Why I Switched from Arch to Debian
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- Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
- So I switched to Debian. I do still love Arch, but I had some reasons to do it, and I have some reasons to keep it. I'm still on the fence, but, we'll see what happens. Hope you enjoy this long-awaited update on what's going on! This is why I switched from Arch to Debian.
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Update: I've been using Debian for a long time now. So for me right now, Debian is better. Arch is great, but for my production machine, I need the stability that Debian provides.
#Linux #Debian #Arch - Наука
Did you know, that Debian is considered the most stable Linux distro. It's so stable that ISS switched from windows xp to Debian on all the computers onboard the ISS. (:
That was a long time ago. While most of their computers that run systems do still run Debian, most of their client laptops that they interact with use Windows 10. As for all the ground stations (ie mission control), they now use RedHat and have for a while now.
It's stable UNTIL you try to update or even worst UGRADE. So if you don't touch it it's stable. LOL
Nope
Netbsd is the most stable OS, that's what satellites use.
@@takeshikovacs667 The same could be said about Arch.
This is why I never bothered with Arch. I want to solve problems in software I write, not resolve conflicts in some other software that should just work.
Then use Windows?
@@l4kr They want a usable system
That's interesting. I use Arch for the same reason. Debian always lets me down, never has correct dependencies and is a general pain to interact with on my server. Arch on my laptop though, I think I've had to mess with stuff 3 times in 4 or 5 years of using it.
Daily usage of arch for a year now. Games, kernel and driver developement, and just generic office work, and never ever had any problems wih updates or stability. So I really wonder what kind of problems people encounter
@@MaderHaker
wow this clownie is a PREMIUM archie DEVELOPER!
games! kernel! and drivers! all fascinating programs people can imagine!
no wonder you dont have any (admitted) problems with updates, on Arch it is :)
When I‘m in the Linux world, I always run something from the Debian family, be it Grandfather Debian, Mama Ubuntu, Hip kid Pop_OS! or Cousin Raspbian/Raspberry OS. And I can always be sure that I know where to go, what to do and that updates work well.
Haha I like the nicknames
Good to hear that you made it back home safe and sound with all that is going on and the new vid is a plus. :D
Thanks Aris! 👍
I also switched from Arch to Debian, years ago
but I sometimes fondly remember Arch as an old lover
A little PSA: The Debian live iso with GNOME currently has the Calamares installer configured improperly, leading to installation failures due to something about the "displaymanager" module. This should be fixed in Debian 10.6, which should become available by this weekend. Other live iso flavors install properly.
I didn’t have this issue but I heard about it. Thanks for the tip, pinned!
@@Doriandotslash what do you use, Xfce or Kde ?
Clorox Bleach I use Gnome with the Dash to Panel extension. This is what you see in the video. But on my production machine I use Cinnamon.
yeah that explains why installing kde debain net install fails to show the desktop manager.
For anyone having issues with this on 10.5, you can use the 10.4 and just run the updates. Works fine. Get it from here: cdimage.debian.org/mirror/cdimage/archive/10.4.0-live/
0:41 HE SAID THE THING
lol
I was in a love hate relationship with Arch for years. When I first got into Linux 10 years ago I switched from Ubuntu to Arch after a few months. While it was a pain to set everything up it felt awesome when everything finally worked in the end. But after 3 months my system broke which eventually brought me back to using Windows. I was switching back and forth from various distros back to Arch only to return to Windows when something broke again. Over a year ago I tried Fedora for the first time and fell in love. It's like you said - just turn on your computer and get work done. No need to worry about stuff breaking or troubleshooting things for hours and hours. I'm still using Fedora on my main machine and never looked back. No more distro hopping and finally no more switching back to Windows. Btw I discovered your channel yesterday and I must say that I really enjoy your content!
I had the same problem but, ironically, learing to install arch cured it. I was in a love hate relationship with ubuntu and other debian based distros for a long time. Usually it would end with trying to set something up and failing, then switching back to windows because it could do the thing anyway with less fuss. So far arch has not failed me where a lot of distros have before. The last check on my list is to get qemu/KVM working with vga passthrough and then the windows drive will no longer be needed. Can't shake Ubuntu when it comes to servers though.
@@GoldenGrenadier My comment didn't age that well tbh. I'm still not distro hopping or switching back to windows every now and then though. I switched back to Arch roughly a year after commenting and Arch is what I'm using to this very day. Yeah, stuff breaks from time to time but can usually get fixed within minutes if you know what you're doing. And I think this was the issue back then - I didn't know what I was doing which not only meant that I wasn't able to fix many issues but also meant that I caused some of them myself due to bad configurations or something similar. I'd still reccomend Fedora to most people though 🙃
Debian, I tested it out 8 years ago and stayed with it, not much reason to change once you're somewhere nice. The 'cool linuxing' part is now when installing the latest stuff, but that's more exciting than package dependency fixes. Happy you're back, really good videos.
