DistroWatch Weekly |
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1 • containers (by marc on 2025-08-25 00:30:05 GMT from Australia)
I use docker with compose with data volumes so I can kill my os and reinstall with my data in tact. I use immich, jellyfin and a few others over tailscale so I can access from away from home too.
2 • containers (by keysgate on 2025-08-25 01:29:10 GMT from United States)
Aeon ships with Distrobox, so that's what I use
3 • Destination Linux's This Week In Linux Podcast (by InvisibleInk on 2025-08-25 02:13:34 GMT from United States)
@Jesse Perhaps you can listen to this week's podcast. Distrowatch is mentioned near the end. Michael makes a plea for you to change the name of your "Ranking" list to something more realistic. He suggests "Trending" instead of "Ranking." He makes a good point that your ranking list actually ranks nothing, and, because of the name "Ranking," it can mislead readers into thinking the top names are actually the most popular Linux distributions in some way or form, when they may be nothing of the sort. "Trending" is the better term since it suggests the listed distributions are garnering more interest on your site at any given moment in time. Cheers
4 • @3 TRENDING. A very useful tool. (by Greg Zeng on 2025-08-25 02:45:52 GMT from Australia)
Agreed on noticing the effect of new releases, in the lifespan of the hundreds of Linux brands. The newest show a surge of interest from Distrowatch readers. This displaces the 'normal' order, for a very short time. Longer term trends do show that some of our personal favorites do gain, or slip, compared to others.
Also 'TRENDING' are the main Families of Linux. Family groups are losing or gaining loyalties. Compiled applications (AppImage, snap, flatpak, etc); systemD or not; X-display, or not; official RPM, or not; truly independent, or reliant on another version of Linux systems, or not.
Very few of the hundreds are truly independent, with everything being compiled from raw source code, every time. This explains the need for the "universal" compiled packages such as appimage, snap or flatpak. It is difficult to know which Linux brands support any or all of these universal compiled applications.
5 • @2 Aeon Containers (by Alter Furz on 2025-08-25 08:21:00 GMT from Germany)
@2 And podman.
6 • Question about the Poll (by Always__curious_about_FOSS on 2025-08-25 08:38:42 GMT from Germany)
When I am running Snap or Flatpak on my PC, are these Containers ? I don't know it. So I didn't answerd the poll.
7 • containers (by picamanic on 2025-08-25 08:57:32 GMT from United Kingdom)
I use Bubblewrap [bwrap] along with custom command line parameters for Firefox and other web browsers. Before that, I used Firejail. Probably AppArmor would be better if I could work out how to use it!
8 • Page Hit Rankings (by hadji457 on 2025-08-25 10:38:52 GMT from United States)
I think we're just playing semantics with this one. It's what it says it is.
9 • @Jesse, containers? (by Wally on 2025-08-25 11:14:25 GMT from Bosnia and Herzegovina)
@Jesse- About the poll, reading some of the comments so far, seems a clearer explanation of what containers are might help.
Myself, While checking out a couple of the new immutables, I tried running Debian and Fedora containers from Distrobox. Worked quite well, including GUI apps running and looking as if thet were native. Impressive. Then I figured I really had no need for them, so back I am to children of Debian and a few Flatpaks. No containers.
10 • Containers (by Robert on 2025-08-25 13:52:00 GMT from United States)
I do use Flatpaks, and I know Steam uses some containerization technology under the hood, so from that perspective I guess you could say yes.
But I don't directly use anything like docker, podman, lxc, or anything one normally thinks of when the word "container" is used. So I answered no.
11 • Opinion Poll - I did not vote (by Nobody on 2025-08-25 14:36:26 GMT from Germany)
I did not vote on the Opinion Poll. Nothing zero. At first the question seem to Confucius to me. Because I use Flatpak only. Maybe I should have selected the no container option. I do not know. I will look up if Confucius did say anything about this phenomena, and then I will think about it for the next Min..
12 • Rankings vs Trending (by Slappy McGee on 2025-08-25 16:10:17 GMT from United States)
@3 Trending is one of the drop-down menu choices for list view. Ranking is one word of the more descriptive three word name of the list: Page Hit Ranking.
