I installed Linux Mint for the first time on my personal Laptop just a few months ago, and it ran so well that I didn’t want to mess with it to try out different distros.

But today, my company’s IT department announced that they have some spare old Laptops to give away (technically because they didn’t meet the specs for Windows 11, didn’t stop the IT department from giving them out with Windows 11 pre installed though)

So now I got a few devices to play around with!! They’re a Precision 7530 and a Latitude 7390 2-in-1!

I already got ZorinOS running on the little guy because apparently Zorin is nice for Touchscreen support. For the big guy I was initially thinking that I could try Bazzite, but the installer was like “Intel UHD Graphics aren’t really recommended” so I might try something else first. Any recommendations? I mainly just want to try as many different flavors of Linux as I can haha

  • pr06lefs@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Snagged a thinkpad today for just over 100$. Guy mentioned it was because of windows 11. Its hippie christmas for linux!

    • python@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      Not yet, but I have seen that it is very popular on Distrowatch! :D It’s definitely in my backlog

  • erebion@news.erebion.eu
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    2 days ago

    Try out Debian. Stable, base of many other distros, loads of documentation, huge helpful community, just runs and barely ever breaks (I can’t even remember the last time I had issues).

    • Tanoh@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      For desktop I run debian sid (unstable), despite the name it very rarely breaks. And once in a blue moon when it does it gets fixed in a few hours/a day. Usually it is just some package that doesn’t play nicely with something else, so not like it is unusable during that time.

      The unstable part is that they do not guarantee that it will work, it is still more stable than most other distros and you get new packages.

      • erebion@news.erebion.eu
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        22 hours ago

        It’s called unstable because packages are constantly upgraded, unlike Debian Stable, which stays the same until the next release and only gets patches. It is NOT called unstable “because they do not guarantee that it will work”, for that you’d need paid enterprise support from some company.

      • LeFantome@programming.dev
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        1 day ago

        Why doesn’t anybody ever recommend Debian testing? It has stricter quality criteria than unstable while being almost as up-to-date.

        I agree that Debian Stable is not a great fit for desktop as the packages get very old between releases.

        • erebion@news.erebion.eu
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          22 hours ago

          Testing does not have dedicated security work and issues could be unsolved for a couple more days. You can use testing, of course, but read Debian security advisories. Upgrade packages from Unstable if there’s something critical and do not wait days for a fix.

        • Tanoh@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          Testing doesn’t get security updates as quickly as unstable, or even stable sometimes.

  • ColdWater@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    And end with Vanilla Arch, for me atleast I distro hop every week when I got into Linux for the first time and I thought I’m going to use Fedora, Debian, OpenSUSE, EndeavourOS as my main but ended up using Arch Linux permanently instead. For me it’s the “just work” distro easy to use and troubleshoot

  • INeedMana@piefed.zip
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    2 days ago

    Maybe not exactly what you are asking for but try out yunohost. Since you have some spares, one can be self-hosting stuff

    • python@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      That’s a neat pointer! I have been meaning to look into self-hosting anyway since my AWS free tier is running out pretty soon and I need a new place to cheaply plant down my in-development website project haha

      • erebion@news.erebion.eu
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        2 days ago

        That seems to be something a cheap Raspberry Pi 4 can easily handle. I even use mine as an SMB share. Sure, the speed is limited by the network port and USB port sharing data lanes, but it’s fast enough for my needs. Needs tiny amounts of eletricitiy, so I don’t burn the planet that quickly.

  • SlicedPotato@feddit.dk
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    2 days ago

    Bazzite is the more gaming oriented flavour of Universal Blue’s distros, but take a look at Bluefin if you wanna try something similar (but not focused on gaming, although gaming also works fine on it). I’ve used it for about a year or so myself, and I love it. It’s immutable so it “just works”, but I can still play around and tinker with distroboxes or VMs.

  • st3ph3n@midwest.social
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    2 days ago

    I’ve become quite the fan of Fedora with KDE. Running Fedora 43 on both my couch Thinkpad and my gaming desktop. Only issue I’m having with it is sleep functionality on the desktop, which just sucks (it likes to not wake up from sleep) so I have that set to not go to sleep, just turn the screen off when idle.