Thank you! I’m honestly very happy that I won’t have to fix upgrades regularly anymore lol
@@Doriandotslash the thing with Debian is: even if you don't update it in a LONG time, it's possible that you just dedicate a couple hours and a simple 'apt upgrade', 'reboot', 'apt dist-upgrade' and you're done, you're in the last point release without issues. APT is a beast of a dependency resolver and provides reliable upgrades. Ahem, I'm looking at you yum/dnf 😒
And if you get tired of old software, get your repos set to Debian testing. Same feel, more frequent updates, pretty much the same rock solid stability and smooth upgrades.
What I do is: Debian stable on all my 50+ servers, and Debian testing on my desktoo. Once you get the hang of apt, you don't want to touch any other package manager. I was distro hopping for some years, tried from Ubuntu to Gentoo, and I'm happy to say Debian has everything I have ever needed for the las 15 years, both at work and my personal PC/Laptop.
PS. I know I sound like a fanboy, but I wanted to share the experience for you to have some more reference. Good luck with your new distro!
Didn't know you were Canadian! I watched a lot of your videos when I jumped over to Manjaro a couple of years ago.
Indeed I am Canadian ;) Glad to hear you're still watching! Cheers brother
Welcome back! I’m excited to see more consistent content from your channel
Thanks, and me too! :)
Good explanation as to reason for switching, we do take good connections for granted in some areas and I never really thought about the update issue with rolling releases.
I run Debian on my "backup storage machine" in part for the reasons you mention. It's stable and I can log onto it a few times a year to run updates without the worry of a glitch. Debian is simply stable and reliable.
I’m now using newer software and kernel 5.10 by using Backports. Check out my video on that as well! ruclips.net/video/pcJe1LqOBv4/видео.html
Man, Do you mean Rolling realese for Debian Testing ? Sorry I´m new and considering switch to Linux, thanks.
Could be good to mention your hardware specs for this configuration system.
@@ivanguerra1260 No. Backports is not the testing branch. It’s software destined for the testing branch that is recompiled on Debian Stable. Check the video I linked above for it.
@@ivanguerra1260 technically Debian "testing" is not a "rolling release," but some people kind of use as if it were. The real "release" is "stable," and "testing" is literally testing, and can be broken for a while. I've heard it can get stuck into broken situations even more so than "Sid"/experimental. For a while I've used myself it as if it were "rolling release," then later I sort of "froze" it making my "personal/custom stable/frozen release" -- "stable" means no/rare upgrades, so I basically got things working and seldom ever upgraded anything, as if the testing was "stable." Rather than risking it getting broken. Not only most minor upgrades don't make much of a difference to me, but I don't waste anyone's bandwidth with them, at the same time everything is working satisfactorily. Now I'm trying the proper way of using just "stable" and maybe some backported stuff, if I really need.
use debian unstable it is debian but rolling release
Sad to see you you have not been producing the past 2 years or so, I like your presentation style and material selection. I appreciate your life situation may have changed. Hopefully you are still in good health!
I went from Ubuntu, that I had been using about 7 years to Manjaro about 4 years ago. I never really felt comfortable with Manjaro for many of the reasons you indicated in this presentation. I was working away from home often for 2 - 3 weeks at a time and upon return there would be 1 - 2 GB updates waiting for me on Manjaro. Once or twice it needed more work than a simple update to get working. Ultimately I suppose I was use to and comfortable with the Ubuntu/Debian environment. I made the switch to Debian desktop about 1 years ago, perhaps with this video in the back of my mind. My main desk machine to is setup with Debian testing, which gives me more up to date software than stable. I have never had a problem yet with Debian testing to date, although the updates are bigger than I like, I suppose that's the compromise.
I run a VM with Debian stable primarily to run Docker instances. On my Linux router (NFTables, bare metal), main and backup servers I run Debian stable. Again I use QEMU/KVM VM to run VMs with Docker. The benefit of Docker in a VM is that it does not muck up my firewall rule on bare metal, just the VM. I want to move and update my ISC DNS/DHCP from bare metal to Docker instances on the router, but have not got around to it yet. I have been very happy with XFCE for GUI on all my machines, most only available headless via VNC. I digressed......
Thank you! You experience just justifies the reasoning that I had. I have never tried Arch but did think of couple of times, I work in IT and I have infra issues to resolve, so cannot spend lot of time with issues on the work device(which runs Debian due to Zoom, google meet VoIP, otherwise FreeBSD :).
If you like recent releases of software, try FreeBSD, the stability and package collection like Debian and fresh like Fedora! I use FreeBSD on my personal Desktop which has dual boot of Debian just for the sake of VoIP apps.