13 • Containers? (by uz64 on 2025-08-25 23:33:11 GMT from United States)
I don't use containers. I use virtual machines.
Mostly for trying different Linux distros and BSDs, without actually "hopping."
14 • Containers (by 32298 on 2025-08-26 01:28:03 GMT from United States)
Tried something today - had success!
My container is a Virtual box - gnome boxes
Downloaded Debian netinst ISO
Used the graphic installer inside the Gnome Box - which allows you to set up any desktop. I chose xfce.
All went well - and all gets updated easily
I run xfce on my laptop with Sid repositories - that's next for my " Container "
The netinst ISO is a bare bones desktop - just what I wanted.
Sweet!
15 • Containers (by Sam Crawford on 2025-08-26 02:12:55 GMT from United States)
I answered one container, and I think that's what I'm using on my Synology NAS to run my Unifi Controller. I think it's Docker.
16 • Opera browser in packages list? (by John on 2025-08-26 03:24:18 GMT from Brazil)
Just wondering why is opera browser a tracked package. It isn’t open-source and always I checked it lived on user data, very much not privacy respecting.
17 • Containers (by Mario on 2025-08-26 15:13:06 GMT from Italy)
I don't use containers, virtual machines, snaps, flatpaks. I test a little number of Linux distro (secure boot compatible) only on real hardware, as long as the SSD survives.
18 • FreeBSD Jails and bhyve hypervisor (by Jonathan Vasquez on 2025-08-26 16:32:18 GMT from United States)
I don't use containers, I do use FreeBSD Jails though, which are much simpler to set up than containers on the Linux side, and provide similar benefits of resource utilization/sharing.
I recently deleted virtualbox and switched to the built in hypervisor that comes with FreeBSD called bhyve. It was very easy to set up and I was able to set up Windows and Linux VMs (and of course easily set up FreeBSD VMs as well). I've also currently been exploring with GPU passthrough since bhyve easily allows one to pass in PCI devices into the VM. While setting up bhyve VMs is pretty easy, I also started using the "vm-bhyve" shell scripts that provide some simple automation for bhyve VMs creation and management.
Since I use FreeBSD for both my home server and my personal main machine, I'm happy to have the power of OpenZFS, Jails, and bhyve out of the box.
19 • GhostBSD (by Dave Postles on 2025-08-26 17:24:41 GMT from United Kingdom)
Requirements: 8Gb minimum. That's a bit heavy. (I tried Gershwin - not sure what its purpose is at this stage).
20 • containers->VMs (by picamanic on 2025-08-27 10:32:03 GMT from United Kingdom)
I am thinking that whilst "containers" have their uses, the Qubes approach, using lightweight virtual machines, represents a way to radically improve the security of Linux. It's just a pity that it shackles itself to the systemd corpse.
21 • illumos.cafe and Ghost bsd (by rhtoras on 2025-08-27 13:06:54 GMT from Greece)
In the systemD era it's nice to have alternatives. First of all i have to congratulate the team behiond illumos.cafe for making such a nice place to learn and talk about illumos and it's distributrions. Real unix is not dead. There is also unix cafe which follows a different path. I also like the colours you chose for the site.
Now to the ghost bsd things. What i don't like about Ghost bsd and maybe freebsd is it's heavy enough. Shall i say bloat ? I am not sure. Openbsd is more lean and simple but with stability and size in mind. It is better to have simple things that work rathen than big things that struggle to work. I would like to see back the openrc init on ghost bsd because it made the wgole os stand out in the bsd family. It was a real alternative. Now also the octopkg package is evene abandoned offering an alternative that was not to my likes. This is why i prefer nomad bsd because it offers a better overall sollution (please bring back openbox iso). What i have to admit though is ghost bsd is a nice os for people to learn what exactly a bsd can do.
Last but not least: i am not using containers. No! There are better sollutions imho.
