I’ve dabbled with Linux over the years, first with Ubuntu in the early 2010s, then Elementary OS when that dropped, and a few years ago I really enjoyed how customizable the gui was with Xubuntu. I was able to make it look just like WIndows 2000 which was really cool.
Which current distro has the best GUI, in your opinion? I find modern Ubuntu to feel a little basic and cheap. I guess I don’t really like modern Gnome. I’m currently using Windows 10 LTSC which is probably the best possible version of Windows, but I’d jump to linux if I could find a distro with a gui that feels at least as polished and feature rich as Windows 10 LTSC.
- pfr ( @pfr@lemmy.ml ) 21•1 year ago
Distro is irrelevant. DE/WM choice is all that matters as far as GUI goes. Also, if you want a GUI that looks or feels like windows then KDE probably has you covered in that you could probably customise it to mimic windows.
I quite like the Desktop Environment in elementaryOS. I think it’s called Pantheon Desktop? It’s very polished. Or InstantWM from InstantOS is also interesting and has some nice animations and effects.
Personally, I use simple and minimal Openbox
- Jarmer ( @Jarmer@lemmy.ml ) 6•1 year ago
Yes, exactly. haha, the distro has nothing to do with the GUI. That’s your Desktop Environment. On almost every single popular distro you can get teh same DE’s either through official offerings or community versions.
- Arthur Besse ( @cypherpunks@lemmy.ml ) 17•1 year ago
You can use most desktop environments on most distros.
If a distro has its own GUI and it doesn’t exist on other distros, usually that means either it isn’t free software or it’s not good enough that anyone has bothered to package it for other distros.
- lysozyme ( @lysozyme@lemmy.ml ) 16•1 year ago
Linux Mint Cinnamon. Stable, yet tons of customizations possible and makes the jump from Windows a whole lot easier (I jumped 1.5 years ago and will never look back).
- pAULIE42o ( @paulie420@beehaw.org ) 12•1 year ago
The real question is what Window Manager has the best GUI… you can run any window manager on any distro - it just takes a little work.
If you’re talking about out-of-the-box without any user customization, I’ll make a couple suggestions that I think work for new Linux users - not that I’m saying you’re green, but most power users know they can fully design the OS from the ground up if needed.
PopOS - In between - GNOME-like with some PopOS customizations under the hood.
ElementaryOS - MacOS-like WM thats clean fresh and easy to understand
Mint - Cinnamon DM, Windows-like with some customization possible
- Random Dent ( @CrabAndBroom@lemmy.ml ) 4•1 year ago
As a caveat to this, System76 is working a brand-new DE that they’re writing from scratch in Rust called COSMIC Desktop, so they might become less GNOME-like fairly soon. Although presumably you’ll still be able to install GNOME on it if you really want to.
- pAULIE42o ( @paulie420@beehaw.org ) 3•1 year ago
System76/PopOS always bringing the noise!!
- constantokra ( @constantokra@lemmy.one ) 1•1 year ago
Pop is is great. The tiling is so easy. There’s very little learning curve.
- Skimmer ( @Skimmer5728@lemmy.ml ) 10•1 year ago
i really like gnome, especially with extensions like dash to dock, transparent top bar, etc. really nice, simple, and clean ui imo.
- NullRiver ( @NullRiver@beehaw.org ) 6•1 year ago
Yup, I tend to recommend fedora to my newbie friends because Gnome is simple to switch to and works really well.
- lps2 ( @lps2@lemmy.ml ) 4•1 year ago
Gnome with pop’s cosmic extensions is great. Excited to try their rust based replacement once it’s ready
- asexualchangeling ( @asexualchangeling@lemmy.ml ) 10•1 year ago
Personally I’m a KDE Plasma person, it’s easily customizable and very windows like (though I’m pretty sure in some ways Microsoft has been taking design ideas from KDE)
- argv_minus_one ( @argv_minus_one@beehaw.org ) 9•1 year ago
Distro? Probably Debian, because it has all the desktop environments. If you want, you can have Plasma, Gnome, Xfce, Cinnamon, and MATE all installed at the same time and switch between them at will. Most distros seem focused on one specific DE, which if I’m not mistaken means switching to another involves reinstalling the whole operating system.
