Well let’s see if it is worth it or if I go back to debian.

0 points

RIP.

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4 points

NixOS vs Mint anyone?

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9 points

One’s the worst idea to suggest to a beginner, the other is not so bad. Mix them up and you’ve got the best of both worlds.

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1 point

Have you used it with Debian? Much better that way IMO

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2 points

Gonna try that next. Probably. Nixos isn’t really working if I don’t know how to do stuff.

For example I can’t change settings in vlc because it is read only.

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2 points

It’s a whole different story when it’s just a package manager and not a distro. I made this comment to help people get started.

I’d only use nixos if there was a specific reason. Otherwise it’s too much trouble for practically no benefits.

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The benefit would be: changing stuff doesn’t break it. And if it does you can easily roll back. Keeping the config file sets up a new installation like the old one without trouble. Somehow I don’t think you really need it if you aren’t distro hopping but I need it way too much.

Currently the trade offs are too big I think. Programs don’t work because of the atomic behaviour.

And the learning curve is steep even for Linux veterans.

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1 point

So just for fun I’ll document how everything goes.

Making a new user with fresh home folder fixed most of my issues.

I managed to get iscsi working.

Vlc settings can be changed in the new home folder too, but for some reason this vlc version shows ssa subtitles wrong. Probably not nixos fault.

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