Honestly I use Debian on all my work machines (I have 6 of them now, 1 desktop-server, 1 desktop, 2 test beds, 1 laptop and Dell PowerEdge R715)
I run CentOS 8 Stream as bare metal on server and Debian on VM.
I cannot even imagine running arch on anything serious. I am part this stage.
My OS must work no matter what. Stability is my first order of business (I run ECC RAM in all Desktops and Registered ECC in server). I even would sacrifice a lot of speed for stability.
Debian is actually comparable to Arch and even Gentoo on speed. Long ago, Phoronix did some benchmarks and Debian was equal and even beat the others couple of times. :)
@@mzs114 I wonder what gain of speed I would get, if I would recompile everything for AMD phenom (Barcelona). I run on 2 AMD Opteron 6180 SE
Debian stable with backports kernel is where it's at. Plus, like you said, there's so many options between flatpaks, snaps, virtual machines, containers to run particular things you need, it's great. The whole point of stable is not necessarily fewer bugs, but rather the things that you already know work a particular way will continue to do so, so that you can focus on the thing you actually wanted to work on, rather than riding the bleeding edge and updating multiple times a day.
This 😁
Exactly. If you really need things (perhaps printing, projector, shares) to work next week, choose stable.
I'm newly moving to Linux and have been having a hard time picking a distro to run with as main, so this was really helpful!
You're the second person I've seen now with the same taskbar layout (on your laptop). I would love to know what that is / what DE to use to get it, because I really hate most of the default linux DE layouts!
Welcome back, missed ya!
I use Debian (or Debian derivatives like Raspberry Pi OS) on all my machines. Having a uniform set of administrative tools across all installations makes sense, and Debian is utterly reliable.
because when there's drama with an OS install, it's never pleasant
I agree to this even though I'm Arch user but this thing is really true because debian supports almost every type of Hardware architecture.
what icon pack is that? ps you might have contributed to stopping my distro hopping sickness, thx
Totally agree. When I sit on my workstation, I want to get work done. But I always falling back to Arch-based. Manjaro is pretty good with holding packages back so its not absolutely bleeding edge. I really like debians mindset, but I dislike using apt. While testing Debian 11 I had many problems with flatpaks, I never had problems on my arch system. I need to use some up to date apps (just because they do not connect with debians old versions, like discord). Did I mention I'm using (some kind of) arch?
Thanks to your neofetch I finally decided to install debian on my desktop, I had only used it on my servers (with absolute great success, but no GUI). Thanks so much, I will never use another distro again.
Excellent video!! I love using Debian! I use MX19 on one machine and debian LXQT on the other. Fast, reliable and efficient!😀
Thank you!
Same debian rules
I'm currently evaluating Debian Stable. So far, so good. I don't find the software too stale. Do we really need the latest and greatest Firefox, for instance?
Nice to hear! Well, it comes with Firefox ESR, which still receives updates when needed. I personally am leaning more towards Chromium lately. I had switched from Chromium to Firefox a while back but I'm coming back to Chromium again.
This is a question only you can answer. I've been using Linux for over 20 years and most of the time I prefer rolling release on more recent hardwares and prefer really slow release on older hardwares. I did run Arch for a long time and rarely had to fix things I wouldn't need to fix on another distro... unless you start mixing a lot of packages from different places that is.
I never had more problems than on Ubuntu when they started to push Unity. This was a real pain and never returned to Ubuntu after that. I think Debian, Fedora, OpenSuse, Manjaro, Arch, Mx Linux, Antix and probably Linux Mint that I didn't use much are good distros that just mostly works. They all have strongs and bad points, but should be quite easy to get going and find support when something doesn't works as expected which should be that often.
You need the security updates that Debian provides.
That usually means that if you are stuck with a version which lacks functionality or has a bug you have to go very difficult paths to update it: it's not only the package, but libraries, etc you need to track. and those dependencies can have sub dependencies, and so on.
Is there installer in live version of Kali Linux, which is based on the Debian? There's no desktop shortcut or program for this.
How do I change my graphics card in peppermint os/debian ? I only have sound coming through my headphones , but its not coming through regular television speakers. Linux mint I was able to fix it by changing the graphics card to the one actually on my pc , but on peppermint os , I cant find where to change it.
How do you make gnome look like that? (The start of the video) Great video!
I’m using the Dash to Panel extension to move everything to the bottom of the desktop.
Ok thanks
Sorry bro ... There is no way back from Debian
However, you are the winner
Enjoy your real life with Linux from now on
I still think ubuntu is better than Debian, specially the community.
@@Joe3D Well it's based on Debian. Try Mint, it's a charm
you only find opensuse and debian.. rest is.. rest
Hello Dorian, thank you for the information, and for sharing your opinion about switching to Debian. A couple of questions though, 1) Is the GUI you are currently using the default GNOME for Debian 10? and 2) Is the application Kdenlive installed in your Debian system a Flatpack app? or Snap? Thank you in advance, and wow frankly speaking the GUI and theme/icons used on this Debian 10 (release name Buster), look sleek.