The big downside of Debian is that the software in it tends to be very out of date. You’ll get security updates and the occasional bug fix between Debian releases, but that’s about all you’ll get.
You can get a rolling-release experience by running the “unstable” version, but as the name implies, upgrades will sometimes fail or break something, and you need to know your way around the system in order to recover from that. Not a problem if you want to learn to be a Linux sysadmin anyway, but if you want your system to Just Work™, then unstable Debian is unfortunately not for you. It’s a trade-off, as with most things in life.
- howrar ( @howrar@lemmy.ml ) 4•1 year ago
Don’t most distros have access all desktop environments? I’m assuming OP is asking about the default DE.
- PureTryOut ( @PureTryOut@lemmy.ml ) 3•1 year ago
They should specify that then. Because right now I’d also answer the question with “all distros”.
I’m assuming the OP just wants know what GUI we like best, and the distro is irrelevant.
- triantares ( @triantares@fosstodon.org ) 1•1 year ago
@PureTryOut @howrar Well there are distros that are specifically geared to their default DE like #Elive #linux #RetroWave There’s no way any distro can just ‘slap that on’ as the saying goes.
https://www.elivecd.org/download/retrowave- PureTryOut ( @PureTryOut@lemmy.ml ) 1•1 year ago
I… Have never heard of those. I’m sure there are some distros like that, but the majority (and especially the few mainstream ones) just ship and offer all DE’s.
- triantares ( @triantares@fosstodon.org ) 1•1 year ago
@PureTryOut Well, in general installing a different DE on a distro than the default, tends to be a sad experience. There’s lots of work under the hood that are geared to make the default DE nice and slick. It’s the reason why there are distros like Xubuntu, Kubuntu and what not.
- PureTryOut ( @PureTryOut@lemmy.ml ) 1•1 year ago
Tbh the various DE’s should work just fine out of the box without additional distro work done outside of packaging. That’s the case on Arch Linux, Gentoo Linux and Alpine Linux at least, not sure why it would be different on distros like Ubuntu or Fedora.
- Parsnip8904 ( @Parsnip8904@beehaw.org ) 1•1 year ago
They do but I wouldn’t really install two DEs in say Ubuntu because it leaves you with a bunch of confusing shit. Debian does it a nice way where they don’t interfere with each other.
- gnuhaut ( @gnuhaut@lemmy.ml ) 9•1 year ago
I don’t see why distros should be married to a specific GUIs. Any distro can support any number of GUIs. It just seems like a huge waste of effort to make a distro just to support one GUI.
I would encourage people who want to implement their unique vision for a GUI to make their effort easily packagable by any distro and to work with an existing community distro to make their work available widely.
- Lvxferre ( @lvxferre@lemmy.ml ) 9•1 year ago
This is subjective. For me, anything with Mate as desktop environment. Currently using Ubuntu with it.
I’m a conservative user. I don’t really care about whistles and bells, nor appeal to novelty. I want something that works and that I’m used to.
- Parsnip8904 ( @Parsnip8904@beehaw.org ) 6•1 year ago
Is mate being ported to Wayland? I will die on the hill that gnome 2 was peak gnome.
- Lvxferre ( @lvxferre@lemmy.ml ) 2•1 year ago
Initial Wayland support started around 2021. I’m not sure on its current state as I’m still using X, but it’s worth trying.
- Parsnip8904 ( @Parsnip8904@beehaw.org ) 1•1 year ago
That is great. After some unpleasantness with Ubuntu, I ended up switching my dad to Mint + KDE because of multimonitor support in wayland. Unfortunately, KDE + mint has been a bit janky. Now that mate has been ported, I’ll ask him to try that.
- Rentlar ( @Rentlar@lemmy.ca ) 2•1 year ago
MATE is my pick. It’s got all the modern features with a relatively simple baseline that is easy to customize, that also come with several presets.
Two or more start menus? You got it. A Plank dock plus taskbars filled with shortcuts and info covering every other edge of the desktop? Hell yeah! A simple Windows, macOS, or old Ubuntu like interface. Yep. Hide it all away leaving a minimalist and clean space to work? Sure can do!
