https://github.com/ublue-os/countme/blob/main/growth_global.svg

Graphs can be found here on their github. Since around mid November the active user count for Bazzite has gone up by around 16k active users.

Personally, my only wish for Bazzite is a Cosmic version 👼 I tried it out recently and it seems fairly impressive

    • mfat@lemmy.ml
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      20 days ago

      What’s so special about this? Aside from the immutable thingy, of course.

      • alekwithak@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        The immutable thing is nice, though it takes some getting used to. It’s Fedora which I already love, without any of the hassle. Everything just works. I never realized how much time I was wasting until I didn’t have to do it anymore. Every task I throw at it, it performs beautifully, even things I’m sure aren’t going to work out of the box do. Every time, so far.

      • PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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        19 days ago

        It just works. It works better than Windows 11 in my experience. I can’t break it. I forget it’s there. I just do computer stuff. Like video editing, gaming, web browsing.

  • Victor@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    I’m surprised people are so keen on these gaming-focused distros.

    I just want a great, general-purpose computing system that can do gaming as well. 😁

    • DillingerEscape@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Universal Blue is the project which maintains Bazzite and other brilliant immutable images based on Fedora Silverblue (Gnome) and Fedora Kinoite (KDE)

      Bazzite has Steam bundled in the image which is a bit better for performance, Bazzite-dx is Bazzite with devtools.

      Aurora is another image made for general computing, Steam is installed as a Flatpak with a little worse performance but not much

      Bluefin is your typical dev-workstation

      If you’re serious about gaming I recommend KDE as your desktop environment, plays nicer with HDR, VRR and fractional scaling than Gnome.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        Why is Flatpak Steam worse for performance? I’ve been using it for years, seemingly better performance than Windows on the same system. Something inherent about Flatpak?

        If you’re serious about gaming I recommend KDE as your desktop environment, plays nicer with HDR, VRR and fractional scaling than Gnome.

        Mm, I don’t think I’d be willing to sacrifice my Niri workflow. Niri also supports fractional scaling and VRR, but not yet HDR, which I can live without until it’s implemented. 😁

    • Kronusdark@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      Yea I bounced off Bazzite because I needed to run plex. And I couldn’t get a container to run reliably on it. It’s still a cool distro though.

      Edit: typo

  • Ugurcan@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I’ve been using Bazzite for a while and mostly happy with it. So from 2026 and on, I’ll start donating a Windows license amount of money to Bazzite and other fundementals every year. Because fuck Windows, that’s why.

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    19 days ago

    I ended up with CachyOS over Bazzite but I’m looking into the latter for my dad since I’m guessing it’s more stable and easier.

    I just… Idk, I like Arch over Fedora. I blame the little pacman eating my progress whenever I install stuff in konsole. Desktop mode to desktop mode it’s the same KDE Plasma I’d be using, though. Are there any other striking differences between Cachy and Bazzite?

    Edit: it was good to bring it up here, y’all are very knowledgeable on these things. It sounds to me that I need to get bazzite for my dad mostly because he won’t want to fuss or work on it and that I made the right call for myself since Cachy (and Arch in general) gives more flexibility. Frankly I might not even give him desktop mode default, he strictly wants something to play from bed in full on retirement mode.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      AFAIK CachyOS still demands a little involvement in the OS. Like, you have to watch the logs when you update, you need keep context in mind, like knowing you’re running KDE and an Nvidia card and so on. But I feel like Bazzite would be more usable to someone who doesn’t know (and doesn’t need to know) what a filesystem or a discrete GPU are.

      But in terms of stability, CachyOS has been rock solid for me. The cadence that Arch + CachyOS devs fix stuff has been utterly perfect.

      So I say if your dad is more ‘software curious,’ give him CachyOS. If he doesn’t like messing with computer stuff, give him Bazzite.

      • taiyang@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        It’s unfortunate that years as a tech guy at his job has made him less software curious, so probably bazzite then. Rather, I guess when it’s your job to fix things, tinkering isn’t fun anymore.

