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Debian is the love of Debbie and Ian. ☺️
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I love being on Debian, everything just working and not living in fear of updates. And any software that I must have the latest version of I just install via flatpak, appimage, distrobox etc.

i love running Debian on devices i barely use :D
Yes.
i love running Debian on devices i
barely usenever have to touch :DIs how I would put it!
I love Debian. It
- works
I always go back to Debian. It’s the spiral. Even bought a t-shirt.
Debian is great. but where is the fun in greatness? the jank is what makes computing enjoyable. wabi sabi or something like that.
(i use arch btw.)
Arch on my workstations, Debian on my servers.
This is the way.
i too have debian on my homelab, and arch on my main rig

lets goo debian!!
I started with Ubuntu 8.10 on Gnome 2, and switched to Debian 8 after Snaps were introduced in Ubuntu 16.04.
I still use Gnome with a very Gnome 2-esque layout. AND default Adwaita. What can I say, it’s digital home for me. Almost every app I use is Flatpak, so it’s always fresh.
Installed Debian last night hoping to try out the freedombox thing. Haven’t had much time with it but so far I’m very pleased. Runs smooth as silk on an old laptop. It also feels very clean and straightforward.
I might ditch MX for vanilla Debian down the line. (Extra points for them disabling data collection by default and having it as a choice)
There’s a reason why Debian is so popular as a base for other distros. It’s just no-nonsense, does what it’s supposed to do, never expects praise just for doing its damn job.
I switched from Mint to Debian recently and it’s been great so far. I’m still getting used to the idea of no “panel” (tasks bar), but I think I will keep it that way since it looks cleaner. I find it really easy to navigate with just keyboard shortcuts. It does really feel universal.
Only issue that keeps bugging me is that for some reason the sound quality on any Bluetooth device is trash. €100 headset sounds like a €10 one. An issue I didn’t have with Mint, Ubuntu or Windows. I haven’t had time to investigate it yet though, maybe something is missing in the default installation and is just a matter of installing the right package.
You could also install any de on top of debian(for example cinnamon if you liked mint or KDE). Even parallel if you like
Or if you don’t want to uninstall and install a bunch of packages there are official flavors of debian https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current-live/amd64/iso-hybrid/
Yeah, I know, but as I said I kind of like it and I think I can get used to it. It’s not necessarily something wrong with Debian, it’s just that I have been a long time windows user, and then used mint also for a long time, so this is just a habit.
There’s also just LMDE (Linux Mint Debian Edition)
I never actually had to deal with Bluetooth issues on Linux so take this with a grain of salt.
BT audio devices generally support multiple different encodings, for example aptX, but they can always fall back to the most basic and most horrible codec that is universally supported on any BT host device. Sounds like that’s what’s happening. So you might want to look into why your PC isn’t using the better options.
Yes, I thought it might be a code issue. It just seemed weird that with other Debian based distros (ubuntu and mint) I have never had this issue. I hope this weekend I get enough free time to investigate further. Thank you for the tip.
Maybe the necessary codecs just aren’t installed in Debian by default? Mint and Ubuntu are targeted at laptops for general use, so it makes sense they’d bundle all Bluetooth codecs in a default installation to be ready for most users. But Debian makes fewer assumptions like that, and is often used for servers, so perhaps they didn’t want to bloat it with codecs that many installations will never need.
I’m just guessing here, but that makes sense to me.
It’s probably just using the call profile for everything.
https://wiki.debian.org/BluetoothUser/a2dp
This is probably what you’d want to start with. Mint and Ubuntu are probably handling the switch automatically.
Thank you for the suggestion, it might be this. I haven’t had a lot of free time lately, but I hope this weekend I can sit down and investigate.
I’m still getting used to the idea of no “panel” (tasks bar),
I’m using Debian/Plasma and I have a task bar. Maybe it’s optional or depends on environment?
Now you’re making me think I should get rid of my task bar…
Yeah, I completely forgot that during the install Debian gave me multiple choice for the DE. I think I am using GNOME. I don’t remember if I chose it on purpose or it was the default choice and I just rolled with it.
Gnome is typically the default for Debian, if you want that taskbar here is the doc to install KDE Plasma.
Essentially:
sudo apt remove gnome task-gnome-desktop gnome-core gdm -y # alternatively you could also “sudo apt purge *gnome*” but there is a possibility dependencies may get caught up in this sudo apt install kde-full kde-plasma-desktop task-kde-desktop sddm -y # You’ll likely get prompts throughout the install sudo apt autoclean sudo apt autoremove -y sudo reboot
I have never had a problem with debian except for the whole old packages thing
Definitely need to install LMDE on my T460 one of these days. Thanks for the reminder.
Love me some Debian. But I still have to find a proper way to update only some packages to
testingorunstable.Sway is still on 1.10 and has some problems with Godot for example.
I have to set this up right away, that sounds exactly like what i’m needing. Thanks for sharing :)
Distro hop to some Arch-based one, so you won’t have problem with horribly outdated packages.
Actually just hopped from arch (btw.). It was surprisingly stable considering how cutting edge it is. But I tinkered too much with it and just want something with less moving parts and focus on actually working with it.
Debian + nix + flatpak is okayish











