Suggest unto me a new FOSS operating system

I have a 1TB harddrive on my desktop computer that isn’t doing much of anything, so I’d like to dual-boot something “interesting”. Suggestions are greatly appreciated, so let me know what y’all find intriguing/interesting/frustrating/innovative.

The logo is just for attention, but EFF is a great cause that we should all support.

delirious_owl,
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

New to you or new to the world?

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

Either way, just looking for something interesting to play with.

DarkNoul,
@DarkNoul@feddit.nl avatar

NetBSD

refalo,

based

szemy,

Void, stable, fast, not a fork, also is using runit

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

Now that’s an engaging option. Thank you!

01189998819991197253,
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar

If you’re looking for interesting more than useful, may I present TempleOS.

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

. . . could you possibly unpresent it? I kid, I kid–this looks insane and I love it. Thank you!

greybeard,

If you have never heard of it before, I recommend checking out the wikipedia page for it, and some of the information available about its creator.

flora_explora,

Wow, thanks! What an interesting read :O (But also really sad to watch the video on the templeos site)

Aatube,

Sugar, from One Laptop Per Child. it has like an entirely different UI paradigm or something, haven't tried it

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

That’s intriguing, thanks for letting me know!

qprimed,

AROS (Amiga) Research Operating System

Wikipedia

Official Page

would run in an emulator or bare metal boot from separate media.

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

Oh look! Amiga’s still alive! Awesome, thank you!

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

something interesting you say. source mage linux. https://sourcemage.org/ its more up to date than it seems. look at the repo.

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

That’s interesting to the point of bizarre. Thank you!

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

Updates: We are currently running Fedora SilverBlue, which is a very pretty OS as they go.

We won’t stop with that, though, so keep the suggestions coming!

DriftinGrifter,

freedoss 9front Uxn(more an emulator but still interesting to check out its by 100 rabbits) openbsd netbsd dragonflybsd etc…

yraten,
NaibofTabr,

Qubes - an OS that compartmentalizes system functions (including userspace) into separate VMs, with the intent of keeping them secure from each other. Kind of an internal zero-trust approach. Complicated to use.

Alpine Linux - stripped down to create a reduced attack surface, with the intent to provide only packages which have been vetted for security. Fairly straightforward.

Redox OS - a Unix-like OS written in Rust (not actually Linux). Limited, still kind of a prototype.

Damn Small Linux has been revived with a new version recently, which is nice to see.

HoloISO - a community built reimplementation of the Steam Deck OS.

axum,
axum avatar

Fedora silverblue
The main system OS is immutable and tracked by a git like system, which means to upgrade, or downgrade your whole OS to a release you just pull in the 'tag' you want, and it just does it.

Can also side grade easily to respins of the OS using this too, just add the remote and pull in the image.

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

Oooh that’s a fun idea. Thank you!

Lemongrab,

As a rebase, I reccomend secureblue: github.com/secureblue/secureblue

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

I was gonna slap Kali on there for fun, but that’s a little obvious.

ReactOS is kinda piquing my interest.

Lemongrab,

Or instead of Kali check out ParrotOS

Lemongrab,

Kali is all about the tools. It is not more secure than the average linux system, actually the opposite most of the time. It is designed for red team hackers mostly. Still neat to poke around with. The same is true for ParrotOS

leetnewb,

opensuse aeon (Linux). Immutable and designed to just work and keep working. en.opensuse.org/Portal:Aeon

Lemongrab,

2nded. OpenSUSE in general is great imo. IIRC, OpenSUSE has the 2nd largest repo, after Arch Linux AUR

Masterkraft0r,

well actually… sry i couldn’t resist

i think the biggest repo is that of nixos

lemmyreader,

You want to try something interesting but want to dual-boot. That last bit could be difficult or “impossible” but using a VM or running from USB stick are options.

  • www.haiku-os.org I’ve run it from USB stick on some older laptop.
  • chimera-linux.org FreeBSD user-land with a Linux kernel.
  • nomadbsd.org FreeBSD which can be run from USB stick with persistent storage. Has a version with ZFS support.
  • nixos.org Very interesting concept.
  • www.gobolinux.org GoboLinux is an alternative Linux distribution which redefines the entire filesystem hierarchy. Doesn’t seem up to date but quite interesting. If I remember well you can have different versions of software installed at the same time. Let’s say (making this up) Bash 1.1, 3.1 and 5.2
  • bedrocklinux.org Bedrock Linux is a meta Linux distribution which allows users to mix-and-match components from other, typically incompatible distributions.
colournoun,

I was also going to suggest Haiku. It’s the spiritual successor to BeOs. I was always disappointed that didn’t become more popular.

sin_free_for_00_days,

BeOS on my old PowerPC blew my mind in the late 90s.

lemmyreader,

Yes. Haiku is quite light weight, small and snappy. One drawback is that it has not yet multi user implemented (everything still runs as root! But so do old DOS flavors :-) ) but imho it is fun to play with and check which software packages it has (it has several emulators packaged).

MHSJenkins,
@MHSJenkins@infosec.pub avatar

GhostBSD My pre-coffee self mistyped. I have a separate drive with my daily drive OS on their (Mint), and I have an additional separate drive that I’d like to do something interesting on. These are fun suggestions, so thank you!

towerful,

I feel like Talos Linux is NixOS applied to a very specific purpose: kubernetes.
I’ve recently been playing with kubernetes, and talos linux feels like cheating.

I think NixOS could has a huge market unexplored of server side deployments. Install NixOS, connect to the fresh install via a CLI tool, apply the patches (flakes?), and have an easy way to reset to base NixOS when you make a mistake so you can try a different set of patches.
All from the cli, all with idempotent config files.

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