I’m not a beginner anymore, but I’m much less interested in technical tinkering for its own sake than I used to be. These days I just want my computer to work properly without too much intervention from me.
I’ve been using Kubuntu for a number of years, but I’m also hearing increasing complaints about how Canonical is running things. I don’t think I’m ready to switch to a new distro yet, but it wouldn’t hurt to know what’s out there.
Is Kubuntu still a good choice for an “it just works” KDE-based distro, or has it been surpassed?
As someone who can’t quit KDE because of KDE connect, my go-to is debian. Debian 12 is an outstanding release, it’s stable, and it works. The only gripe is that debian famously has later releases than most distros, which can be a problem if you need a recent version of say, go or rust (you can still install manually but apt exists for a reason), but in general it’s not that bad and it’s of course a tradeoff between recency and stability.
You don’t need to use KDE to use KDE connect. 😉
I am using it with i3wm.
Happy DM hoping. 😊
Holy hell
As said my sibling comment, I use KDE connect with GNOME shell
For managing non-distro versions of language runtimes I suggest rtx.
$ cat .tool-versions python system nodejs latest rust system elm latest $ rtx current python system node 20.5.0 rust system elm 0.19.1 $ rtx local go@latest # go gets installed $ which go /home/andy/.local/share/rtx/installs/go/1.21.0/go/bin/go
Very nice!
Unfortunately my go use case requires my go install to be default (I patch it to gradually remove dependencies on the kernel - it’s not going well) but for anyone doing something sane this should be very useful.