I’m using Gnome with the Dash to Panel extension and using Kdenlive from the repo. I’ve also switched the icons and times from the defaults.
Thank you so much for your video. It helped me make up my mind on what replacement operating system I need to switch to. I had been running CentOS 6( i386 32bit ) since 2014 on a desktop. It met my needs wonderfully but is no longer supported since last month. Anyways, Debian sounds good. Stable. No gimicks or bloat like Ubuntu. Thank you for the advice. You have a new subscriber. 😊
Thank you and I'm glad to hear it! For what it's worth, RedHat is dropping CentOS entirely at the end of 2021 so it would be time to switch regardless. I think you'll like Debian for it's simplicity and stability. Cheers!
I'm always trying different distros but I always return to debian, there's nowhere I feel at home as in Debian, on computer I want to have all the new stuff I use the testing, and when I need it to be reliable stable it is. It never let me down.
debian is home 😁😆😆
I feel the pain man. That's been my internet speed for the last decade
How would be using Debian + Nix/Guix package instead of Debian + Flatpak?
I think I’d prefer the flatpaks. If I want to do some extra in order to get newer packages, then flatpaks would be pretty recent versions of everything.
Thank you for this video.
I am asking if better I upgrade debian from 9 to 10 or I keep 9.
Depends if you really need the newer packages or not. If you’re not missing out on anything then you don’t really HAVE to upgrade. You could also use flatpaks or backports to get newer software on Debian 9.
I had a similar experience with Manjaro Arch Linux. Ran it for a year fine and then the updates started breaking things. It eventually updated to a kernel my machine couldn't handle and it broke. I can boot it up in recovery mode using one of the older kernels but I've been using PopOs for a few months and no breaking issues.
Thanks for sharing. Pop is also pretty good.
Yeah Manjaro breaks a lot. Haven't switched to endeavour OS (basically arch) yet because they don't have an bspwm edition.
@@vladlu6362 2 years with Manajaro and applied different mods.... Never broke once!
Manjaro is not Arch. The Manjaro update script is jus an ugly hack. If you want a stable Arch experience you're better off just using regular Arch
@@vladlu6362 just run bspwm on pure Arch
"Why I Switched from Arch to Debian" - because you get older.
Half-joke/half-true :-)
TFW you mature... as a computing enthusiast.
You forgot "Because I want to have a life... Get out and do things, have a family, etc."
@kenzøu No, troubleshooting package installs eats into your time with friends and family especially if this is your main box and you need it working to do your job.
@@MrEdIsTheSource Manjaro is pretty reliable. I broke it just once (at the beginning).
TimeShift tool is a must have :-)
@kenzøu I was talking about manual intervention during package upgrades as Dorian said in the video and attempting to add some humor to the comment I was replying to. It was a joke. Lighten up a bit.
I've used Ubuntu since around 2006, never had a major problem with it. The only time I had to fully reinstall it was when upgrading from 32bit to 64bit in about 2012. I used it as a file server and firewall machine and a few other things. I've moved the same install between computers and drives without reinstalling, I have even converted the filesystem from ext2 -> ext3 -> ext4 -> GPT -> BTRFS, although the BTRFS conversion did fail, ended up having to make a new partition and copying the files manually and fixing the boot loader afterwards.
Also one time I was updating the OS to a new release and the power went out, (the timing lol) I was able to complete the install in recovery mode (although it was so broken I did not have any text in the console, had to type in commands blind and it completed and booted.
My previous experience prior to that was with madrake, and that broke on every update. The debian package manager really is great. And before that I used slackware where you had to compile the OS yourself, well I was using it on super old hardware no other distro supported (386), the days before package managers was terrible.
Great video Dorian, i moved from Linux Lite to Sparky Linux stable and I love it.
Love Debian. Haven't tried Arch yet but I'm still pretty new. Made the switch from windows a few months ago. Have a server I'm still tooling around with on debian and a couple laptops on mint debian. It's fast and solid even on older hardware.
Agreed! Mint is good as well, and has some slightly newer packages too.
Arch needs some time, but the pandemics gave me all the time to learn that I needed hahaha
using for 2 months now, I'm loving it. Arch Gnome
i tried arch first thing when i switched from windows. took me a few hours but i did it.
Great video Dorian, I think Debian is the way to go, stay safe.
Thank you! Yes, Debian is great
The same reason I change from arch to debian but after when I use debian I get problem with package of node in dev web
Can you Please make video about dual booting other distros like arch,NixOS with Fedora?,..as Fedora makes different partitions that can create major problems with other dstros..
I couldn't find a proper guide..since im currently using fedora 38 as main os and want to try NIxOS.(i can't do vms as currently my laptop has only 8gigs of ram).?
