Used to do pop, currently manjaro, liked it a lot and might go for straight arch in the future.
A few nitpicks here and there, since I do gaming and general internet browsing, it's a hit or miss situation, but usually solving a problem means it won't be a headache in the future, unlike with windows. In general it's just tradeoffs, you get to brush off really stupid issues that pop up on windows for no good reason, but then compatibility (which afaik is actively worsened on purpose) becomes an issue with multiple elements that have to be circumvented individually, like the drm chip on my xbox controller or browser hardware acceleration.
My main reason is that I hate windows, but I'm progressively liking the concept of not being owned by the companies that make my software more and more.
Tbh lemmy is already oversaturated with linux content. I use Zorin OS, and before that I was using Mint for a very long time, then tried out Pop OS!. It's my computer, so I use it whatever I want for. Zorin looks very good, is very stable (because kernel and software are not the bleeding edge). I switched to Linux because I was unable to install Windows on my brand new PC (some kind of error, I don't remember anymore).
Everything I need. Study, programming, browsing, gaming, talking on Discord.
It works fine. I sometimes get black screen for 0.5 second at random, like maybe once every week. Also sometimes after suspending I need to restart pipewire to get audio back. But these are minor inconveniences.
I didn't want to limit myself with windows. On Linux I can do what I want. And programming dependencies are way easier to install. like make, gcc, cmake, rust cargo, etc.
daily everything (programming, gaming, whatever else flies my way)
good, wouldn't recommend this in particular to new people unless they aren't afraid of a steep learning curve
privacy, more control over my system, and my computer finally does what I tell it to. (Even if sometimes it probably shouldn't, but then that's on me). Oh also: it makes programming so much more enjoyable. Need a dependency pacman -Syu whatever-i-need, done.
Probably the installation of the distro itself, since it doesn't have a graphical interface that most computer savvy people are used to. I've heard that nvidia driver installation used to be complicated, and it's usually necessary to employ command line for that. And even after you install Gnome or KDE, you'd still probably have to use bash for many, many things that you want to adjust or install. Oh, and since it's a rolling distro, it can easily stop working after you update it.
That's what I know, I've never used Arch myself, been sticking to Debian-based distros for now.
I utilize both Arch & Debian. Arch is for my daily driver, it would've been Debian but I don't want to make a Frankedebian by updating to latest GPU drivers and other utilities. I use it for just about anything, solid distro, not much to say.
Debian is my distro of choice for anything server related. The services I host are all on Debian. It's reliable, secure and focuses a lot on free software.
Yeah I like Linux Mint a lot. Great way to breathe some life into an old, otherwise unusable Windows computer, or just a nice intro to Linux without the obnoxious UI stuff from Ubuntu.
Kubuntu on my main while I set up my Proxmox VE home lab. Plasma is superbly customisable, but there's something about Gnome that's so pleasing to the eyes that makes me look up ways to make Gnome work for me.
I have decided that xRDP is how I want to access my VMs (the only protocol that I'm able to reliably get multi display to work without additional configurations), so that's my bare minimum requirement for now. The test Debian VM I had straight up would not install the xRDP Easy Install script.
Switched to Linux (on my spare laptop) because that's what the programming tutorial I was following at that time recommended (though I've had experience with Ubuntu on and off before this). Such a delightful experience setting up programming stuff on Linux compared to Windows (I know WSL exists, but I like to keep my environments separate). Now my Linux spare laptop is my main PC, while I've barely turned on my "main" Windows laptop lately. Helps that my entertainment is mainly YouTube and not much gaming, though I played a few steam games on it before with a few quirks.
I use Linux in the cloud- Ubuntu, Amazon Linux 2, RHEL. Pretty much the whole internet runs on Linux, so that’s what I do- app servers, load balancers, workstations, etc.
I went with kubuntu. Mostly used for internet surfing and media viewing. Has been considering to switch to open suse. Doesn't want to pay nor subscribe to anything for such usage.