Version: 5.3.2 Rating: 9 Date: 2026-05-06 Country: United States Votes: 1
Almost perfect* exactly the way it is currently, I always boot the iso live so it remains almost perfect, hope the developer doesn't add or change anything, too many distros die a frothy bloated death.
Since ENux auto installs support for 12 package managers with the implementation of Bedrock Linux, this allows for extreme experimention, if the user breaks the system the re-install of Enux is quick and simple.
*Perfect is a minimal install that only boots to CLI, then executing appimages on a USB for everything else.
Version: 5.3.1 Rating: 10 Date: 2026-04-22 Country: Türkiye Votes: 1
I installed ENux on my laptop, and so far the experience is so good. It's extremely lightweight, at only using less than 1 GB of RAM, and around 10 GBs of SSD space after all of the stratas and package managers have been installed.
The thing about this distro that made me download it is the implementation of Bedrock Linux. From what I've heard integrating Bedrock Linux on a live environment is pretty difficult. The creator of ENux has posted on r/bedrocklinux 3 months ago on experimenting with Bedrock Linux on the live environment. They failed because awk couldn't be found on their setup, but I really liked how they pushed and improved this project. On that post, they've also mentioned that you need a proper installer for Bedrock Linux on the live environment. Guess the proper installer is the installer that ENux uses today. Also, the support for 12 package managers is pretty wild if you ask me.
So yeah, you should try out ENux as soon as possible if you are a power-user
This is Linux Distribution is the first one I've seen that utilizes Bedrock Linux to it's limits (in a good way).
The reason why I like this distro, A LOT is because I use multiple Linux ecosystems at the exact same time. I tried containers, but didn't like them because they were isolated, and I didn't wanted to manually install Bedrock Linux, because it is very sensitive. ENux came in handy for me, because it auto-installs Bedrock Linux, supports 12 package managers, and is nice to use.
So to sum everything up, you should give ENux a shot if you use a lot of Linux ecosystems at once, without worrying about if something would break or not.
Almost perfect* exactly the way it is currently, I always boot the iso live so it remains almost perfect, hope the developer doesn't add or change anything, too many distros die a frothy bloated death.
Since ENux auto installs support for 12 package managers with the implementation of Bedrock Linux, this allows for extreme experimention, if the user breaks the system the re-install of Enux is quick and simple.
*Perfect is a minimal install that only boots to CLI, then executing appimages on a USB for everything else.
I installed ENux on my laptop, and so far the experience is so good. It's extremely lightweight, at only using less than 1 GB of RAM, and around 10 GBs of SSD space after all of the stratas and package managers have been installed.
The thing about this distro that made me download it is the implementation of Bedrock Linux. From what I've heard integrating Bedrock Linux on a live environment is pretty difficult. The creator of ENux has posted on r/bedrocklinux 3 months ago on experimenting with Bedrock Linux on the live environment. They failed because awk couldn't be found on their setup, but I really liked how they pushed and improved this project. On that post, they've also mentioned that you need a proper installer for Bedrock Linux on the live environment. Guess the proper installer is the installer that ENux uses today. Also, the support for 12 package managers is pretty wild if you ask me.
So yeah, you should try out ENux as soon as possible if you are a power-user
This is Linux Distribution is the first one I've seen that utilizes Bedrock Linux to it's limits (in a good way).
The reason why I like this distro, A LOT is because I use multiple Linux ecosystems at the exact same time. I tried containers, but didn't like them because they were isolated, and I didn't wanted to manually install Bedrock Linux, because it is very sensitive. ENux came in handy for me, because it auto-installs Bedrock Linux, supports 12 package managers, and is nice to use.
So to sum everything up, you should give ENux a shot if you use a lot of Linux ecosystems at once, without worrying about if something would break or not.
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