Are you using Debian Stable? I think it is important to mention that.
BTW do also add Debian backports repo
Yes I’m use stable with the backports. I used backports to install kernel 5.7 and LibreOffice 7 👍
Debian is the shiznit! I love the Debian installer. I have never had the Debian installer not work, perfect install every time. The advanced options give complete control of the entire install process, and the regular install is quick and simple for those who do not want to answer tons of questions.
I disagree i found plenty of bugs in the text ui installer when using LVM and drive encryption at the same time. And from the usability standpoint, there can be improved a lot.
@@OpenGL4ever I have never done and LVM with encryption install in any operating system, so I cannot speak to that. Good to know.
Lightdm/sddm/whatever dm never worked for me when I tried installing debian
The advanced installer even has a ssh option, great for servers unfriendly location, 1. boot from CD/USB 2. enable ssh, 3.detect network, and you can do the rest of the install remotely, including partitioning disks etc.
How did you install debian ?? i tried to install it a couple of times, but it keeps booting into the terminal rather than a desktop , I tried installing a desktop environment through the terminal but it doesn't seem to work, does it happen like that on newer hardware ?
Try the installer with nonfree firmware: cdimage.debian.org/images/unofficial/non-free/images-including-firmware/10.6.0+nonfree/amd64/iso-cd/firmware-10.6.0-amd64-netinst.iso
I was considering DEBIAN and you just answered several of my questions... and basically said exactly what I was thinking about.. MUCH APPRECIATED.. THANKS for the EXCELLENT video. OH- one quick question--- is Debian as cumstomizable as other distros?? (just for a few things- blur, transparency, background as slide show- that kind of thing?)
Thanks! And yes it’s as customizable as most. The only downside is sometimes having older packages could be missing a couple features but that’s hardly a big issue.
Debian is great. I've strangely enough done the opposite and switched to Arch from Debian (:
The patrician's distro
No matter were you are, you are always going to distro-hop 🤣. That's the Linux way 😌
@@polgzz yeah
@@polgzz exactly
Long time Debian user here. Love it. Use it on multiple desktops, servers, in production, etc.
So stable that I've use auto-updating on production webservers for years without issue.
As for desktop, I'm oldschool, so Mate desktop for me.
I may just enable auto updates as well.
@@Doriandotslash FYI The package for this is unattended-upgrades
wiki.debian.org/UnattendedUpgrades
Do anyone know why nvidia optix render (blender) don't works in Debian
How did you make your Debian desktop environment you had in the video look like that? I just wanna know everything you did I am new to Linux and I love how your desktop looks
+ How did you change it to cinnamon too?
I’m using the Arc Darker theme, and the Papirus-Remix icons along with the Dash to Panel Gnome Shell Extension.
I've been all over around the world jumping from distro to distro. It's nice to finally get back to Debian, the first, the best.
I understand how it feels when you arrive to the one system that is stable, and works fine according to your needs and your schedule. In my case, I tried to use Debian but never worked out for me. Instead remain with Gentoo for a long time and later moved to Arch. But there is not like dealing with a system you know how it behaves and simply works for you. ☺
The good thing is that there are so many options in Linux/BSD that some work for some users and others work for other users... unlike Windows 10 and OSX which has only 1 flavor.
Now wait a sec... In this case it's overindulging in unfounded fears because the user gets phobic about missing updates, not getting more productive or more efficient. "Works for you" can become "babies you by appealing to your irrational impulses". That's what keeps people chained to Windows. That in particular bothers me. "Caters to your insecurities" is not how to pick an OS.
I've been using debian since debian 2.1 and I'm thinking about trying Arch or simply turn debian into its rolling release version 'Sid'. I'll probably do both in that order to see what suits better for me. I'm curious to see if Arch has any benefits over debian Sid.
Thanks for the update Bro....!!!
if you enjoyed Debian but miss the newer packages of Arch, I find that Debian testing is a nice sweetspot. I would recommend the netinst for the base install and build from there.
I used testing for a while before Buster came out via Q4OS. That wouldn’t have solved the issue I had with bandwidth at the time though.
Arch is good for tinkering and playing around but if you need to get actual work done and need reliability Debian and Debian based distros are the way to go.
Debian is reliable if you don't value updates or relationship stability
One thing with the live installer is that it doesn't create a root password. I found out after typing su in the terminal. It said incorrect password. I tried su - as well. Same thing. I reinstalled debian LXQT from my USB stick again with the same result. I noticed that the installer doesn't allow you to set up a root password.
I guess I will have to run the debian net installer which does allow you to setup a root user and password.
You can setup a root password afterwards by going “sudo passwd root”, enter your users password then and it will prompt you to enter root’s new password.
