I apologize if my english isn’t perfect in how you would say it daily, but I hope it’ll help with Linux popularity and as a reference for future days.

For this post specifically I want opinions regarding what would be best for school lab of tech vocational high school (for both computer networking and software engineering).

  1. Package update frequency:
  • A. Years per update (Debian, OpenSuse Leap)
  • B. Every 6 month (Ubuntu/Fedora)
  • C. Rolling Release (Debian Sid or Arch but update whenever (every week/month/semester/year))
  1. Desktop environment:
  • A. Gnome
  • B. KDE Plasma
  • C. Cinnamon
  • D. Lightweight DE (XFCE, LXQT, etc.)
  • E. Other DE (Mate, Budgie, etc.)
  • F. Stacking Window Manager (Fluxbox, IceWM, Openbox, etc)
  • G. TIling or Dynamic WM
  1. Community or Company Distro?
  • A. Community Distro
  • B. Company Distro
  1. Display server protocol:
  • A. Xorg
  • B. Wayland
  1. File System:
  • A. EXT4
  • B. BTRFS
  • C. Other
  1. Immutable?
  • A. Not Immutable
  • B. Immutable
  1. Functionality
  • A. General Purpose (Debian, Arch, OpenSuse)
  • B. Specific Purpose (Debian Edu, Parrot Linux, AV linux, etc.)

Let me know your opinion, perhaps I missed some critical question or maybe some question above isn’t that important to consider.

  • @CameronDev@programming.dev
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    401 month ago

    I think you are missing the most critical features, stability and support. You need whatever distro you pick to be solid. No one cares about the file system or whether it is immutable or not, your users need the computer to work when they use it, and nothing else matters.

    You also need to be confident you can update and upgrade safely and easily, any risk of a broken update will make your life a misery when that happens.

    Kickstart support, or some form of automated deployment will also be extremely valuable so that you can easily redeploy broken boxes with minimal effort. And some form of remote config/admin will also be extremely valuable. You dont want to have to do updates manually one at a time.

    I would pick a general purpose commercially backed OS, so that if you need it later, you can pay for support if there is a problem. And you need to write some basic usage guides, because no matter which distro you pick, if its not Windows, your users will complain when they cant do X the same way it works on Windows.

    • @Sinfaen@beehaw.org
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      228 days ago

      This 100%. Even if you don’t like canonical, you can get Ubuntu for free and then later pay for support if you need. They have experience managing fleets of systems.

      There’s a post on Reddit where a Brazilian state government org is testing out Ubuntu at scale.

  • @bloodfart
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    231 month ago

    Look at what schools in your area are using. Pick that.

    If I had to make a recommendation outside that one: RHEL. You’re literally their target audience.

    • FinOP
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      31 month ago

      thank u for your kind word

  • @ProgrammingSocks@pawb.social
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    1 month ago

    I’m going to say Debian or RHEL. Both are extremely well supported by software and very stable, but you’d get administration benefits with RHEL that you would be missing with Debian. Since these computers are public-facing I’m going to STRONGLY recommend against smaller distros like Zorin or Manjaro.

    Debian and RHEL are proven to be stable for professional work. Debian is especially notable for being on the space station. RHEL is used by basically every company that uses Linux in an enterprise environment.

  • lemmyreader
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    111 month ago

    Package update frequency:

    With Ubuntu and with Debian there is also LTS (Long Term Support) to choose from. For Ubuntu this is five years for the default Ubuntu. I believe it is three years for the community flavors (Kubuntu, Xubuntu and so on). Personally I find the pushing of snaps and Ubuntu Pro by Ubuntu somewhat annoying and confusing, so I’d for Debian at your school.

  • @barbara
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    91 month ago

    I’d use fedora atomic, specifically ublue, because you can fully control what the os is.

