Deepin Linux - Printable Version +- Makestation (https://makestation.net) +-- Forum: Technical Arts (https://makestation.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=45) +--- Forum: Software (https://makestation.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=104) +--- Thread: Deepin Linux (/showthread.php?tid=2389) |
Deepin Linux - Darth-Apple - April 8th, 2019 I've been using my MacBook Pro as my sole compute device for the past few years. It's an old model with a 1280x800 screen. Serves me very well indeed, but I do development on this thing. The screen is a mood killer, 110%. Well, I had an old Lenovo G710 (2.5 ghz dual core haswell (4th gen) i5, 16 gigs of RAM, 240 gig SSD), and the thing is gigantic. 17 inches, 1600x900 display, and otherwise a terrible design. Horrible battery life, heavier than the most heavy gaming laptop, and gigantic in just about all regards. Windows doesn't exactly boot on this thing, so I started finding some linux distributions. I settled with Deepin, very much by surprise. It's a Chinese linux distribution that isn't particularly popular here in America. From my past couple weeks of rumaging around reddit, it seems like very few people actually use it in the English-speaking community. This was almost a turnoff to me, but I decided to use it for a variety of reasons. I started off very skeptical, but let's just say the experience managed to change my mind.
Because it's based on Debian, I figured that if I needed to dig deep into the system, I could look up Debian tutorials and most likely find what I need. From a couple weeks of experience so far, it definitely appears like this is very much the case. It doesn't seem they refactored things too greatly under the hood. This was originally a concern for me, but I'll say this, if you're familiar with Debian (or Ubuntu even), you'll be fine here. Overall, I'm very highly impressed. I *might* go back to Ubuntu once 19.04 comes out. (Even though Deepin's repositories seem to be much better, in Ubuntu, you do have snap packages and PPAs for unofficial distribution of software from vendors themselves. This is nice, because not even the best repositories always carry the latest versions of software that you'll need. ) But honestly, as surprised as I am, I've been using it a lot, and my experience has been nothing short of fantastic yet. Anyone heard of this distribution? If you're a Linux user, what distro do you use? RE: Deepin Linux - Thomas - April 8th, 2019 Is there any reason in particular you chose Deepin Linux? More popular, less Chinese distros such as Ubuntu and Mint all have these sorts of features as well. You addressed Ubuntu but I'm interested in the nitty, gritty details. RE: Deepin Linux - Darth-Apple - April 8th, 2019 For me, I don’t have an issue with it being chinese. I’ve been told by a few people I should worry about privacy or security. Not a single person has been able to offer any definitive evidence that they are doing anything of the sort. On Reddit, it’s nothing but an echo chamber of people who are finding a reason to dislike that it’s chinese. It actually seems like it’s clean. Personally, the desktop environment is the aspect of it that drew me in. You can’t find Deepin’s desktop environment on most other distributions, and if you can, it has stability issues as opposed to using the vanilla distro. Ubuntu’s twist of Gnome is nice, and offers a lot of the same UI components, but it’s significantly less polished. Every install of Ubuntu I’ve had in the past few years has had bugs, rough edges, software crashes, and frequent stability issues. So far, Deepin just works. In terms of my actual experience with it, I haven’t had any complaints. RE: Deepin Linux - SpookyZalost - April 16th, 2019 it looks nice, though you know me, I like to go with a minimal build and design my gui from the ground up say darth... outside of the default, do you have any tools or customization you like to make on GUI's when you setup your system? for me it's dark themes, conky for interface stuff, and transparent windows as my usual go to before I really get into tweaking things. RE: Deepin Linux - bestforums - April 19th, 2019 Thanks for all of useful information. |