Recently I’ve gave up Windows for Linux and installed Ubuntu with KDE Plasma desktop on my pc and laptop from 2007. It’s an i7 Intel processor with 8gb ddr ram so I thought it would be fine, but it seems quite sluggish. What distro could I use that would be faster and still fully functional? Thanks for your help in advance.

  • GravelPieceOfSword@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Ubuntu uses snaps, which I’ve found sluggish on older ide hard drives. To be honest, even flatpaks are very slow for these in my experience.

    I think you might be better off with opensuse tumbleweed.

    Novelty recommendation besides tumbleweed: antix.

    While I haven’t used antix except out of curiosity in a virtual machine, they are lightweight, but they have a hard stance against systemd.

    • Knuschberkeks@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      give AntiX a shot, I run it on my own older laptop and it’s super snappy. Be aware it doesn’t come with a DE, just your choice of 4 WMs, and is quite bare bones but still a fully functional Distro out of the box.

    • UnknownQuantity@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      Thanks, I have installed tumbleweed today and I like it. It is much faster too. I’m unsure about learning two different sets of commands just when I’m switching. I guess I have time to decide until my ssd arrives.

      • GravelPieceOfSword@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Very cool.

        Interesting timing that opensuse recently announced slowroll, which has a slower cadence for updates (updates with monthly frequency, rather than daily, while security updates are still ASAP.

        Depending on whether frequent updates is you thing or you prefer slightly delayed cycles… you can easily convert your install to slowroll

        https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Slowroll

      • GravelPieceOfSword@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I’ve used a lot of distributions over the years, and I don’t think you have to worry about a different set of commands across most distributions. It’s some variation of distropkgmgr followed by command, where command, where command is generally one of install upgrade refresh/update remove search to name the most common. If you use a software frontend like gnome-software or discover, you don’t even need to worry about command line differences.

        The only exception to that is nixos, which I wouldn’t recommend to someone just switching. It is very cool, just needs more experience.

        The shell commands are the same one installed for the most part.

        Out of curiosity, are you planning to use a different os when your ssd arrives? I switched from Ubuntu to endeavouros (Arch) to Opensuse tumbleweed on my primary laptop (i9 processor), no complaints 😁!