    1. It installs updates while it runs and at the next boot it boots into the updated image. If an update fails, it boots into the old image.
    2. Most people don’t know WM. Use a DE. It doesn’t matter which one you use KDE or GNOME. Both are stable and solid. It’s up to you. Maybe choose it based on the apps you use.
    3. Other questions are redundant.
    4. https://universal-blue.org/ https://github.com/ublue-os if you’re interested, use https://blue-build.org/ and your own OS is ready to go within minutes.
    • Possibly linux
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      31 month ago

      I would be careful using Fedora Immutable as it is still fairly untested.

      A stable base and Ansible is probably a safer bet

      • @barbara
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        1 month ago

        What are your specific concerns such that I can learn and adjust the recommendation?

          • @barbara
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            21 month ago

            Still very vague. What needs to be proven such that you would use it?

            • Possibly linux
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              1 month ago

              Proven that it can run without issues. Proven that if you have an issue, you can fix it.

              Don’t put untested software in prod

              • @barbara
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                11 month ago

                No idea where you get the idea from that it has to be proven and that it’s somewhat unreliable and in beta. I get the impression you talk about something different

                • Possibly linux
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                  -11 month ago

                  You don’t put untested software in prod. You just don’t. It might be fine on your machine but don’t put on systems for others

    • @MrSpandex@lemm.ee
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      130 days ago

      I second this recommendation! I’d consider immutably a requirement here. For a little more stability, I’d stay one version behind the current release of Fedora (last 3 are supported at any time). So when 49 comes out, I’d stay on 39 and only update to 40 when 41 releases about 6 months later.

  • Possibly linux
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    1 month ago

    You word structure is a little odd but I think I can figure out what you are trying to ask.

    If you looking for desktops I would focus on stability and reliability. For the desktop you could use something premade like Linux mint or you could roll your own with custom Xfce4 configs.

    The real question is how you are going to manage this. I assume you have some sort of active directory environment but your group policy will not work on Linux. I would setup Ansible so that you can manage all the desktops in one place. You can create a Ansible playbook that domain joins the machines and then sets up the system.

  • @eldavi
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    530 days ago

    if the lab users aren’t adults; i would go with an immutable distro

    • FinOP
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      128 days ago

      that’s what I’ve been thinking

    • Possibly linux
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      51 month ago

      I would go with Xfce4 in this case as it is much simpler in terms of UI and complexity

      • @Revan343@lemmy.ca
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        121 days ago

        I’d lean towards Xfce as well, but for other reasons; school computers aren’t typically the most beefy machines, so a lightweight desktop environment is probably preferable

        • Possibly linux
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          21 days ago

          Gnome will run on anything made in the last 10 years. Computers won’t last that long in a school environment.

          Xfce4 is lighter but it isn’t that big of difference. Xfce4 might also have less of a learning curve.

          The reason I suggested xfce4 is that it works well with Debian releases.

          • @Revan343@lemmy.ca
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            21 days ago

            My experience with Gnome vs Xfce has been Gnome being sluggish; there’s a difference between running and running well/quickly

  • Kubuntu and Fedora KDE are probably the safest options. Linux Mint (Cinnamon) should also work. I’d go with KDE, as it looks and feels similar to Windows, which will make it easier to learn for new users. Cinnamon is another great choice for new users. The file system doesn’t really matter, ext4 should be fine.

  • @Steamymoomilk@sh.itjust.works
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    41 month ago

    Opensuse tumbleweed. Its rolling release and gets lots of packages and is pretty stable NASA uses opensuse for there computers. I run tumbleweed on my laptop and btfs is really good and i havent had any issues minus one time i forced powered off while it was updating and it broke zypper. Plus side tho is the live boot can "upgrade an install and fix things like broken package managment. Aswell as opensuse is based off of rhel so package support is really good

  • suoko
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    31 month ago

    Check zorin os, it’s Ubuntu LTS with a familiar look, and wine well integrated. Veyon sw then is probably good for pc control

  • Eugenia
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    31 month ago

    I’d go with a stable distro, like Debian, or Mint if you wanted something that’s also rather stable and easier to use (Ubuntu underlying structure has a lot of fixes/changes compared to debian).