@@Doriandotslash excellent!! Thanks from a fellow Canadian 😀
how did you set up your desktop?, it's looking cool with minimal setup. Please provide icons, themes, extension you used here
BTW i'm a linux mint user, thinking to move to Debian (but not a fan of gnome)
Thanks! I’m using the Dash to Panel extension with the Arc-Darker theme and Papirus-Remix icon theme.
Debian is a very cool (and reliable) distro. Something similar happened to me, but I went to Void Linux instead of Debian (part of my dabbling into Void was in part thanks to your videos btw). I have to say that it has been rock solid stable for me. Also, the packages on their repos, although not as big as Debian's, are very well selected; every package that I used on Debian or Arch is in there, but that's just my personal case though. For fixed releases, Debian is my go to, and for rolling releases, Void has become my indisputable choice.
Nice to hear that you also checked out Void! I'm enjoying Debian and it's stability. I've been toying a lot with the "root" distros lately.
Try Debian testing or even Sid if you really want rolling distro.
Debian is fantastic. I had a Debian 9 VPS that ran for 5 years straight without any issues whatsoever. Rock solid stability.
Artur Araripe Agreed!
Hey, can you share where you got your wallpaper from? the one with greeny hills and snow/brown mountains.
Thanks!
Sure, here you go : www.deviantart.com/joeljohnston/art/Low-Poly-Mountains-Cinema-4D-456552954
@@Doriandotslash Thanks man
Can every distro on your PC use the same Linux swap partition? Or, do you have to do something to make it happen?
Yes they can all use the same swap partition.
I use debian in production for 20 years and on my workstation for 10 years. It is well balanced and stable. If you want to be on the bleeding edge with debian just run sid.
Spent over a year with Arch friggin around with it "good for learning Linux?" but in the end I do have to work so I switched to Manjaro and Mint :-)
Nice! Arch is indeed fun to play with, and it can be stable too. I just didn’t have time to mess with fixing it anymore when I had things I needed to do
@@Doriandotslash Makes sense, not everyone is a college student running and obscure riced tiling window manager
Just curious. Manjaro, based on Arch, doesn't it inherit some of Arch issues? At least the rolling release related ones. I will read anyways but I could use an opinion :)
I've been using Arch (btw) for like 2 years and it's been great, but I might want to switch to something that "just works" out of the box and doesn't get in the way.
@@ahidalgo94 I have been using Manjaro for over a year now, and IMO it bring the same peace of mind like Debian or Mint. It just works. You still get the updates, but it is up to you if you want to run them or not. It also plays nice with the AUR, so I believe it is kind of the best of both worlds. Granted, I downloaded and installed the XFCE version of Manjaro, I did not install the desktop environment after the initial setup
Mint rocks
Which to install between manjaro xfce and debian?
I need that Wallpaper so badly. Could you give me any info about it?
Arch is definitely recommended to all linux users, because it teaches alot of working of linux. Prior to arch i had used ubuntu for a couple of years but barely learnt anything. And i would agree that one should shift to other stable lts distros after they have learned.
Skip learning about computers. It is not a topic I am terribly interested in. But if you are there are guides available online. They're better to view on a PC that works rather one that is experiencing issues. I ran Arch once. I'll never get that 15 minutes back ever either.
@@1pcfred There is difference between practical and theory.
@@mdzaid5925 in theory there's no difference theory and practice. In practice there is. -Yogi Berra.
I learned so much about Linux in the past 11 months without having to use Arch.
Arch forces you to learn about things a computer should take care of......Let me repeat...*a computer should take care of*, NOT a human being. You can look and research on what dependencies do what, but it should never be touched and fiddled with most of the time, especially rolling release distros that are very prone to breaking.
Arch is NOT a desktop distro, let alone a reliable one you can trust with your documents and photos. It gives you silly bragging rights nobody cares about, and that's as far as Arch goes. It's a distro that prevents your computer from doing its own job. Arch doesn't do "OS" very well.
Even Windows isn't as bad with updates and Windows is more stable.
I use MX Linux BTW.
I use Arch btw 😆
I love Arch. I´ ve testet manjaro, ubuntu and linux-mint, but i always went back to my lovely archdistro . ^^
Duke Nukem same here. Been using Debian for years. Went to arch and never looked back.
I'm trying Instant OS right now
I used Arch by the way , too many updates , unstable .
Debian is ❤️
@@dukenukem9781 isn’t Manjaro just Arch?
i'm new to all this, but i was wondering if you were using the lts kernal? if not would it be a solution to the constant updates problem?
That’s not how Arch works. Also, using an LTS kernel has nothing to do with all the other package updates.
I wish everything would be rolling release to stable new software except the main things like the whole desktop environment, I want stability for the core parts...
If a program crashes who cares I just restart it, if my login manager and desktop environment (SDDM and plasma in my Manjaro KDE case) crashes, all my work is broken, cause restarting SDDM kills my session.
