• sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    This is unironically why I switched over to Bazzite, and why I recommend it to newbies as well.

    I will tinker too much and break things.

    At least with Bazzite, if I thinker too much in a container, I just throw out the container and try again.

    (And if you insist on fucking up the core OS, presuming at least some of it is still intact, you can rollback/reinstall/rebase fairly easily)

    • Naia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      Bazzite was too limiting for me and the layered updates made updating take forever. I was only using it on a media PC at the time too, so it wasn’t as if I had that many changes.

      I’m perfectly happy with CachyOS. Can basically do whatever I want and snapshots are a nice safety net. Updates take like 2-5 minutes depending on how long it’s been since the last time I ran updates and the power of the system (Steamdeck always takes longer than my desktop or media PC).

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        Hey I mean, if Cachy works for you, that’s awesome!

        I’ve not tried it yet myself, but I’m not gonna be like an insane hyper fan boy for Bazzite.

        I will fully admit to just having had toooo many insane experiences trying to get Arch to do what I wanna do… kinda sucks to have to rely on the AUR for random dependencies for something like building a whole game engine from source.

        But, my use case is not your use case, I’m geneuinely glad you’re happy with what works for you.

        • Naia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          One of the goals of Cachy is to take the pain out of Arch. I’d tried to use various Arch flavors before and I just never had a good experience. Vanilla I had no patience for, Manjaro is known to break more than vanilla with updates (something that happened to me), and Endevor just didn’t feel right for some reason.

          Arch purists aren’t happy about that because it goes against the “ethos” of arch, but they don’t seem to like when a distro comes with a desktop environment.

          Cachy has been pretty painless and I’ve been running it on multiple machines. There are regressions that sometimes happen since it’s still arch and gets the latest updates, but that stuff is usually quickly fixed or rolled back if there is a bigger issue that needs more time to fix.

          The only real issue I had was it revealed a hardware problem with the newer Ryzen CPUs getting unstable in the new lower power CState 6 when idle. Disabling the CState fixed the issue.