Good points. Thanks for your post.
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My first post here. I have used Kubuntu since 10.04 (various tries in between with PCLinuxOS, and OpenSuse), currently running 15.04. I have triple boot system, Windows 7 for games (soon 10), Kubuntu and PC.BSD for other uses. If worst happens to Kubuntu, I'll probably move entirely to PC-BSD. Yeah it is not Linux distribution as it is based on FreeBSD, but at least for desktop computer it is quite decent.
Pros:
-Rock solid filesystem (ZFS)
-Rock solid update system based on ZFS snapshots and beadm.
-Nvidia blob will be installed automatically if you have supported gpu.
-Pretty decent KDE experience (Though Plasma 4 still, Plasma 5 support is still higly experimental)
-Proprietary codecs installed as default.
-Big running filecopy operations do not render system unusable to other tasks.
Cons:
-Software tends to be older as porting to FreeBSD takes some time, most software is made for Linux first.
-Hardware support is limited, mine works.
-As Linux moves away since SystemD from other Unix-likes there will be problems with various desktop integration tasks.
-ZFS is quote resource intensive.
-System is somewhat more sluggish in certain tasks.
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Out of curiosity I installed PCBSD as a guest OS. It used an install process I haven't seen in years; after the basic system is installed it reboots and then requires user and root information, but no reboot after that is given. The user login appears immediately. I've never used the ZFS system and wanted to explore it sometime, which is the real reason why I installed this OS as a guest.
PCBSD uses the KDE 4.14.3 desktop. On the first bootup it gave a "Virtuoso is missing" msg. After I installed it the subsequent boots did not display that msg. However, each boot is met with a VirtualBox Err but the guest appears to run OK.
Sluggish is being polite. Installing a single app using AppCafe takes an eternity, and starting apps from the menu takes only slightly less time. Visually the OS look nice. The user base is small but the developers appear to be dedicated."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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I'm running it on hardware directly. Virtualbox tends to be little bit sluggish with every OS compared to running directly on hardware. With i5, PC-BSD is noticeably more sluggish than Kubuntu, but not so much more that it would render system inconveniently slow. Mine does not nag about lacking Virtuoso, maybe your installation hit some snags.
Yes userbase is small, but devs really are dedicated. Community is also welcoming and beginner friendly, especially when compared to FreeBSD community, which on the other hand is very friendly when compared to OpenBSD community.
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Originally posted by MoonRise View PostNOTE: Went back to Kubuntu. Netrunner is good but there was something "off" from Kubuntu. Don't know what, but I'm happy where I am.
Nice to see you back in the fold
VINNYi7 4core HT 8MB L3 2.9GHz
16GB RAM
Nvidia GTX 860M 4GB RAM 1152 cuda cores
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Reminded me of this, which is still around, since 2005:
(A) One Grub menu that boots 100+ systems
The 100+ systems comprise of
3 Dos
3 Windows
5 BSDs (in Part 2 Menu)
2 Solaris (in Part 2 Menu)
97 Linux including 2 versions of NetBSD
It's (obviously) for GRUB Legacy. That's about when I learned GRUB. So I had many OSs on my HDD, many. Many. Experimented. After awhile (like after a couple weeks or so), I never used them, only booted into two OSs: Kubuntu and XP. I only booted XP once a month to get updates and run CCleaner. I maintained XP until about six years ago, then bye-bye, dd if=/dev/zero & out_you_go (I even, still, have the legal XP disk, OEM, got from NewEgg when I built that machine). Right now I have Mint KDE and Debian Jessie 8. I never boot into them. Mint KDE is OK, fine, no problems, but it just ain't got the feel of Kubuntu 14.04 LTS.An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
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... which reminded me of the original GRUB material,
Erich Boleyn's Home Page
http://www.uruk.org/~erich/
and the original GRUB documentation, ver. 0.5
GRUB -- GRand Unified Bootloader
version 0.5
by Erich Boleyn
http://www.uruk.org/orig-grub/An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
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On my part I stick with Debian 8. There's almost no difference w/ Kubuntu LTS, however its future is much more foreseeable than Kubuntu's. Anyway I must thank all the contributors on Kubuntu for their amazing work (and the ten years I spent with that distro)
For me here are the pros and cons of Debian stable :
Pros :
- Veeeeeeeeeeerrrry stable, much more than *buntu actually. (I didn't think so previously but now I can confirm) No need for a kernel upgrade every week (avoiding the need of rebooting the machine)
- Much less software installed by default, making the system much easier to customize and actually much lighter and faster.
- In a mid-term, only Wayland, no need to have three different graphic stacks for the same system.
- Very close to SteamOS (yes I'm a Linux gamer) due to Canonical crappy politics. Actually in SteamOS they just updated some packages and suffixed software versions with bsos.
Cons :
- Somewhat outdated software (but partially fixed thanks to backports, and the software is at level of Kubuntu 14.10 for Debian stable)
- Problem with some recent hardware. I had to pin Nvidia 346 blob from SteamOS to make my GPU work.
- Much less out of the box experience. (Notably with proprietary codecs which come from a separate repo and so on)Last edited by julek; Jul 19, 2015, 10:46 AM.
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julek, nice, clear summary of pro's and con's. I was thinking someone should post such. I'm sticking with Kubuntu 14.04 LTS, though I do have Debian 8 installed on a partition. Thanks.An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
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Your summary, julek, is why I'm reserving Debian Jessie KDE as my go to distro if things go south with Kubuntu.Last edited by GreyGeek; Jul 20, 2015, 01:00 PM."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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