    • idefix@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I’ve had a really poor experience of Fedora and KDE. It really felt like third-class experience as they push so much for GNOME. Once you try a more desktop neutral or pro-KDE distributions you can’t go back to Fedora.

    • azvasKvklenko@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Yeah, I’m normally an Arch guy, but gave Fedora with KDE a shot when I bought Framework. It’s pretty sweet, does everything I want and never bothers me

        • azvasKvklenko@sh.itjust.works
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          2 days ago

          No, not really. If it’s set up right, it pretty much just works. I use it on my work computer and never mess around with anything, just use it and sync packages every month or so.

          Honestly a distro called Nobara was a huge let down for me compared to Arch. It was effortless to install and came out with cool tweaks, but in just 6 months of usage it randomly broke like 4 times, every time I was supposed to check their discord server to get info on what broke and how to fix it. From Plasma not loading and opening crash report window indefinitel, to bootloop with update screen, to experimental drivers being shipped causing hard GPU crashes. And this is recommended for newbies? I’d rather give preconfigured Arch (like CachyOS) to newbie than this.

          • Victor@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Yikes on the Nobara experience. Will avoid. Not that I ever felt the need to explore or hop beyond Arch. Discord as the main communication channel? That screams immature project IMO.

            I have the same experience as you with Arch. In probably a decade of use I’ve only reinstalled when buying new computers. It’s just so solid. I use it both for work and at home. 👌

    • zmrl@lemmy.zip
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      3 hours ago

      I had the same problem until I installed the nvidia drivers. KDE will install some that gets things to work but I had that sleeping problem you mention. I can’t remember the exact package name but I can try and figure it out if you need help finding it.

  • The_v@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Umm… With 2 free computers and nothing on them.

    Run down the list and install all the different distros. Test them out for a few weeks then onto the next. Pretty soon you’ll one that you prefer.

    • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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      1 day ago

      This is the way.

      The only way to find the right distro is to try them out, on the end device, with the end user.

      • python@lemmy.worldOP
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        2 hours ago

        Installing one distro on one laptop and then only using that laptop to figure out how to install the next distro on the other laptop! That would give me an actual goal in each distro I install too, since I’d have to get the wifi and browser working and figure out how to run that program that burns iso files onto a usb stick :0
        … that would be such an entertaining youtube video concept too, I wish I was into video making haha

  • MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    “Intel UHD Graphics aren’t really recommended”

    Because Bazzite is gaming oriented and Intel UHD is barely good enough to render a display?

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      19 hours ago

      I have a Dell with UHD+Nvidia, took me a while to get Prime working to switch video cards. Even on UHD, it could do basic Steam games and Minecraft if you didn’t have high expectations.

    • JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      Well, it works for MC, older games, even stray runs somewhat (from my experience). It’s decent for a 300€ laptop with a quad core like the ones in the post.

      • python@lemmy.worldOP
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        2 hours ago

        I actually have tried it on the bigger laptop by now and somehow Bazzite runs Sekiro more smoothly than my “Gaming” Lenovo Legion Y530 that has an actual GPU and is from around the same time ever did. 🫣 It was completely unplayable on my other Laptop… which makes me think that maybe I misconfigured it to not actually use the GPU back in the day??? I’ll have to experiment with that a bit more haha

  • silt_haddock@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I just got a new laptop for my work (which I also use for personal stuff, it’s a family business).

    It came with Windows 11 but I’d got a bigger SSD which I’d installed before I’d even turned it on so Windows never even got a chance to boot.

    I installed one of the Fedora atomic distros and it seems to be pretty good, though I’m trying to figure out how to tune battery life. I’ve setup TLP but haven’t noticed any improvement, though, it’s still much better than when I first tried Linux on a laptop.

    I’d never used Fedora before, but the first distro I ever used was Ubuntu Dapper Drake and I’ve dipped my toes occasionally since then, but never fully committed until now

    • python@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      Man I wish I could participate in the programmer socks joke, but I feel like it just doesn’t really hit the same when an afab person does it :(