Not bad, it picked Debian based on my responses and its definitely my preference. The list below all works too, with the minuses as noted.
Seems like a decent tool!
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Not bad, it picked Debian based on my responses and its definitely my preference. The list below all works too, with the minuses as noted.
Seems like a decent tool!
Some more criteria which I think are meaningful:
Do you know that webpage on which you can run a bunch of linux distros? It is a great addition for newbies.
Nice!
Have you considered adding I want a community driven distro (as opposed to distros like Fedora or Suse)
I tested it and was surprised to not be offered Mint (the one I'm using and that fits me rather well) just because of the 'proprietary drivers' option. I checked that I wanted to use 'Free software as much as possible' but in doing so, in my mind at least, the whole sentence had equal importance, aka: I'll go free as much as I can provided I can make my computer work. Maybe it could be worth considering detailing a little more what the choice are?
@Libb @HaraldvonBlauzahn while Fedora is backed from RH, it is community driven. You can find more at fedoraproject.org -> Connections -> Project Discussion and at discussion.fedoraproject.org
I haven't installed Linux on my desktop yet, but I was leaving toward CachyOS and this tool suggested Arch. So pretty close to what I was thinking, I think, considering this took doesn't seem to include CachyOS as an option.
It seems our answers are lost very quickly (probably by design)?
I've lost the rather large feedback I've typed after filling up the questionnaire and I don't even know if it's been submitted or not... For context: Windows user thinking about switching to Linux for a while.
My result: https://distrochooser.de/en/d5a5066d255c/
Main feedback (I don't want to to re-type everything) : are the distro listed from most adapted to least? Just a list of all distro with +/-? There is little to no explanations on the list itself.
I'd also like to know how popular the distro are. From what I understand the more a distro is popular, the more ressources will be available (tuto, forum, help,...).
I'll probably try Linux with a mint on my "paperwork" laptop to see how it goes.