Hey all, thought this might be of interest to some here.

Wrote about why I moved from NixOS to Ubuntu after using it for several months on my daily driver. Suspect that this take is likely to be kind of controversial and court claims of skill issues, which might even be true.

Let me know what you think.

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77 points
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tldr:

  • fucking with configs for hours regularly
  • pip & venv doesn’t work on nixos
  • DE broke when installed new DM
  • not much community support
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22 points

I didn’t realize pip and venv didn’t work… that’s a pretty big deal breaker for a lot of people, myself included.

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9 points

I’m not a Nix user, but doesn’t Nix make both pip and venv obsolete in a way? Nix is a package manager (which could be used to package anything including Python packages/modules) and also allows you to create environments that include only certain packages of certain versions.

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14 points

Sounds good in theory, until you want to install scikit-image or other Python libraries which need complex builds.

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6 points

pip and venv are working, but packages that require compiling or ship binaries by itself usually won’t work out of the box. They depend on gcc or libopenssl to be globally available: the whole gist of Nix not doing 😅

I’ve found devenv.sh to be most convenient way to handle such projects. You can define the dependencies for a project. It has explicit python/venv/requirements.txt/poetry support. It works for NixOS, but also other distros and MacOS. Very convenient to share and lock development tools and libraries across a team.

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-2 points

it is for advanced users

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6 points
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fucking with configs for hours regularly

this is the one reason i dont board the hype train for “customizable” distros: arch, nix, gentoo and so on unless im specifically looking to learn.

i use linux so i can install it and forget which distro im actually using.

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2 points
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I have been on arch professionally for ~5 years.

I am a GUI fan and I don’t like fucking around with the OS. In fact, I don’t even want to think about it at all.

So far it hardly required any maintenance (much less than Ubuntu, Windows or Mac, at least for my workflows).

And the only fucking around I did with it was the first two days setting everything up just the way I like.

To be fair, I already had extensive linux knowledge at the point of switching to arch - through ~4 years of constantly breaking my Debians and Ubuntus every couple of months.

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4 points
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i find arch to sometimes break on updates for me. it always turns out to be either:

1- bleeding edge package update made it bleed 2- needed to be watching announcements and change some config file 3- i havent updated in a while and it dislikes that.

i like having 100% automatic updates.

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