22 • Trending vs Ranking (by rufus t firefly on 2025-08-27 15:13:57 GMT from United States)
If the "Michael" you're referring to is Michael Tunnel, personally I find him annoying and nit picky (and not always honest). So this is just another semantics issue that doesn't seem that important.
I think by now everyone's aware that the rankings are not the most used distros or necessarily the most popular, but, frankly, how else would you do it? Not everyone's happy with the BCS college football rankings, either, but if you can think of a better way, please enlighten us.
Distrowatch will do what it wants, but for me, this is a non issue.
23 • GhostBSD (by Slappy McGee on 2025-08-28 14:06:45 GMT from United States)
@21 "It is better to have simple things that work rather than big things that struggle to work."
GhostBSD does not "struggle to work." It works out of the box (now, there was a time that it did not and one did have to struggle to just have networking or audio.. no more).
The complaint about "bloat" or just that it's too big (8GB etc) is not relevant to most who want non-systemD and Linux alternative. IMO.
24 • Trending ,Ranking and Michael Tunnel (by vmc on 2025-08-28 16:41:15 GMT from United States)
@22 https://tuxdigital.com/podcasts/this-week-in-linux/twil-325/ 6:24 into the video he explains it all in plain Endlish. Doesn't sound not picky or annoying to me. Just explains how and what Distrowatch ranking page hits actually mean.
25 • Vetnoy, CalyxOS, GrapheneOS... (by Vukota on 2025-08-28 20:42:46 GMT from Serbia)
I am surprised Ventoy LiveCD is just entering DistroWatch now. It is a life saver. I am probably not going to need another tool to write iso to a flash drive after it. Only missing feature they have is compressed images (as it may save space on a thumb-drive and some distros offer already compressed images). It is perfect for distro hoppers and folks who like to try new distros all at once.
Problem with all mobile OSes (other than built in ones) is that they support only limited number of newer flagship devices and they drop support for them very fast. I maybe have few older spare cell phones I would use to test them, but none of them is any more officially supported (other than some shade sources that does not offer source code nor support).
26 • Containers (by youlk1234 on 2025-08-29 08:53:41 GMT from France)
On my personal computer, i use one Debian Distrobox container. On my server though, i have 14 docker containers.
27 • Getting a job working in Linux system administration (by dali on 2025-08-29 11:17:14 GMT from Sweden)
I'd just like to add that while Fedora is "next gen" Red Hat Enterprise Linux, there are enough differences (use of Btrfs, package versions) that I would suggest that it is better to use Rocky Linux or Alma Linux to get an experience that is fully applicable to current versions of RHEL.
28 • Ghost BSD (by rhtoras on 2025-08-29 14:13:27 GMT from Greece)
@23 I am not against GhostBSD. I just don't like some things adopted that's all. It work's although it needs some tweaks here and there to work flawlessly. When i said bloat i was speaking generally and compared to openbsd. Checking the mb/ram used on idle is what i compare. Some don't care but non-systemD users do. At least i do and i think most do. OK ram is cheaper than it used to but it's better to work with light resources.
