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  • NinjaTurtle@feddit.online
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    7 hours ago

    Is it worth nuking my PopOS to try CachyOS?

    I like the stability of Ubuntu and a lot of projects usually have deb files officially, like Signal. However, my start up time on Pop is oddly long and have Bluetooth issues (which is fine as I dont use it very often).

    I was on Bazzite for a bit. It was fine but the immutability was a bit annoying for me when editing files. Then on Nobara which was also fine but plasma crashed on me several times which caused me to repair it each time in order for it to work again.

  • Itsamelemmy@lemmy.zip
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    8 hours ago

    Still on Mint. Tried catchy recently when I nuked my Mint install. (I told myself I’d never remember to remove kisak-mesa before updating the kernal, and yup).

    Was only on catchy for half a day, but did really like it. KDE and some of the preinstalled tools were nicer than Mint. Only issue is I could only access my old NTFS windows drives as read only. In the process of getting more storage so I can backup and format everything as ext4, and might try catchy again. But Mint has been treating me well, and has no issues handling the windows drives.

    • underscores@lemmy.zip
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      27 minutes ago

      I think it’s important to recognize that if something is working well for yourself you don’t really need to change it

      this might be something you’re doing already but you can use VMs to try distros before fully committing

  • iamthetot@piefed.ca
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    11 hours ago

    I’m among those. When switching to Linux last year, I tried a few distros. I went with arch based because I wanted cutting edge. Cachy just works.

      • eli@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        I used it 5-6 years ago, and it broke itself within a month of using, and I dropped it. Just doing normal updates, no tinkering.

      • PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.social
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        14 hours ago

        Never used it myself, but every year or two I see an article about how one of their SSL certs expired and they have to tell all their users to set their clocks back until they can fix it.

      • Robbo@programming.dev
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        14 hours ago

        I made the bad decision to try it instead of arch for one machine because installing was easier. And it was just constantly broken from out of date repos and all their built in shit just not being very good. And now they just released some manifest or something to try get the project back on track. I haven’t looked at it in like 5+ years but this graph makes me think nothing really changed.

        • ken@discuss.tchncs.de
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          59 minutes ago

          No. This is the first time in ~a decade I’ve felt anything resembling optimism about Manjaro. That maintainers are acknowledging the deep-rooted issues (resulting in the actual reasons people sneer at Manjaro) and forcing change is something that I think should be supported. Those conversations are necessary and have a higher chance of being healthy if the peanut gallery can hold off from turning spin on everything that smells like drama…

  • Laser@feddit.org
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    12 hours ago

    NixOS went from not being visible to… beating Manjaro!

    Whatever that’s supposed to tell

    • cecilkorik@piefed.ca
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      10 hours ago

      You can also look into PikaOS if you want gaming features and drivers baked into Debian.

    • rozodru@piefed.world
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      12 hours ago

      It’s essentially Arch with a custom kernel and repos. That being said the Kernel and repos are REALLY good. very optimized. I use the CachyOS Kernel on my NixOS system and I use the repos as well as the kernel on a regular Arch system. If you’re a gamer then you’ll notice a definite increase in performance. the devs/maintainers of CachyOS are also very transparent and provide constant updates.

      Now you’ll probably ask “well why not just use CachyOS itself?” to which I’ll say they pack A LOT of stuff into the distro most of which I just don’t need. It can result in a long install time, much longer than most distros. But if you want a solid easy to install distro right out of the box you can’t go wrong. They also support just about every DE and WM under the sun. Seriously when you install it they provide you with options for everything AND also provide you with custom configs for everything so you can say use Niri or Hyprland or whatever right away without having to do much if any further configuration. They also have configurations for shells too. They also have their own version of Proton which is quite good, I also use that. They also provide you with the option to have snapper/timeshift set up for you right off the bat so you don’t have to worry about rolling back if something goes wrong.

      They also have a fairly new updating feature which I love. Basically it’s a version of pacman where anyone can use it/figure it out. Like other distros like Fedora or Debian it’ll notify you when there are updates and will walk you through the process of updating, providing you with recent Arch News while you update, then clear out orphaned dependencies and clear your cache for you. it’s really a very good updater.

      Overall it’s a very solid and easy to use Arch based distro and a fantastic introduction to Arch.

    • Jayjader@jlai.lu
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      13 hours ago

      From what I understand, it is the arch approach but with package binaries compiled to target newer hardware instead of the largest set of hardware. Their homepage claims they enable several performance-type optimizations in both the kernel and common system libraries. It’s not surprising to me that protondb, a repository of “how well can I get this game to run on Linux through proton?” reports, is studying an outsized proportion of users on CachyOS.

  • org@lemmy.org
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    15 hours ago

    Well, mix up all the Ubuntu flavors in the same bowl and then weigh it.

    • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 hours ago

      If you go that way, you also gotta count ubuntu and all its derivatives towards debian.

      But if you look at the plot you can see the only ubuntu based ones are mint, ubuntu and pop which add up to 20.6% and thats still less than cachy. So unless you add the 2.7% of debian to make a “debian based” cluster, cachy still wins with 21.1%

      All this to say, cachyos is fucking boomin.

    • Mountaineer@aussie.zone
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      15 hours ago

      I’ve been running Cachy for a few months - it just works.

      I picked it because it appeared to be easy to install Arch (which I’ve run before, btw) with sane defaults.
      But that’s exactly what Endeavour is from what I just read.
      I don’t know if the purported optimisations provide any real world benefit, but the major reason I went Cachy is it being the flavour of the month.
      For the time being, it’s where a lot of focus is for new development in the gaming space.

    • sbird@sopuli.xyz
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      13 hours ago

      Based on the experiences I have seen with others, it looks like CachyOS has more software installed out-of-the-box (compared to EndeavourOS being more minimal). Both look similarly easy to install and offer many different DEs (I think CachyOS has a few more though, but you could manually install others)

      I personally use EndeavourOS as I like that it’s more minimal and don’t really care about the gaming optimisations of CachyOS. It seems pretty neat though, so I might try it out one day if I get a newer computer that would benefit from those bits.

    • determinist@kbin.earth
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      15 hours ago

      I’ve been running cachy for about 9 months. It’s great. Just works with my older hardware and allows me to game. Updates are easy, rollbacks can save your life (I’ve rolled back once after I fucked up).

      I run KDE with nvidia (gtx 1070 ti) and it’s all just … great.

      I previously ran debian then mint.

    • HeartyOfGlass@piefed.social
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      14 hours ago

      From the article:

      Flatpak is NOT a distro, but that’s what Steam reports when it’s running on Flatpak, and Flatpak being distro independent we report it as a separate environment, if that makes sense. Feel free to ignore it if you wish.