this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2024
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I ran Fedora Silverblue for the past few months. The selling point that convinced me was that the system you install is the exact same the developers use for testing.
I also hoped it would just update itself without any intervention. And I was fine with default Gnome and Flatpaks.
My experience was that it actually offered no real world benefit. Arch had fewer visible bugs. It crashed a few times, in a way that the only way out was cutting power. The auto-update didn't work, I still had to manually check for updates and click "install", and every update requires a reboot. Sometimes it needed 2. Video streaming was jerky even in the flat hub version of Firefox.
And it's pretty limiting: Many command line tools I'm used to were missing, even Gnome Tweaks was missing (WTF?). Of course I could "layer the image" and alter it to include what I need, but that defeats the entire purpose. And system tools don't work well in containers, either.
There's basically no in-depth documentation on how to do stuff that is standard on other distros but now doesn't work the same due to the immutability. And it had just too many inexplicable quirks to use it as a zero maintenance grandma OS.
I switched back to Debian. Installed just the minimum required base system, the minimum required packages to run Gnome shell, and got all my software from Flatpaks. It looks basically the same, is more stable and bug-free, and I can tinker on the command line if I feel like it.
I made an
which is so much faster than using the gnome software center.
You can also include
&& flatpak uninstall --unused
in your alias to clean up more space.Thanks, added it.
That's what I'm afraid of. Lacking features and having to take weird extra steps to get what I want and tweak the system the way I want.
I'm a bit of a power user and I'm wondering if a immutable distro could work for me over a regular one.
IMO it felt a lot like running Android.
It's important to mention that the specific way by which 'immutability' and all of its associations are implemented, is key to determine what possible limitations are. Perhaps to gain a better grasp on this, consider reading this blog post. Note that due to the (very) active development 'immutable' distros enjoy, not everything found within that article is accurate.
~~Does uninstalling
snapd
on Kubuntu fall under this?~~ Jokes aside, the way that 'immutable' distros want you to do stuff is simply unconventional compared to traditional distros. Heck, even the need to (soft-)reboot to apply changes to the base system is almost unheard of on traditional distros. However, unconventional does not necessarily imply weird. Care to elaborate when something goes from unconventional to weird?It depends on your priorities. There's a 'cost' that comes with going 'immutable'; mostly related to how it's still relatively immature and/or unpopular. However, even in this state, there are problems it solves and tackles that traditional distros don't.
Regarding 'being a power user', like what's even the wildest thing you'd want to do?