Number of Comments: 28
Display mode: DWW Only • Comments Only • Both DWW and Comments
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Archives |
| • Issue 1163 (2026-03-09): KaOS 2026.02, TinyCore 17.0, NuTyX 26.02.2, Would one big collection of packages help?, Guix offers 64-bit Hurd options, Linux communities discuss age delcaration laws, Mint unveils new screensaver for Cinnamon, Redox ports new COSMIC features |
| • Issue 1162 (2026-03-02): AerynOS 2026.01, anti-virus and firewall tools, Manjaro fixes website certificate, Ubuntu splits firmware package, jails for NetBSD, extended support for some Linux kernel releases, Murena creating a map app |
| • Issue 1161 (2026-02-23): The Guix package manager, quick Q&As, Gentoo migrating its mirrors, Fedora considers more informative kernel panic screens, GhostBSD testing alternative X11 implementation, Asahi makes progress with Apple M3, NetBSD userland ported, FreeBSD improves web-based system management |
| • Issue 1160 (2026-02-16): Noid and AgarimOS, command line tips, KDE Linux introduces delta updates, Redox OS hits development milestone, Linux Mint develops a desktop-neutral account manager, sudo developer seeks sponsorship |
| • Issue 1159 (2026-02-09): Sharing files on a network, isolating processes on Linux, LFS to focus on systemd, openSUSE polishes atomic updates, NetBSD not likely to adopt Rust code, COSMIC roadmap |
| • Issue 1158 (2026-02-02): Manjaro 26.0, fastest filesystem, postmarketOS progress report, Xfce begins developing its own Wayland window manager, Bazzite founder interviewed |
| • Issue 1157 (2026-01-26): Setting up a home server, what happened to convergence, malicious software entering the Snap store, postmarketOS automates hardware tests, KDE's login manager works with systemd only |
| • Issue 1156 (2026-01-19): Chimera Linux's new installer, using the DistroWatch Torrent Corner, new package tools for Arch, Haiku improves EFI support, Redcore streamlines branches, Synex introduces install-time ZFS options |
| • Issue 1155 (2026-01-12): MenuetOS, CDE on Sparky, iDeal OS 2025.12.07, recommended flavour of BSD, Debian seeks new Data Protection Team, Ubuntu 25.04 nears its end of life, Google limits Android source code releases, Fedora plans to replace SDDM, Budgie migrates to Wayland |
| • Issue 1154 (2026-01-05): postmarketOS 25.06/25.12, switching to Linux and educational resources, FreeBSD improving laptop support, Unix v4 available for download, new X11 server in development, CachyOS team plans server edtion |
| • Issue 1153 (2025-12-22): Best projects of 2025, is software ever truly finished?, Firefox to adopt AI components, Asahi works on improving the install experience, Mageia presents plans for version 10 |
| • Issue 1152 (2025-12-15): OpenBSD 7.8, filtering websites, Jolla working on a Linux phone, Germany saves money with Linux, Ubuntu to package AMD tools, Fedora demonstrates AI troubleshooting, Haiku packages Go language |
| • Issue 1151 (2025-12-08): FreeBSD 15.0, fun command line tricks, Canonical presents plans for Ubutnu 26.04, SparkyLinux updates CDE packages, Redox OS gets modesetting driver |
| • Issue 1150 (2025-12-01): Gnoppix 25_10, exploring if distributions matter, openSUSE updates tumbleweed's boot loader, Fedora plans better handling of broken packages, Plasma to become Wayland-only, FreeBSD publishes status report |
| • Issue 1149 (2025-11-24): MX Linux 25, why are video drivers special, systemd experiments with musl, Debian Libre Live publishes new media, Xubuntu reviews website hack |
| • Issue 1148 (2025-11-17): Zorin OS 18, deleting a file with an unusual name, NetBSD experiments with sandboxing, postmarketOS unifies its documentation, OpenBSD refines upgrades, Canonical offers 15 years of support for Ubuntu |
| • Issue 1147 (2025-11-10): Fedora 43, the size and stability of the Linux kernel, Debian introducing Rust to APT, Redox ports web engine, Kubuntu website off-line, Mint creates new troubleshooting tools, FreeBSD improves reproducible builds, Flatpak development resumes |
