今日已更新 412 条资讯 | 累计 19972 条内容
关于我们

From Mint to NixOS: Why a Long-Time Linux User Made the Switch

Gavin Murambadoro 2026年06月15日 02:32 2 次阅读 来源:Dev.to

Background I started daily driving Linux back in 2019. The start of that journey was rough, and I still deeply appreciate the help I received in those early days from the old guard who kept me moving forward. Early on, I quickly found my home with Linux Mint and its Cinnamon desktop. As the saying goes, "You don't choose a Linux desktop; the desktop chooses you." Built on top of a stable foundation with a rich package infrastructure, Cinnamon provided a familiar experience that bridged the gap from Windows. It also afforded me excellent customization options right out of the box, such as configuring custom keyboard shortcuts or setting up auto-login startup scripts, while always getting out of my way. No adverts, no pop-ups, just a fast and efficient desktop environment. I won't lie, though: I distro-hopped multiple times just to see if the grass was greener. Through those escapades, I quickly realized I am definitely not a GNOME person; I do not like polyfilling my desktop experience with a suite of extensions. And as much as I appreciate KDE Plasma, I learned that with great customization comes great responsibility because it was far too easy for me to break my environment with just a few theme toggles. This is not a dig at those desktop environments; it just means I am not wired for that kind of experience. As I continued my Linux journey, my priorities shifted. I wanted a predictable operating system that could act as a trusted companion, both for my daily life as a software developer and as a casual user wanting to watch Netflix on the weekends. This is what made me appreciate Linux Mint even more. It featured a predictable release cycle, a stable package base built on Ubuntu LTS, and Timeshift to guard against system breakage during upgrades. However, two major friction points always bothered me: Stable but Stale Packages: Linux Mint's software is incredibly stable, but it is rarely fresh. For example, the okular package is consistently several versions behind

本文内容来源于互联网,版权归原作者所有
查看原文