this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2026
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I distro hopped for a bit before finally settling in Debian (because Debian was always mentioned as a distro good for servers, or stable machines that are ok with outdated software)

And while I get that Debian does have software that isn't as up to date, I've never felt that the software was that outdated. Before landing on Debian, I always ran into small hiccups that caused me issues as a new Linux user - but when I finally switched over to Debian, everything just worked! Especially now with Debian 13.

So my question is: why does Debian always get dismissed as inferior for everyday drivers, and instead mint, Ubuntu, or even Zorin get recommended? Is there something I am missing, or does it really just come down to people not wanting software that isn't "cutting edge" release?

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[–] vithigar@lemmy.ca 97 points 22 hours ago (2 children)

For reasons similar to why plain bread doesn't show up in sandwich recommendations.

[–] kernelle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 hours ago

Plain bread is not a fair comparison, Debian is like an old familiar sandwich you keep going back to because it's not fancy, it doesn't use over the top ingredients so it digests very well.

[–] Kronusdark@lemmy.world 23 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

That's my take too... it's certainly a soild choice, but not incredibly exciting.

[–] eldavi@lemmy.ml 25 points 20 hours ago (2 children)

boring is awesome if you need to just work all the time and for a long time.

[–] erebion@news.erebion.eu 5 points 9 hours ago

That's why I recommend it for non-technical users that just need something to browse the web, Debian will not disappoint them.

Also, GNOME is good for that. Many believe it has to look like Windows for less technical people, but people nowadays mostly are more used to Android than Windows, so having overview of open apps, a menu with shutdown and brightness and volume and sort of an app launcher seems quite natural to them.

Recently installed it for people that have never used Linux before and they immediately got it. One of the two struggles with writing emails and attaching files and things like that, but GNOME is simple for them.

Often simple solutions are the best, flashy solutions break and don't give the stability that's expected.

[–] Holytimes@sh.itjust.works 2 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

Debian is the absolute goat so long as your work flow fits inside of the scope of Debian which 99% of everybody's well, even most regular normal gamers will do just fine in Debian using flat packs.

You just have to also accept the fact that if you're doing something niche like VR gaming or using weird third-party custom hardware or something Debian sucks ass. A lot of my VR kit straight up doesn't even support anything that uses apt.

It only supports Fedora and Arch. Because a lot of it straight up will not work with flat pack anything. There's just no support and s*** brakes constantly. You need up-to-date libraries and some of these libraries update multiple times a week. It's just not inside the scope of something like Debian.

Always try Debian first. If it doesn't work then try something else. It's usually the best rule of thumb.

[–] eldavi@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 hour ago

agreed, Debian's rock solid for 99.99% of people.

You just have to also accept the fact that if you’re doing something niche like VR gaming or using weird third-party custom hardware or something Debian sucks ass.

i've worked on predominantly debian based infrastructure professionally for multimedia companies in the last 10ish years, so it's a little bit funny to me that og flavored debian doesn't do this, but it clearly can if you can afford an army of developers to create it for you.

entire multi-billion dollar revenue streams literally exist because of debian doing this and doing it well, but everyone popularly and unquestioningly believe that you can't do it on linux. lol