        • meathorse@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          I second this, it’s why I went with Bazzite on my main rig - it just needs to work and be reliable. The last thing I want to be doing in my spare time is funking around trying to fix anything that happens to break.

          All my other devices run whatever I feel like so I can scratch that curiosity-itch but they get reinstalled if anything major breaks and I can’t fix it in a reasonable amount of time

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          Ah.

          Well one catch I’ve found outside of CachyOS is that if something isn’t working right, it’s easy to create a ton of work for yourself trying to fix it. An example would be fighting your system trying to roll a package forward for a fix, which then gets out of sync with your distro, which requires more manual fixing since you’re the one maintaining it now…

          The Arch/Cachy ecosystem, on the other hand, tends to encourage more usage of system packages, and fixes stuff quick. Usually waiting a day or a few days + a pacman -Syyuu fixes what was wrong.

          If your Dad is a software engineer, it’s possible he might fall into that trap with Bazzite. It kinda just depends on his habits/personality, though from what you describe this may not be a huge danger.

          • taiyang@lemmy.world
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            19 days ago

            Him 20-30 years ago probably would have. This is a man who, when I was a kid, made a custom UI for msdos so my brother and I could play games easier. He wouldn’t just tinker, he’d probably be contributing.

            Old age and alcoholism has kind of robbed him of that, though. At this point he’ll probably just ask me to fix it if it goes wrong, lol

  • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    As a normie, I love Bazzite because it’s as intuitive as Microsoft without the intrusive and monopolistic proprietary features, and Bazzite is also built for gaming.

  • Lung@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Huh I guess it’s “normal” but I hadn’t heard of Linux OSes tracking active user telemetry. Turns out this is a fedora / rpm mechanism that tracks the ip addresses of people updating their system. Something to think about. Archlinux for example does not do any form of this tracking as far as I can tell

    • etbe@lemmy.ml
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      20 days ago

      Debian has an option to anonymously report packages installed. There’s a question about this at install time and at any time you can install or uninstall the popularity-contest package.

    • marcie (she/her)@lemmy.mlOP
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      20 days ago

      iirc it doesnt track ip, it just sends a ping for counting, the unique ID is when you installed your distro. its easy to opt out of. in the past it used IP but they changed it because they didnt like the privacy implications of it. regardless, you should use secureblue if you want a fedora atomic image focused on privacy and security. personally i consider the risk of being included in the count negligible (and on par with pinging timeservers imo, so unless youre making your computer completely silent its kinda nonsensical to worry about) so i keep it running. you still ultimately pull data from fedora/bazzite servers for updates (and thus, show IP) so i dont really understand consternation over this.

      https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/fedora-coreos/counting/

      https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/infra/sysadmin_guide/dnf-counting/

  • Tantheiel@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    I’ve recently dove back into Linux and my last try was on Mint. After a few issues I went back to Windows. With the recent Microsoft news I wasn’t happy using a system that could start spying on me.

    It’s been close to a month and aside from some specific game issues likely due to running a nivida GPU I’ve been enjoying my time so far.

    Copy paste did take a while to get used to. Also the default screenshot tool doesn’t automatically put the snip on the clipboard.

    My main focus is gaming so this has been a solid operating system to use.

    • comfy@lemmy.ml
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      19 days ago

      Always good to try out a few distros before settling in for the long run. As much as I love Mint, there are always cases where one distro has issues with your hardware where another doesn’t.

      Copy paste did take a while to get used to.

      Which part, the highlight-middle click part or something else?

      Also the default screenshot tool doesn’t automatically put the snip on the clipboard.

      In Mint? You’ve made me realize that would be convenient for me so I looked into it, I believe copying straight to clipboard is a default keyboard shortcut option I didn’t know about.

      • Tantheiel@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        Sometimes ctrl c / v doesn’t work and it’s a combination of ctrl, super and C.
        Que confused “what’s the super key”

        Turns out that’s what the windows key on my keyboard is called. So far only when I was messing with the terminal.

