I’ve ready that is a nice and very advanced OS. I run a dell laptop with Intel processor, so I was thinking of checking it out.I did a live disc and it felt like every other version of gnome… Though there are probably many¹ features im not aware of. So what and who is this distro for. Me running Intel drivers, processor, CPU, would it me to make the swap?
- Though there are probably many¹ features im not aware of. - Actually, they aren’t many features, and that’s one of the main drawbacks. Clear Linux isn’t really meant for a general-purpose daily-driver (of course, nothing actually preventing you from doing so, like most Linuxes). It’s mainly aimed at DevOps stuff, AI development, cloud computing, container usage etc. - Speed is it’s main selling point, but it’s speed mainly comes from it’s default packages compiled with extensions such as AVX512 and applying other Intel-processor optimisations. Which means third-party applications won’t get that much of a benefit. It wins synthetic benchmarks and overall the OS feels snappy, but you can get that snappy feel by using a custom kernel like Xanmod on your existing distro. - And here’s the main catch - the package manager sucks, and there’s very few packages in the default repos. You need to compile a lot of stuff, like codecs, if you want to use it as a daily driver. It does have Flatpak, but again, if you use Flatpak packages then you’d be missing out on all the optimisations. - I guess if microarch optimization is it’s main selling point, we can go with Gentoo instead. - While it does requires tech knowledge, if one looks for such optimization, chances are they’re tech savy enough. 
 
- It feels weird to me to invest in a distro that focuses on just one CPU manufacturer for a laptop. If I was trying to hyper-optimize a server then it makes sense. But what if you get very used to how this works and then switch to an AMD laptop in a couple years? Or maybe ARM becomes the next big thing? - I agree, it is strange. But I run Intel tech in my laptop so maybe take advantage? 
 
- Clear Linux or ClearOS? - yea that always confused me, I think it’s clear linux; the one that’s sorta built for intel products - I tried it, it was peppy, but barebones. Similar to MS Mariner CBL. Seemed geared to headless server or purpose built equipment. - Interesting, thanks 
 
 
 
- It’s heavily Intel-optimized as you can tell from the project’s page. The distro is primarily aimed at container workloads but there’s no harm in using it as a desktop distro. It’s supposedly fast! (according to Phoronix benchmarks). - Thanks, I just imagine it working good given my dell xps 13 has all Intel drivers and such 
 