| • Issue 1146 (2025-11-03): StartOS 0.4.0, testing piped commands, Ubuntu Unity seeks help, Canonical offers Ubuntu credentials, Red Hat partners with NVIDIA, SUSE to bundle AI agent with SLE 16 |
| • Issue 1145 (2025-10-27): Linux Mint 7 "LMDE", advice for new Linux users, AlmaLinux to offer Btrfs, KDE launches Plasma 6.5, Fedora accepts contributions written by AI, Ubuntu 25.10 fails to install automatic updates |
| • Issue 1144 (2025-10-20): Kubuntu 25.10, creating and restoring encrypted backups, Fedora team debates AI, FSF plans free software for phones, ReactOS addresses newer drivers, Xubuntu reacts to website attack |
| • Issue 1143 (2025-10-13): openSUSE 16.0 Leap, safest source for new applications, Redox introduces performance improvements, TrueNAS Connect available for testing, Flatpaks do not work on Ubuntu 25.10, Kamarada plans to switch its base, Solus enters new epoch, Frugalware discontinued |
| • Issue 1142 (2025-10-06): Linux Kamarada 15.6, managing ZIP files with SQLite, F-Droid warns of impact of Android lockdown, Alpine moves ahead with merged /usr, Cinnamon gets a redesigned application menu |
| • Issue 1141 (2025-09-29): KDE Linux and GNOME OS, finding mobile flavours of Linux, Murena to offer phones with kill switches, Redox OS running on a smartphone, Artix drops GNOME |
| • Issue 1140 (2025-09-22): NetBSD 10.1, avoiding AI services, AlmaLinux enables CRB repository, Haiku improves disk access performance, Mageia addresses service outage, GNOME 49 released, Linux introduces multikernel support |
| • Issue 1139 (2025-09-15): EasyOS 7.0, Linux and central authority, FreeBSD running Plasma 6 on Wayland, GNOME restores X11 support temporarily, openSUSE dropping BCacheFS in new kernels |
| • Issue 1138 (2025-09-08): Shebang 25.8, LibreELEC 12.2.0, Debian GNU/Hurd 2025, the importance of software updates, AerynOS introduces package sets, postmarketOS encourages patching upstream, openSUSE extends Leap support, Debian refreshes Trixie media |
| • Issue 1137 (2025-09-01): Tribblix 0m37, malware scanners flagging Linux ISO files, KDE introduces first-run setup wizard, CalyxOS plans update prior to infrastructure overhaul, FreeBSD publishes status report |
| • Issue 1136 (2025-08-25): CalyxOS 6.8.20, distros for running containers, Arch Linux website under attack,illumos Cafe launched, CachyOS creates web dashboard for repositories |
| • Issue 1135 (2025-08-18): Debian 13, Proton, WINE, Wayland, and Wayback, Debian GNU/Hurd 2025, KDE gets advanced Liquid Glass, Haiku improves authentication tools |
| • Issue 1134 (2025-08-11): Rhino Linux 2025.3, thoughts on malware in the AUR, Fedora brings hammered websites back on-line, NetBSD reveals features for version 11, Ubuntu swaps some command line tools for 25.10, AlmaLinux improves NVIDIA support |
| • Issue 1133 (2025-08-04): Expirion Linux 6.0, running Plasma on Linux Mint, finding distros which support X11, Debian addresses 22 year old bug, FreeBSD discusses potential issues with pkgbase, CDE ported to OpenBSD, Btrfs corruption bug hitting Fedora users, more malware found in Arch User Repository |
| • Issue 1132 (2025-07-28): deepin 25, wars in the open source community, proposal to have Fedora enable Flathub repository, FreeBSD plans desktop install option, Wayback gets its first release |
| • Issue 1131 (2025-07-21): HeliumOS 10.0, settling on one distro, Mint plans new releases, Arch discovers malware in AUR, Plasma Bigscreen returns, Clear Linux discontinued |
| • Issue 1130 (2025-07-14): openSUSE MicroOS and RefreshOS, sharing aliases between computers, Bazzite makes Bazaar its default Flatpak store, Alpine plans Wayback release, Wayland and X11 benchmarked, Red Hat offers additional developer licenses, openSUSE seeks feedback from ARM users, Ubuntu 24.10 reaches the end of its life |
| • Issue 1129 (2025-07-07): GLF OS Omnislash, the worst Linux distro, Alpine introduces Wayback, Fedora drops plans to stop i686 support, AlmaLinux builds EPEL repository for older CPUs, Ubuntu dropping existing RISC-V device support, Rhino partners with UBports, PCLinuxOS recovering from website outage |
