I’m resetting windows 10 on my Thinkpad T580 for work but would like to create a partition for linux. It’s an older laptop and really chugs through games like Minecraft or RuneScape but I enjoy playing relaxing games while I listen to audiobooks at night. I grew up using windows which is why I’ve mostly used Ubuntu and ZorinOS in the past but I’d like to expand my horizons to something like kubuntu. I value good UI/UX design and something lightweight for my old potato. Any recommendations on Linux distros?

** Thanks for all the input! I tried Fedora first but it felt kind of clunky to me. Then I tried out Mint xfce and it’s right up my alley! I can run a separate Firefox profile right off the task bar that runs outside of my VPN which is perfect for Netflix and other sites that have issues. So far loving how customizable it is. Minecraft runs ok off GDLauncher, and lutris is really cool. I forgot I had a boat load of old GOG games that are perfect for this laptop. I really fucking love Linux 😆

  • GandalfDG@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    If you want to shake things up with an arch derivative you can try EndeavourOS, there are a lot of different DEs you can choose straight from the installer

    • Tretiak@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      To any user that reads this comment, only install Debian if you can understand this quote, else, you may want to consider otherwise!

    • Trash Panda@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      IMO one should never recommend manjaro. To suggest an easy arch endeavouros should be the way to go, why? Because the manjaro devs make way too many mistakes and a mistake or two can happen to anyone, but when it happens often it becomes a pattern, one where I wouldn’t want someone to deal with if it can be avoided.

        • CheshireSnake@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Definitely try it. I started Linux with Mint since it’s the closest to Windows I could find. Later on I wanted to try bleeding edge but vanilla Arch was too complicated for a noob like me. Until I found EOS. The transition was smooth and painless. I learned more about Linux in a few months with EOS than years on Mint, but that’s a me problem. Now I have vanilla Arch on my VM and EOS on my laptop bare metal. It’s pretty stable, and that one-time Grub issue was the only hiccup I ever experienced that was not due to my stupidity. Lol.

          Now I want to try Gentoo, but man it’s even more complicated.

  • UrbenLegend@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’d say give a few Arch-based distros a try, or just straight up Arch if you’re feeling adventurous. Arch distros are just slim and speedy, which could be good for your old laptop. The new official archinstall tool makes it relatively easy compared to installing Arch the manual way, but if you’re looking for more ease of use EndeavourOS is a great option.

  • jjsearle@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    One of the Fedora spins, or if you are feeling brave Fedora Silverblue or Fedora Kinoite.

  • Trash Panda@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    If your laptop is on the potato side I would personally avoid kde, it’s much lighter now than it used to be but still heavier than other options. Mint looks good in my personal opinion and, again in my opinion, is a better alternative if compared to ubuntu, it’s based on it but with some improvements. The default flavor comes with cinnamon, but if your laptop struggles it’s also available with xfce, which even older machines should be able to handle.

    • Rassilonian Legate@mstdn.social
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      1 year ago

      @raccoon @Triage8420@lemmy.ml @linux_gaming
      I put xfce on a garbage laptop for my parents (who are used to much older windows) and they loved it, the laptop ended up breaking eventually but that was a hardware issue and they regularly ask me when I’ll be able to replace it

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Stick to the main distros unless you have a specific reason to use a novel one. Despite its drawbacks, KUbuntu is great and I definitely recommend it. Once you find a thing or two you don’t like about it, you can swap to a distro that does those things differently and you’re off to the races :)

    PS Linux can breathe new life into a laptop, but if apps are too intense for your hardware it won’t magically give you more RAM… With the exception of Minecraft Prism Launcher + Fabulously Optimized, then your Linuxtop turns into a NASA supercomputer

  • Barbarian@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’m a Linux vet who’s been around the block. I’ve tried all the major distros, used Gentoo for a few years, Arch the same, and a bunch of smaller distros.

    Nowadays, I just want my computer to start up and run my programs with as little fuss as humanly possible. I’m far too lazy to rice or optimize anything, and I have little patience to troubleshoot the next big awesome thing.

    Consequently, I use Kubuntu with Wayland. It chugs along and does everything I need it to.

    • DarthRedLeader@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Basically the same thing here, but with Fedora Workstation. I had my fun, now I just want to work in peace without having to fiddle with something every few weeks.