        The screenshot tool in Brazzite. I think it’s called spectre.

  • inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Very cool. I am still running Bazzite as my reintroduction into Linux as a daily and it’s been great for gaming but I will say that as more and more familiarity rolls in, I do get frustrated with it being an immutable distro and having to jump through hoops to get it do what I want.

    Still I think it’s a great distro for those who don’t want to deal with MS bullshit anymore and a great friendly, works right out of the box while you learn or relearn Linux, and gets you gaming without a lot of hassle and having to deal with less than friendly Linux users.

  • Samsy@lemmy.ml
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    19 days ago

    I’m in this picture. Installed bazzite on steam deck and it’s fucking awesome!

  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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    20 days ago

    Wikipedia: Bazzite is a Fedora-based[1] Linux distribution designed to be similar to Valve’s SteamOS 3 while still functioning as a normal computer.[2][3][4] It offers support for handheld PC devices, including the Steam Deck.[5][6][7][8] Bazzite is named after the mineral of the same name, as Fedora Atomic Desktops historically had used a mineral naming scheme.[9] It aims to deliver a seamless out-of-the-box experience for both casual and advanced Linux gamers.[10]

  • Manu@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    What I would like to know is what data they use as a reference to produce that graph and whether that data can be audited.

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    19 days ago

    I was very happy with Bazzite on my Ally X but version 43 (them or Fedora) broke my WiFi. Then the USBC port has a physical problem as it seems to only deliver power.

    My only option without LAN atm was a cloud recovery to Win 11. Uuugh.

  • zebidiah@lemmy.ca
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    18 days ago

    im in that chart! i just built my wife a gaming PC, she is not a PC person and knows exactly nothing about linux as a whole, but she loves her steamdeck and bazzite means she never has to worry about opening a terminal (or even the desktop if she doesnt want to)

    • SHY_TUCKER@lemmy.ml
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      18 days ago

      Excuse my ignorance. I know nothing about this stuff. Aren’t Steamdeck and Bazzite completely unrelated things? Or is Bazzite something that you install on Steamdeck? Your comment confused me.

      Bonus question: what would be a good piece of used hardware to install Bazzite on? Could I install it on an older MS Surface for example?

      • zebidiah@lemmy.ca
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        17 days ago

        not at all! SteamOS and Bazzite are pretty fundamentally different on the back end (one is arch, one is fedora) but on the front end, they both launch into steam big picture mode, and offer a KDE desktop you can switch to.

        steamOS is available for download as a beta, but it is still a very handheld focused distro and does not include simple QOL things like print drivers, it struggles with things like wake from sleep, but it’s fairly stable and pretty usable

        bazzite is a little more refined and a little more fully fleshed out, it includes more packages and drivers and is better suited as a ‘daily driver’ os

        both are immutable distros, meaning you can’t really install stuff outside of the official app store/repository and a lot of terminal commands wont work out of the box. this means there are ‘nannies’ to make sure you don’t effectively softlock your os by running random terminal commands that chatbot told you were a good idea while troubleshooting.

        the primary focus of these distros is gaming, so they are optimized for speed, performance, and compatibility with steam/lutris, and putting up safety rails to make sure you dont nuke yourself.

        distros like cachyOS and nobara have the same focus, but do not have the nannies, so you can sudo whatever you want (but remember, #3 with great power comes great responsibility). its gaming focused, but meant for more confident power users.

        in terms of what to install it on… linux loves team red, and redder the better! everything AMD is always going to work best, an intel cpu is going to work as poorly (hot and slow) on linux as it does on windows, but amd GPU is always preferred for any linux builds. ive never had a microsoft surface to mess around with, but youtube suggests there are lots of options for installing linux on a surface (although i dont know what hoops you have to jump trough… but if youre interested in linux, then jumping through hoops should be second nature to you lol)