this post was submitted on 13 Jan 2025
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I recently took up Bazzite from mint and I love it! After using it for a few days I found out it was an immutable distro, after looking into what that is I thought it was a great idea. I love the idea of getting a fresh image for every update, I think for businesses/ less tech savvy people it adds another layer of protection from self harm because you can't mess with the root without extra steps.

For anyone who isn't familiar with immutable distros I attached a picture of mutable vs immutable, I don't want to describe it because I am still learning.

My question is: what does the community think of it?

Do the downsides outweigh the benefits or vice versa?

Could this help Linux reach more mainstream audiences?

Any other input would be appreciated!

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[–] penquin@lemm.ee 1 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago) (1 children)

See, most of those things you mentioned are new things that I have no interest in getting into. I don't know how to explain it, but the fact that you started listing ways to fix the things that are totally avoidable by me and I don't need to bother with because what I have works fine, is an instant turn off. I've messed with distrobox and I hated it, just like how I hated nixOS. It's just not for me. I can't get into it even if I tired. Distrobox is just another thing I don't need nor want to fuck with, because, again, what I have works perfectly for me. It's different from person to another. You might like to dig into new things, but I don't. I do other things on my machine. I have one workflow and I'd quite literally get into depression if I changed it, no joke. I like to set things one way and keep that one way forever. I've been running Linux since 2018 and have always used Plasma, and have always used it on an Arch based distros(never Arch itself surprisingly). I have had the same set up all these years. I've tried gnome for a while and I literally hated my machine (no disrespect to any gnome user or the gnome team). I hope that makes sense. I get that you defend/advertise/make look good the thing you use. It's an internal justification, I get it, but people have different likes and dislikes.

[–] FooBarrington@lemmy.world 2 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

All that's totally fine! I wasn't trying to convince you. I just don't want newbies to get discouraged by reading "all this stuff is non-standard and you can't tinker and do stuff". Because you can, it's the same stuff.

[–] penquin@lemm.ee 1 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Newbies should have no business messing with stuff like this to begin with. They should start with mint and call it a day. Lol

[–] FooBarrington@lemmy.world 1 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

Definitely not, this kind of system is perfect for newbies. You have a distrobox you can break all day long, and your main system stays nice and working.

That's what I mean. You put it like it's incredibly complicated and strange, when there's pretty much only upsides. Do you have any idea how much time I've spent on various distributions to debug NVidia issues? Everything is working perfectly now, and it has for months. I've never had this good of a Linux experience.