For me it’s PeppermintOS.
I started my Linux adventure a few years ago, and haven’t owned a Windows PC since.
I currently use Arch on my main rig, and I wanted to install Linux on two old laptops that I found laying around in my house
I then remembered the first distro I ever used, which is PeppermintOS, and I was amazed at the latest updates they released.
They even have a mini ISO now to do a net-install with no bloat, with a Debian or Devuan base.
Sadly, I believe the founder passed away a few years ago, which is why I was really happy to see the continuation of this amazing project.
NixOS, and hopefully soon SnowflakeOS which makes it more approachable for more casual users.
https://snowflakeos.org/
Another user mentioned Guix, which I’d like to try soon to compare to NixOS.
It’s hard to compete with how much there is in nixpkgs though… as much as I… a professional Haskell programmer… hate to acknowledge the realities of network effects.
NixOS has the worst documentation I’ve come across. It’s difficult to describe just how useless it is despite its wealth. It’s neither a manual, nor a reference, nor a guide, but all three jumbled in one and that goes for the package manage with its DSL, the operating system built on top of the package manager, and the tooling.
The best description I can think of the documentation of that project is “everything is everywhere”. Bless their documentation team volunteers that are trying to figure out the absolute mess it is. They have my utmost respect.
What does snowflakeOS do differently than nix ?
Is it perhaps like endavourOS and Arch linux ?
It is the endavourOS of NixOS.
However, making NixOS more user friendly is a lot more work than simply offering a default config. Most of the work/challenge lies in the GUI NixOS configuration editor.
Maybe it’s the soulless cynic in me speaking; but the obvious snow-theme around NixOS notwithstanding, ‘snowflake’ MIGHT NOT be the best name for a distro aimed at ‘casual users’. It’s as though they’re saying, ‘LOL! You snowflakes can’t be assed to figure out how to install nixos, but still want to reap its benefits? We got you precious snowflakes LOLOLOL’
So, I have only ever known Windows, but am becoming more and more Linux curious. I see all these different distros you guys talk about and I have to ask, do all the distros run any of the available software or would I have to try to try to find one that will run what I’m interested in running? If so which distro will run the available music production software? I’m sick of microshaft. Help a brother out?
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Thank you. That’s some real, usable information. You and the others who have replied have really been great. In the past I’ve encountered so much elitism and dismissiveness when I have tried to wind myself up for the switch. It’s nice to find some inclusive helpful folks for a change.
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Will do
Search https://repology.org/ for the software you’re trying to run.
If it’s windows only, search for an alternative on https://alternativeto.net
If there’s no alternative, check if it runs in wine https://appdb.winehq.org/
But honestly, I’d stick to the first two. I’ve been on linux for more than a decade now and do not miss a single application that runs on windows.
That’s what I mean with distrobox. You decide to run distribution A. Later you realize a package(program) is not available in A but in distribution B. So you run distrobox and have B on top of A. And access to all the packages.
Interesting. Sounds like i have yet another thing to read up on.
So my intuition and guesses from what I’ve heard is that Fedora might be the best for you.
Here are some links:
https://labs.fedoraproject.org/jam/ https://linuxmusicians.com/ https://archive.ph/hYxrO
Not sure if oudated:
https://jfearn.fedorapeople.org/fdocs/en-US/Fedora_Draft_Documentation/0.1/html/Musicians_Guide/index.html
https://fedoramagazine.org/configure-fedora-to-practise-and-compose-music/
If you want to use NixOS, the one I recommend elsewhere, I’m not sure what your experience will be whether good or bad. Probably more fiddling, but more flexible/stable in the long run.
Here is a matrix room if you are interested in asking more knowledgable people about that path:
https://app.element.io/#/room/#audio:nixos.org
Writing music and making files for my 3d printer is most of what I do with a computer anymore. What I’m not trying to do is make a separate hobby of OS trialing. I’m worried I won’t be able to find drivers for my audio interface, hell I’m running it on an old Win7 driver in Win10 now. Payday is Friday, and I will be ordering a second SSD to quarantine this experiment on. For now I read and pester random folks on the Internet for opinions. I appreciate your suggestions, for sure.
What you need to do is install Oracle Virtual box on your pc.
Then download a Linux distribution: I’d recommend Linux Mint
Install it virtually on Virtualbox.
Then connect your audio equipment to the pc and in Virtualbox use the menu to send that device from Windows to Linux.
Look for the menu called devices or something like that. It will just the various inputs it sees eg. Usb, SCSI, aux etc and you can select that and then select the attached device. That will send the device signal to Linux.
Then see if you can see the device in Linux.
If not research whether you need a driver or a particular application. The best place to ask about drivers is from the device manufacturer. If they don’t exist anymore then Google it. Eg Linux driver for [device name] or Ubuntu driver for [device name]
If you can get it to work then you’re set and you can install Linux as your main OS. or just use it in the VM. If there are no drivers and it doesn’t work, stay on Windows.
Just be aware it’s the device manufacturer that should make the driver, whether for Windows or Linux. Sometimes the Linux community will make their own driver if the OEM doesn’t. I haven’t seen that happen on Windows. On Windows if the OEM doesn’t make one, you either use an old one or get a new audio device 🤷
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I run blender and cura, so it sounds like I’m covered there and that’s encouraging.
Most distros are almost exactly the same, NixOS and Guix are a bit different but if you get Ubuntu or Fedora or PopOS or something they all work fine.
That’s encouraging