It already happened..
Going to suspend to RAM, then back, SDDM login works, after that if screen saver (or screen turn off) happens anything that triggers superkey+L that SDDM login prompt should come - it doesn't come again, everything freezes.
Restarting plasma from tty2 doesn't work, restarting SDDM kills like said above my whole session, it starts a new one and "working again" but it's horrible.. I prefer restarting entirely in that case.
Is there a way to restart it without killing my active programs and so on?
I don't think so, if possible please tell me.
I did it I believe with sudo systemctl restart sddm .
And when I wanted to look at Manjaros source code, I realized they use plasma unstable, is that right?
I prefer new software, but stable core desktop.
I won't ever run an old browser for example, or vs code, or anything, but the desktop, I don't care if it's a little bit older, it should just work...
You could install Debian and then install whatever programs you want as flatpaks. Then you’ll have a stable desktop and newer programs from the flatpaks. Fedora Silverblue would probably be a great choice for you since it makes its OS read-only and ALL programs are installed as flatpaks by default. Check out my videos on Silverblue.
Long term debian testing user here. In testing world you got newer packages, rolling release and although its called testing, its still solid AF. Also I even installed firefox from the unstable branch, which is easily possible using apt pinning (without using flatpaks or similar).
Thank you, Dorian. I have always felt most comfortable with Debian family distros.
Nice to see you Anzan 👌🏿
I run Debian Testing Unstable mix. But, I'm confused because why did you have to do the upgrades at all? Also, if you needed to upgrade something couldn't you just upgrade that package?
To get security updates. I was away from home for several months. I had internet but it was extremely slow. So since I was still online, I wanted to ensure I was still getting security updates. But in Arch, you can't specify that you only want security updates in Arch, it's all or none.
What theme are you using? icons ? Is this a out of the box install ?.
I really like the look of your OS !.
No it’s not. I use the Dash to Panel extension for the bottom taskbar, and all the themes are listed in the terminal window at the very beginning of the video.
Debian was my first linux distro back in 05. I have tried dozens of distros since, arch, gentoo, slackware, various distros based on these- and I always come back to Debian. I Am using Debian as we speak.
Debian is my way to go for anything production wise. Quite, nice and safe.
But there is always that side machine were I use for trying new things and fell the adrenaline rush, that always had arch and some other new distro now and then. 😃
If you want an adrenaline rush you could always switch to Sid repos 😁
Excellent video with very useful material for me!
Glad it was helpful!
Where can I get this background image?
I just did the same thing, sort of. I went to Pop!_OS instead of Debian. Too many things to change to make new software available, mainly the kernel.
Awesome. Pop is great too. I just wanted to try to stick to a root distro. Kind of been doing that for a while now; Arch, Void, NixOS, Fedora and now Debian...
I think to it too, but Yay keep me to arch ❤️
I like it for its bleeding edge nature and the fact that you can tune it to your heart's consent
@@SFSAtlas yeah... I rolled back to arch finally, garden neighbor's not so green 🍏 😌
What are the wallpapers you use and icon theme? Thanks!
The icon theme is papirus-remix
Hi Dorian, How did you get rid of the top bar and placed the time in the dock? I have been wanting to do that from day one.
I use the Dash to Panel shell extension. Works great and highly customizable.
I use LMDE4 - Linux Mint on Debian, it is lovely.
Yes, I already downloaded that the other day and I'm going to try it out!
I noticed the massive size of updates on Manjaro Linux I stopped using it for that reason.
I know I’m late on this, but what was the theme that you were using on your Debian Cinnamon install? It looks really nice
Can anyone explain how I get my DE to look like the one in the video?
It’s Gnome with the Dash to Panel extension.
Debian is a bit like a understanding partner. Many are the times that have I wandered, looking for something flashier, craftier, more nouvelle. Many are the times that that farmiliar old text-based installer comforted me in the knowledge that the stability and functionality that I yearn is just a download away, and that my insatiable infidelity is unconditionally forgiven.
Well said lol
This comment makes me feel better about my marriage 😅😅
The installer??? With Debian you see this once in your lifetime. Don’t bother 😂😂😂 btw I use and love Debian too.
Yeah. People who are new to Linux tend to dislike it. Especially nowadays with such nicer installers. Coming from Arch, it can be nice to just have an installer period lol
I've had a nasty Debian bug where I couldn't upgrade to next release so ended up installing ubuntu.
lol at 3:10 5.6Gb of download, do you have every single package in existence installed? Or have not updated for a year or two? My personal best with Arch was about 2.4Gb, but averages about 800Mb for a once a fortnight update.
No, but one big upgrade was Gnome 3.36.
@@Doriandotslash Probably the difference , I don't Gnome
Maximus Oozenthor That was also my production machine which hadn’t been used in 7 months.
