I like the idea of immutable systems. They allow you to rollback updates/package installs, they break less often and it keeps the system away from the apps.
I’ve never had an issue with it since I started to use it and I will probably never look back.
On Kinoite now and loving it, my next planned direction is ublue, because I really want to go the cloud native desktop route. I might even try and see if I can get my desktop stuff into a separate container running ontop of minimal coreos style system. Then building a new system, attach to new tty, and switching to see if I like it, will be my default tinkering path. Basically extend the toolbox concept to take care of the gui desktop space too.
Universal Blue Link to ublue’s website
I like the idea of immutable systems. They allow you to rollback updates/package installs, they break less often and it keeps the system away from the apps.
I’ve never had an issue with it since I started to use it and I will probably never look back.
If you like immutable systems, you might want to check out Fedora Kinoite if you haven’t already.
I used kinoite before switching to uBlue Bluefin and it’s what made me like immutable systems a lot.
I switched to it because I wanted to try it out, mainly because of the ubuntu-like desktop experience
On Kinoite now and loving it, my next planned direction is ublue, because I really want to go the cloud native desktop route. I might even try and see if I can get my desktop stuff into a separate container running ontop of minimal coreos style system. Then building a new system, attach to new tty, and switching to see if I like it, will be my default tinkering path. Basically extend the toolbox concept to take care of the gui desktop space too.