    • Trash Panda@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Same but with mint. I used arch when it didn’t have an install script, now I’m far too lazy for it. I’m not as experienced as other arch users or gentoo users but I could set my arch up no problems. Now I just don’t see the point, it’s not like my pc can’t handle some bloat.

      Resources not being used are wasted resources so… may as well use them for quality of life.

  • Hexadecimald@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Check out Fedora Silverblue.

    I really think having a stateless root is the future of computing. Silverblue has a big focus on using Flatpak and containers to cover most use cases.

    The only issue is the default Gnome would probably be too heavy for your hardware but (as others have mentioned) you can overlay KDE and use that instead.

    Edit: as others have said below check out Kinoite for a Silverblue spin with KDE by default.

    • noplexa@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      I think plain, vanilla, mutable Fedora is still a more solid choice for newcomers, it’s just easier to find help with a “regular” distro.

      I’ve been trying uBlue on my daily driver laptop, and so far, the immutability of the system has not really hindered me, but I still think it’s not ready for primetime yet.

      • Hexadecimald@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Probably true, but I find that new users tend to try to solve problems by installing random RPMs they find online and tainting their systems.

        Pushing an immutable OS puts up a barrier that may be annoying, but forces them to do things in a more reasonable way (or they can overlay those random RPMs, with the advantage that they are easier to track since rpm-ostree status will always show a list of manually overlayed packages)

      • Hexadecimald@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        The root filesystem is read only so neither you or applications can write to it. If you wanna find better results it’s probably more often referred to as “immutable” since calling it stateless is maybe a bit loaded on my part.

    • d3Xt3r@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Flatpak apps are a PITA for interoperability and modifications though, so I’ll stick to traditional RPMs thanks. I prefer the ease and flexibility of tinkering with my system more than anything else.

      • Hexadecimald@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I actually disagree. I use Flatpak and also maintain a Flatpak myself and I think nowadays they’re mostly af parity with regular applications.

        They also solve dependency issues in neat ways which is nice. For example the application I use makes use of a Wine extension that tracks an older Wine, which is something that is particular annoying to deal with outside of the Flatpak environment IMO.

        • d3Xt3r@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Then let’s agree to disagree, in my experience they’ve been more of a hassle to deal with. Eg trying to fix the weird DPI/tiny cursor issue in the flatpak version of Steam was a pain, same with trying to pass custom flags to flatpak Edge. It’s just one hassle after another. I can deal with a couple of apps here and there, but I can’t imagine having the entire system depend on Flatpak as a crutch.

          As for your Wine example, I’m not sure which application you’re referring to, but Wine is basically portable and doesn’t need installing, eg for Wine-GE, you just need to download and extract the tarball and set the correct WINEPREFIX/path, so you can easily have multiple versions of Wine on your system without Flatpak or anything complicated.

  • BlinkerFluid@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    MX Linux.

    Imagine Linux Mint Debian edition, but it isn’t green and there are a lot of useful GUI tools. It’s also so near to actually being Debian that you can just install things meant for Debian on it. It also runs a backported kernel for modern graphics driver and chipset support so you get your stability and your performance all in one.

  • sandblast@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    As someone who is also new to linux, they’re all pretty simple to use. I honestly struggle to find any major differences in any distros other than the command to get applications not in the repo store. Personally I use pop os on wayland on an old macbook and the battery life had been stupendous. On desktop I’m on fedora 38. Gnome 44.1 has been extremely polished.

  • zedro@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I think Arch Linux could be for you. You can install it with archinstall script. It’s relatively straightforward.

    • png@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      If they want to tinker, but dont want to install arch from scratch, endeavour is the way. If they want their system to just work, they should go with Pop!.

    • toolschism@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Use Pop OS for my wife’s gaming VM, but I use Arch for my main gaming PC. Would absolutely recommend it. We’re kinda spoiled these days, gaming on Linux has never been easier.

    • HegemonSushi@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      If you’re on well-documented hardware, I agree that Arch is definitely a contender. I’ve been using it on my gaming pc for a few years now and it’s been more stable than any Windows install, not including the occasional self-inflicted damage from tinkering.

  • feetongrass@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Regata OS is a gaming oriented customization of Opensuse Tumbleweed. I’ve been using it for a year without issues.

  • aRatherDapperFox@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    My vote goes to OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. It’s a beautiful system, and the most stable rolling release I’ve ever had the pleasure of running. I’ve tried so many different distros, and I always end up coming back to OpenSUSE.