Well my situation is similar, my network speeds are around 50kb/s most of the times, so I just use the software DVDs, and I'm very happy about that feature, I used to complain about having old software running on my machine, but soon I understood that was Debian's main pillar to be as stable as it is, I moved to Arch in my distro hopping days but it was kinda stressing to have so many updates and my slow network didn't help the situation. I came back to Debian because I seldom get an update, it's nothing but security related updates and yeah, to use Flatpak in order to get the most recent software is very useful and I don't notice any slow downs.
Pop os 20.04 here
Same
@Rep 101 it's based on Ubuntu which is based on debian...
@Rep 101 Android uses Linux as it's kernel, Ubuntu is based off of Debian, it uses APT and many other things that are part of Debian. Another example is MX Linux which is based directly off of Debian like Ubuntu is.
@Rep 101 I know what you mean, Android's Linux kernel is a lot different to the desktop linux kernel, Ubuntu is a lot different than Debian although the base of Ubuntu is Debian. Obviously being two different operating system's they are definitely different, it's like Linux Mint, they have an Ubuntu based version and a Debian based version which are very different.
@Rep 101 Debian stable uses old packages I think, Debian SID/Unstable is more like Arch Linux in the way that it's updated a lot more often. I use Arch Linux so I don't need to worry about snap since I can use the official repositories for most things and then the AUR for everything else.
Arch is fun and Debian is reliable
Very true!
No wonder Manjaro is so popular, it mixes those 2 traits very well
Yeah, indeed. Love it. I´m fastest on Arch to install packets. And u will learn much more.
Fun is what you make of things. Debian is enough fun for me too.
@@JoeBloggs777 yes
I was a Debian user for a while already, a few years ago, when I decided to try Arch a bit, as there was all this hype of being so fast and whatnot. At the same time it was rumored to be very difficult to install and manage. But to my surprise and some disappointment, I didn't find it tremendously harder than Debian to manage, the only thing was really having to remember other commands and syntaxes than "apt-get this or that," but bash history handles most of it. There was even a graphical synaptic-like package manager for Arch. I got it to the point that it was virtually a clone of my Debian set-up, but it didn't feel significantly faster in any way, so I ended up getting back to Debian as it was just twice the work to keep everything up to date, with no real gain. One thing I liked a bit more in Arch was the whole boot process scheme it had, instead of SysV, which is more of a complicated network of scripts. Instead it was just one big script that you'd just add or tweak stuff as if it were a more normal script. On Debian/SysV you'd need to edit "scriptlets" in he proper place and then issue some command that would "install" them in the proper place, and they would have to have some kind of comments regarding their dependencies, whether they should start before or after this or that. It was actually more complicated, ironically.
I didn't use Arch for long enough to have some situation that required a lot of manual fixing of things to have the OS working, I guess it was less than six months somewhat dual-booting, even though I'd rarely boot on Debian, instead there is this "chroot" thing that allows you to manage the Debian install from the Arch (or vice-versa), which is kind of funny, sort of feels like "cheating" in a way, not really doing all the work. "I'll update Debian... but I won't even boot on it!" But it's nevertheless more work and not much to gain from it, at least from the perspective of someone who's not a professional sys admin or something like it.
does the storage get's full easily in arch since you update each more often
Not really. Because the new packages overwrite the older ones.
3:26 i want that wallpaper!
Click here : images-wixmp-ed30a86b8c4ca887773594c2.wixmp.com/f/b0c18895-4493-4db4-9964-5918a270b246/d7jtiii-efe64623-7533-492c-bff8-171f9c522288.png?token=eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJ1cm46YXBwOjdlMGQxODg5ODIyNjQzNzNhNWYwZDQxNWVhMGQyNmUwIiwic3ViIjoidXJuOmFwcDo3ZTBkMTg4OTgyMjY0MzczYTVmMGQ0MTVlYTBkMjZlMCIsImF1ZCI6WyJ1cm46c2VydmljZTpmaWxlLmRvd25sb2FkIl0sIm9iaiI6W1t7InBhdGgiOiIvZi9iMGMxODg5NS00NDkzLTRkYjQtOTk2NC01OTE4YTI3MGIyNDYvZDdqdGlpaS1lZmU2NDYyMy03NTMzLTQ5MmMtYmZmOC0xNzFmOWM1MjIyODgucG5nIn1dXX0.phSuHSpQkS3iWdF6WZhnfW61LIzjAcIHGlxEuw_l2D4
Finally someone said it. I thought I'm the only one preferring Debian over Arch
Oh definitely not.
Subscribed! 🙌🏼
Yay! Thank you!
Sorry if this has already been answered, but where did you acquire the awesome mountain wallpaper!?
Just do a web search for "low poly mountains". You'll find the one I'm using along with a bunch of other nice ones.
@@Doriandotslash TY!