Ubuntu Mate on two main PCs. One running windows ten for TurboTax 😭
I dual boot Windows and Fedora on my personal desktop. To keep gaming and productivity separate.
Personal laptop swaps between Fedora, PopOS, and Endeavor.
Work is Fedora or PopOS on my XPS and MacOS on my M1 (not by choice, but Linux for Apple Silicon is not completed).
Wife's computer is Windows since she games and does school work.
pop os on my laptop and pc, steam os on my deck. my work laptop uses mac os, and they had me use a w*ndows machine for a while but that's getting shipped back soon.
i'm not really surprised at the demographics here; it does make sense that so many of us would prefer the foss operating systems
Void linux with swaywm. Its blazingly fast and I lime to tinker
This week it's arch, though I do dual boot win11 specifically for iracing and iracing alone as that doesn't let me run it under proton.
Manjaro i3 as my personal machine.
Mac OS on M1 MBP as my primary work machine.
Win 11 on the company-provided laptop, primarily for when I need Windows-only software (Visual Studio, etc.) or run labs in Hyper-V.
Windows 11
My personal PCs all run Linux Mint my work PC is Win 11 because we need to use Ms Office for certain things.
Linux Mint (Cinnamon) as my daily driver, and if I absolutely must use Windows for something then it's LTSC IoT edition (at least then it is usable!)
I'd still be on Windows 2K if it weren't for everything. Stayed with 7 as long as I could. Given up caring now.
Windows 11. Because my PC comes with a 12th gen Intel processor, and from what I've heard Windows 10 doesn't really know how to address the P and E cores properly. I've tried both Linux and macOS, they're both not my cup of tea, and I keep finding myself crawling back to Windows.
On my old laptop, I was using Windows 10.
Windows 11 for gaming and SuSE Tumbleweed for work and development, mostly Rust.
Only thing preventing me from gaming on SuSE is that the speakers on my Asus Strix laptop sounds godawful on Linux and the microphone is full of static crackle.
Fedora, because it works well out of the box, and I like GNOME.
Ubuntu guest, Windows host. Windows - good enough for most things. Ubuntu - open to neglect, unlike Arch. Easy to work with, i3wm is amazing. Allows me to do actual “work” without having to learn how people program on windows.
I use Solus OS . Pretty much the perfect distro for me , I have tried so many distros (ubuntu , mint , endeavour , fedora etc) but no one felt as smooth and snappier to me as solus . Eopkg(it's package manager) might be limited but has all the softwares I need m so no complaining from my side . Also I like how fast it is . Solus is a rolling release distro and is still very stable , never encountered any problems with it . I was afraid that it may die and started looking for alternatives ,sadly never found one as good as solus to me . But thankfully Solus's founder and buddies of budgie's lead are back and making sure the project isn't dead.
Debian Testing with XFCE. When I need Wayland (for testing my app), i use Sway.
- Performance. I'm stuck with an old computer right now.
- No reliance on quirky black-box packages. It is less 'wrapped' unlike Mint, and more 'wrapped', unlike Arch. Compared to Arch (btw), Debian has some distro-management apps, like
update-alternatives
andsynaptic
. Also, it breaks less often, provided the system is used properly.
Also, I use Debian Stable on a VPS, because you don't want to sacrifice security to bleeding edge.
After using Pop OS for about a year I'm going back to Debian. I missed the stability and the new Debian 12 is very polished.
Garuda Linux on my laptop, because I need a system that can play my absurd steam library, emulate like a champ, compile a wide variety of things easily, and support an array of random other tasks like media dumping and ham radio programming. It's treated me well thus far.
I'm using Linux Mint on my laptop simply because it's the one I'm most comfortable and in love with.
Arch linux - Love the bleeding edge side of it, as well as the AUR, and wanted something with a bit more learning potential than Fedora, which is what I was previously using.
Both Windows 11 and Arch Linux with KDE. I am using my PC mostly for gaming and drawing. Since almost all games in my steam library work without tinkering and Krita and Aseprite work like a charm I rarely use Windows 11 at the moment.
Depends. My laptop has Windows 10 as a backup, but runs current Linux mint w/cinnamon DE
My desk pc is on Windows 7, with a secondary drive I can boot from that's tuning running mint as well.
The household pc is running debian w/plasma because my wife likes it better than cinnamon. I tried mint on it, and gor whatever reason, it didn't "like" mint but debian works fine.
There's also the old PC I used to use as my writing computer. It's running debian with xfce because it doesn't get used by anyone else, and it's slow as hell with plasma or cinnamon. I don't really use it much, but nobody wanted the damn thing, so I keep it set up for the occasions when I need to be able to lock a door so I'm not interrupted. Which is when I have writer's block, not the other thing lol.
Windows for when I'm gaming and anything else Popos. Linux is getting more support than ever for games thanks to valve/steamdeck though so I find myself switching back to Windows less and less
I use a wide variety of machines, but my main desktop runs windows because I pretty much do nothing on it but play games. I have installed arch on another drive but for me an OS is either one or the other, so I mostly stick with windows because, like I said, games just work on there. That being said, I am in love with arch from using it on my school laptop and would love nothing more for everything made for windows to just work on arch.
Edit: Because another comment mentioned it, another reason why I stay on windows is for VR
I have three laptops.
My late-2010s home laptop runs Debian 11, because strangely nothing else will boot anymore.
My late-2000s ThinkPad runs Arch, because I like pacman and a ThinkPad like that needs a hackery OS. BSD, Slackware, Void and Gentoo would also fit, but I prefer Arch.
My mid-2000s MacBook runs GNU Guix. Not really sure why I picked it, but it's a working system on fussy hardware, so I'm happy. However, being a Mac, this doesn't really count as a PC.
Windows because my favorite games don't work on it and neither does any of Adobe's apps.
I'm thinking about buying a used mac because I'll need it for crossplatform testing of apps.
Void Linux on my Thinkpad and Thinkstation. On Pinephone and Pinetab I'm running postmarketOS. I really like postmarketOS and using apk, so if I were to get a new laptop or every change the distro on my laptop or desktop, then I might try Alpine. On raspberry pi 3, it's raspbian. I use that mainly to run pi-hole and pivpn.
I distro hopped for a little while, but then settled on Void. It does what I need and was easy to get set up how I want. It's a rolling release and I haven't ever had any big issues with upgrading. The worst issue I've had was when they recently removed pipewire-media-session and switched to wireplumber. After checking a couple posts on reddit and on void's documentation, I got it set up the recommended way without any trouble and audio is working fine.
edit: wanted to add that my Thinkpad also has OpenBSD as a dual boot option, but I haven't booted into it in a long time. One day I'd like to try a BSD as a server(not on a laptop, of course.) Also, the Thinkstation has Windows 10/Void dual boot, but I never boot into Windows.
I use a form of Linux on all my devices except for my work laptop, but I use WSL2 mostly.
Fedora 36 on both my desktop and laptop. (that's GNU/Linux). Its not the latest because I have outdated hardware. Occasionally dual booth Windows for Valorant and FL Studio.
As to why. I enjoy an Operating System where I can change everything. For me this is Linux. I customize to the point where everything works then I don't touch it. I used to be obsessed with changing stuff. But this way I have it the way I like it. If anyone is curious, go check out !unixporn@lemmy.ml
Ubuntu at home (with sway), and unfortunately macOS for work (with its badly-broken and nonsensical window management)
Fedora. Why? Because its the best!
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