I've been using Fedora since 2014 and quite happy with it. It just works and gets out of my way, allowing me to focus on actual work. Gone are the days of me using minimalistic window managers with custom config, I just use vanilla gnome now and get on with real things.
This last decade I've come to hate any config of my work environment that takes time away from actual work.
Jumped on Silverblue around november last year and now it's my new favorite distro. I honestly believe this is the future of all Linux distros, even for servers.
The main feature I think is great for end users is the ability to quickly restore your system to a previous state. I was always of the opinion that things WILL go wrong, so an OS must be able to handle that.
I've since heard that using Arch you can setup btrfs snapshots in Grub in a similar way. The goal here isn't to use one distro over another, the goal is to be more user friendly. Even for users such as me with 20+ experience in Linux, because every second I spend fixing problems or config is a second away from actual work.
This last decade I've come to hate any config of my work environment that takes time away from actual work.
Jumped on Silverblue around november last year and now it's my new favorite distro. I honestly believe this is the future of all Linux distros, even for servers.
The main feature I think is great for end users is the ability to quickly restore your system to a previous state. I was always of the opinion that things WILL go wrong, so an OS must be able to handle that.
I've since heard that using Arch you can setup btrfs snapshots in Grub in a similar way. The goal here isn't to use one distro over another, the goal is to be more user friendly. Even for users such as me with 20+ experience in Linux, because every second I spend fixing problems or config is a second away from actual work.