| • Issue 1128 (2025-06-30): AxOS 25.06, AlmaLinux OS 10.0, transferring Flaptak bundles to off-line computers, Ubuntu to boost Intel graphics performance, Fedora considers dropping i686 packages, SDesk switches from SELinux to AppArmor |
| • Issue 1127 (2025-06-23): LastOSLinux 2025-05-25, most unique Linux distro, Haiku stabilises, KDE publishes Plasma 6.4, Arch splits Plasma packages, Slackware infrastructure migrating |
| • Issue 1126 (2025-06-16): SDesk 2025.05.06, renewed interest in Ubuntu Touch, a BASIC device running NetBSD, Ubuntu dropping X11 GNOME session, GNOME increases dependency on systemd, Google holding back Pixel source code, Nitrux changing its desktop, EFF turns 35 |
| • Issue 1125 (2025-06-09): RHEL 10, distributions likely to survive a decade, Murena partners with more hardware makers, GNOME tests its own distro on real hardware, Redox ports GTK and X11, Mint provides fingerprint authentication |
| • Issue 1124 (2025-06-02): Picking up a Pico, tips for protecting privacy, Rhino tests Plasma desktop, Arch installer supports snapshots, new features from UBports, Ubuntu tests monthly snapshots |
| • Issue 1123 (2025-05-26): CRUX 3.8, preventing a laptop from sleeping, FreeBSD improves laptop support, Fedora confirms GNOME X11 session being dropped, HardenedBSD introduces Rust in userland build, KDE developing a virtual machine manager |
| • Issue 1122 (2025-05-19): GoboLinux 017.01, RHEL 10.0 and Debian 12 updates, openSUSE retires YaST, running X11 apps on Wayland |
| • Issue 1121 (2025-05-12): Bluefin 41, custom file manager actions, openSUSE joins End of 10 while dropping Deepin desktop, Fedora offers tips for building atomic distros, Ubuntu considers replacing sudo with sudo-rs |
| • Issue 1120 (2025-05-05): CachyOS 250330, what it means when a distro breaks, Kali updates repository key, Trinity receives an update, UBports tests directory encryption, Gentoo faces losing key infrastructure |
| • Issue 1119 (2025-04-28): Ubuntu MATE 25.04, what is missing from Linux, CachyOS ships OCCT, Debian enters soft freeze, Fedora discusses removing X11 session from GNOME, Murena plans business services, NetBSD on a Wii |
| • Issue 1118 (2025-04-21): Fedora 42, strange characters in Vim, Nitrux introduces new package tools, Fedora extends reproducibility efforts, PINE64 updates multiple devices running Debian |
| • Issue 1117 (2025-04-14): Shebang 25.0, EndeavourOS 2025.03.19, running applications from other distros on the desktop, Debian gets APT upgrade, Mint introduces OEM options for LMDE, postmarketOS packages GNOME 48 and COSMIC, Redox testing USB support |
| • Issue 1116 (2025-04-07): The Sense HAT, Android and mobile operating systems, FreeBSD improves on laptops, openSUSE publishes many new updates, Fedora appoints new Project Leader, UBports testing VoLTE |
| • Issue 1115 (2025-03-31): GrapheneOS 2025, the rise of portable package formats, MidnightBSD and openSUSE experiment with new package management features, Plank dock reborn, key infrastructure projects lose funding, postmarketOS to focus on reliability |
| • Issue 1114 (2025-03-24): Bazzite 41, checking which processes are writing to disk, Rocky unveils new Hardened branch, GNOME 48 released, generating images for the Raspberry Pi |
| • Issue 1113 (2025-03-17): MocaccinoOS 1.8.1, how to contribute to open source, Murena extends on-line installer, Garuda tests COSMIC edition, Ubuntu to replace coreutils with Rust alternatives, Chimera Linux drops RISC-V builds |
| • Issue 1112 (2025-03-10): Solus 4.7, distros which work with Secure Boot, UBports publishes bug fix, postmarketOS considers a new name, Debian running on Android |
| • Full list of all issues |
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OmegaLinux
OmegaLinux is an Arch-based, rolling-release Linux distribution featuring the lightweight LXDE desktop. It is suitable for installation on older computers with as little as 1 GB of memory. OmegaLinux was originally based on Lubuntu, but it was rebuilt on top of an Arch Linux base in February 2026.
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