I wouldn’t really call myself a distro hopper, but in the last few months I’ve had to do some fresh installs on a couple of machines and VMs for work

If these aren’t included by default, I’ll make sure to get em:

GUI:

  • Firefox & Chromium
  • Gimp & Krita
  • VSCode/VSCodium
  • Okular
  • Libre office

CLI*:

  • git
  • wget&curl
  • neovim
  • zsh/ohmyzsh + plugins
  • glow
  • neofetch
  • figlet/toilet
  • zellij
  • python
  • nodejs/npm/nvm + nodemon globally
  • ranger/rifle

Also, how do you go about migrating your old config and rc files? Start fresh or just copy em over and make adjustments where necessary?

26 points

Step 1: install Debian 12 today, Step 2: upgrade to Debian 13 when available, then Debian 14, Debian 15 and so on… that’s the only hopping one should.

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8 points

Gatekeeping Linux!? I certainly wasn’t expecting that… I think the state of Linux is needlessly fragmented, but even I won’t say a single distro will work best for every single person, business, school, government, or organization.

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18 points

I always need

  • LibreWolf (privacy-focused Firefox fork)
  • Some nice terminal emulator like Alacritty or Kitty
  • A torrent client
  • Emacs
  • Strawberry (the music player)

CLI:

  • fish shell
  • bat
  • neovim
  • fd
  • fzf
  • zoxide
  • Some other Rust alternatives for GNU coreutils
  • GPG
  • fun stuff like neofetch, lolcat, asciiquarium, cmatrix, etc.
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3 points
*

Another fish and modern Unix user 🫶

PS. Try out lsd if you haven’t already - a nice ls/eza/exa replacement.

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2 points

I absolutely forgot about lsd, I used to use exa but recently I switched to lsd, it’s fantastic.

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15 points
*
  • fish
  • tmux
  • sshfs
  • htop
  • nmap
  • distrobox (haven’t tried this yet but looks amazing)
  • zfs (and any utilities that go with that)
  • sanoid
  • syncoid
  • tailscale
  • snapper (if using btrfs)

As far as config files go, I haven’t gotten around to automating those so I usually search my nas for old ones and copy/paste what I need

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14 points

Extreme Tux Racer, just can’t live without it

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11 points

First I install home-manager, then home-manager installs and configures everything else I’ve added to my config over time

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3 points

Any issues with home manager?

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3 points

I’ve not had any but I’m using NixOS, have yet to try it on other distros. (though it supports other distros)

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2 points

Using it on Nixos, Debian (wsl) and was using it (in the transition to nixos) on arch. Works flawless!

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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).

Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word “Linux” in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.

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