Best bleeding edge distro for a newbie
I know, this is a variant on the ubiquitous "What is the best distro for a newbie?" question. :-)
I am happy with my current distro, Linux Mint 17.3 KDE, but have to balance its stability against the fact that it is more difficult to keep bang up to date with some software e.g. e2fsprogs and new kernels. It is however my working o/s and I crave stability for my work machine. What I would like to do is also install a separate distro which I can keep right up to date for playing about with and learning on. I don't want it to fall over every 10 minutes though. So, what would you kind people suggest as a suitable rolling distro which is well packaged, fairly stable, and will allow me, for example, to upgrade to the latest kernel without too many worries? |
Hi.
Jessie or sid would be perfect but keep in mind to backup your personal data more than usual, have fun! ;) |
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Fedora rawhide to quench your curiosity. I use their kernels (only), never had a problem with them. Currently 4.5.0-rc3, but (obviously) e2fsprogs may be behind the curve. |
I like apt. Keep in mind a netinst plus even Debian with a full blown KDE (recommended I'm on KDE 5.0 now with sid from a netinst) maybe missing stuff you will have to figure to install... :scratch: e.g: NTFS drive supports, proprietary drivers, &c,,, but no worries as Debian (especially jess and sid) have the largest repos. ;)
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Best bleeding edge distro for a newbie
For additionnal learning you could give a shot to AlienBob's live Slackware current.
Then choose to install it if it fits your needs. Often people say that learning with a distribution will teach you this Linux distribution, learning with Slackware will teach you Linux. ;-) |
Try Arch, it is pretty up to date, is a distro for tinkerers with excellent documentation, so optimal for learning, and if you don't go for the Testing repositories is pretty stable.
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I would say Manjaro - Arch without the pain. You can go as bleeding edge as your heart desires...
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Void Linux\monolithic-kernel looks interesting, not loving the big ® but it is only 2016... :D
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/ /home saves personal info more then not, when you want to try another more different linux, or got a re-install the one that got screwed up by no fault of the user by no means whatsoever. :D Linux just does that :D :D LOL :D :D |
Backups best to be redundant, here I use a Blu-ray burner, external ssd and then yes:
I usually use / then have a separate partition (other than home) for my files so if only 1 OS, 3 partitions /, swap and whatever... ;)
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On that note:
I always have at least 2 (free) operating systems installed (one brakes, &c,,, no worries fix it from the other) plus a tablet or phone to google with if in trouble. ;)
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