this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2024
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There are plenty of desktop focused immutable Linux distros. With Fedora Sikverblue/Kinoite probably being the most prominent one, but there are also Vanilla OS, the ublue distros and the one I'm personally using, (openSUSE) Aeon. NixOS technically counts too I think, but that one has it's whole own philosophy/structure that extends way beyond just being immutable
Pros: increased stability/less risk of breakage, sepaeation of base system/apps that will be more intuitive to many non-Linux users, (Flatpak) apps tend to always be the newest version
Cons: still some smaller pain points around app integration, some flatpaks might have some features that don't fully work or you might need to change a permission (this has gotten a lot better already though), less suited for tinkerers
Don't forget blendOS! Immutable and declarative Arch that kind of borrows from the Nix philosophy.
Just a note to OP since they mentioned Kubuntu: Aeon is the Gnome version of OpenSUSE MicroOS Desktop. The KDE version is called Kalpa. (Kalpa is however still in beta)
I know I'm late to the party, but ~~don't~~ do you think Aeon is ready to be a daily driver?
I currently run Debian stable, but I'm interested in Aeon as an alternative.
Many people (including me) have run Aeon for years. It's definitely usable as daily driver. It's also in RC3 stage right now and should switch to it's first "proper" release any day/week now.