Meanwhile Fedora‘s (Red Hat) dominance is never even questioned.
Huh? Pretty sure it’s constantly questioned, especially by those who reject systemd. Sometimes that isn’t hate, but well-reasoned (but occasionally badly worded) rejection.
The hate some have for Ubuntu and Omarchy is ridiculous.
Wasn’t Omarchy made by a fash, TERF or some other kind of extremist? Harmony is great and all, but like with tolerance it can’t be absolute.
Ubuntu gets their well-deserved amount of criticism in my eyes since they still haven’t published the damn Snap server source code (afaik). A distro that had such great ideas in the past like including Amazon ads inside the desktop or silently symlinking apt commands to snap have to do a better job to regain community trust, instead they reject efforts like Flatpak or AppImage and build partial closed-source.
I like harmony too, but please don’t attempt to deligitimise well-reasoned criticism.
Linux users hating on systemd, wayland, emacs, bash, etc. is part of the culture.
The hate some have for Ubuntu and Omarchy is ridiculous. These are some of the best user experience focused distros out there.
Meanwhile Fedora‘s (Red Hat) dominance is never even questioned.
Also you should use OpenSuse, it’s the best distro out there.
Huh? Pretty sure it’s constantly questioned, especially by those who reject systemd. Sometimes that isn’t hate, but well-reasoned (but occasionally badly worded) rejection.
Wasn’t Omarchy made by a fash, TERF or some other kind of extremist? Harmony is great and all, but like with tolerance it can’t be absolute.
Ubuntu gets their well-deserved amount of criticism in my eyes since they still haven’t published the damn Snap server source code (afaik). A distro that had such great ideas in the past like including Amazon ads inside the desktop or silently symlinking apt commands to snap have to do a better job to regain community trust, instead they reject efforts like Flatpak or AppImage and build partial closed-source.
I like harmony too, but please don’t attempt to deligitimise well-reasoned criticism.