wayland, GTK 3/4, PipeWire etc. To be fair, openSUSE was the first to default to Btrfs and auto-snapshotting with Snapper*. Fedora was also facing competition from industry darling CentOS; similar code base, but a lot more stable.

            Thankfully, since a couple of years now, Fedora has recognized that it’s not cool to expect your user base to be sadistic. And together with the (unfortunate) downfall of CentOS, Manjaro and Ubuntu - Fedora has amassed a very healthy user base. And with how quickly Bazzite is becoming the face of gaming Linux (at least until Valve releases SteamOS), I don’t think it has even peaked yet.