- Lvxferre ( @lvxferre@lemmy.ml ) 2•1 year ago
Plus it feels to me more feature rich than even GNOME 3.x (where x≤14; I stopped bothering with its releases later on, so I’m not sure on its current state). And it’s easier to get it pretty than Xfce IMO.
- cavemeat ( @cavemeat@beehaw.org ) 9•1 year ago
Imo, I really like linux mint’s cinnamon, its so clean and pretty.
- nickiam2 ( @nickiam2@lemmy.ml ) 8•1 year ago
I just switched to Fedora 38 with KDE and it’s been great! It’s using Wayland now too, so it’s been really smooth and stable. My last distro was Manjaro with KDE, but I started having issues with the lastet round of updates and wanted to switch to something more stable. I really don’t like gnome as it feels to “basic”. Sure it looks nice, but for me it feels like it’s missing some important features that are just there with the default KDE layout.
- WingedSeven ( @WingedSeven@lemmy.ml ) 8•1 year ago
I’m using GNOME on Fedora rn and it’s bussin
- sheinar ( @sheinar@beehaw.org ) 4•1 year ago
Same. Pretty much the perfect setup for laptop usage. I just use a couple of extensions like Just Perfection to tailor it a bit more, like removing the top bar which I personally don’t find useful when I have trackpad gestures and keyboard shortcuts.
- muerwre ( @muerwre@lemmy.ml ) 4•1 year ago
Yeah, vanilla Gnome experience is great. I wish more distros, like Manjaro, would skip their theming to make it much closer to original Gnome DE.
- HandGargling ( @HandGargling@mastodon.social ) 3•1 year ago
@WingedSeven Fedora is pretty much the go-to distro for vanilla GNOME. There’s something really enjoyable about distros that just give the DE as-is instead of trying to turn it into something different.
- Acala ( @Acala@lemmy.ml ) 8•1 year ago
You can change the DE (desktop environment) as you like but I really like Budgie from Solus. My daily driver is Plasma and find myself on openSUSE Tumbleweed. It’s by far the most crash-free and freeze-free experience I’ve had while using Plasma. Note: Installing Nvidia Drivers is at your own risk, though.
- admin ( @admin@lemmy.pipe01.net ) 1•1 year ago
Same here, I’ve been using Budgie for a couple years and it’s awesome!
- Joe_0237 ( @Joe_0237@lemmy.ml ) 8•1 year ago
Feodora and Debian have a GNOME experience that has not been ruined to make less innovative in favor of making the UX more similar (and therefore familiar) to that of the worst desktop operating system available (windows).
If you’ve seen but never really used GNOME in a daily workflow it looks and feels alien. Thats becausethey devs are trying to make something that is friendly to the people who actually use it and intuitive to the people who are new to desktop computing, and they are making no attemt to appease thoes who believe that it is impossible to do better than Microsoft has with Windows.
If you’ve never really used it (and have used ms windows), Vanilla GNOME is alien to you. If you have really used it, nothing else is yet on its level.
- Jakob :lemmy: ( @jakob@lemmy.schuerz.at ) 1•1 year ago
I switched from fvwm2 with heavy customizing over to gnome3 years ago.
I love that UX. Use it all day. Private and on my work-computer.
- nixfreak ( @nixfreak@sopuli.xyz ) 8•1 year ago
i3, and swaywm , I have used almost … All Linux/BSD/Windows/Osx/Unix Desktop Environments. I really like #enlightenment but it can be pretty buggy especially on wayland.
- naeap ( @naeap@sopuli.xyz ) 2•1 year ago
I’m currently quite happy with i3, but would really like to check out Wayland.
currently the support for barrier/synergy (controlling multiple computers with one keyboard/mouse) seems to be not there - although I saw something about a workaround with the newest synergy version.
would you be so kind to give me some other reasons to hold back?
Anything else that sucks in the new world?- nixfreak ( @nixfreak@sopuli.xyz ) 1•1 year ago
I have never used Synergy , but with sway which is built on top of wayland. I can use multiple monitors and it works great for me. I don’t really have a need for multiple computers since I use libvirtd (VirtualManager) and host multiple OS’s and share directories between different systems.
- naeap ( @naeap@sopuli.xyz ) 1•1 year ago
multiple monitors is sadly different than multiple computers, side by side
thanks for the input, maybe I’ll use a test system first :-)