WetGeek Is there enough disk space for a dual boot?

I gave up on single-drive dual-boot several years ago. If I want to use Solus on a Windows computer, I can use the "Portable Plasma" external M.2 drive which sets up dual-drive dual-boot and works fine on whatever computer I want to use, so long as the computer is UEFI and Secure Boot disabled.

@WetGeek For what it is worth, I ran the "normal" PCLOS Plasma in a Live session and was not impressed. A ton of applications I'll never use, few of the K-pop standards present in Solus Plasma, a washed-out Breeze Dark theme, LibreOffice overload, inconsistent theming with about half the applications, and sizing issues with a number of Windows. Thumbs down.

The more I compare Solus to just about anything else, the more I become convinced that Solus is a unique distro, well-designed and well-implemented from top to bottom.

    tomscharbach The more I compare Solus to just about anything else, the more I become convinced that Solus is a unique distro, well-designed and well-implemented from top to bottom.

    It would take me about 7 sentences to say exactly this ^^, so yeah, me too, this^.

    tomscharbach I ran the "normal" PCLOS Plasma in a Live session and was not impressed

    I decided to give it one last try -- I've replaced the .ISO in the VM with a brand-new (11/30/2022) version of KDE Plasma. It's now making just 22 upgrades, and I should be close to resolving my last smidge of curiosity about what I'm now referring to as my "PCLinuxOS Affair."

    I have never explored other distros in order to find a replacement for Solus, as I feel the same way about it as you do. I'm just intrigued by what's going on in other distros, by other teams. But this last attempt will certainly conclude my participation in the PCLinuxOS Affair.

      WetGeek I have never explored other distros in order to find a replacement for Solus, as I feel the same way about it as you do. I'm just intrigued by what's going on in other distros, by other teams.

      The title of this thread ("If not solus, what distro would you be using?") suggests that "a replacement for Solus" is a relevant to evaluation, but I understand what you mean. While "a replacement for Solus" is always in the back of my mind, I look at distros with an eye towards (1) is the distro a good choice as a desktop/working environment for an "ordinary home desktop user", (2) is the distro something I would recommend to my friends (non-technical for the most part) for that purpose, and (3) is the user interface as well-designed and intuitive as Windows, MacOS, Android, ChromeOS, iOS and other major user interfaces, all different but well done. A threshold criteria is design quality -- nobody who is used to any of the "majors" is going to tolerate sloppy, amateurish design for their primary working computing environment.

        tomscharbach The title of this thread ("If not solus, what distro would you be using?") suggests that "a replacement for Solus" is a relevant to evaluation

        @adurante created this thread, and gave it that name. I created the Other Interesting Distros thread, which is more in line with my interests. Still, having used and loved Solus for years, there's understandibly some overlap. If Solus were taken away somehow, and I no longer had it, I'd want its replacement to be as much like it as possible.

        tomscharbach The title of this thread ("If not solus, what distro would you be using?") suggests that "a replacement for Solus" is a relevant to evaluation, but I understand what you mean. While "a replacement for Solus" is always in the back of my mind, I look at distros with an eye towards (1) is the distro a good choice as a desktop/working environment for an "ordinary home desktop user", (2) is the distro something I would recommend to my friends (non-technical for the most part) for that purpose, and (3) is the user interface as well-designed and intuitive as Windows, MacOS, Android, ChromeOS, iOS and other major user interfaces, all different but well done. A threshold criteria is design quality -- nobody who is used to any of the "majors" is going to tolerate sloppy, amateurish design for their primary working computing environment.

        Sometimes I think we BS ourselves, maybe I do. I love threads like these because maybe I pretend to be looking for a cool sidekick to Solus. As a practical matter Win10 is my backup. Do I need a third OS? I'm not a hobbyist.
        Or is the truth that Solus set the bar so high this distro hunt is an intriguing pita. You really want the truth truth? I'm always scared that Solus & Co.will cease to function, pull up stakes, and vanish, and I want a luxurious daily driver like this I can step right into to conduct the business of day to day living.
        [If that awful day comes I will be honest, Bodhi or Bunsen I've enjoyed the most].
        But I very much enjoy others' POVs on distros.

          joluveba In my experience Void boots faster than Solus. That's not to say Solus is by any means slow.

          brent Or is the truth that Solus set the bar so high this distro hunt is an intriguing pita.

          I think that the bar -- in terms of design quality, user interface and useability, ease of use for non-technical users, and quality/stability of the underlying operating system -- is set by Windows, MacOS, and ChromeOS on the desktop, and Android and iOS for smartphone users.

          When I show friends Linux on the desktop, that level of quality (the level of quality that they are used to from using mainstream operating systems) is what my friends expect to see on my Linux desktop.

          Solus and a relatively small number of other distros provide that level of quality -- carefully designed user interfaces, carefully curated apps and a stable operating system -- in short, top-to-bottom quality and ease of use. Most distros, frankly, do not meet the bar.

          brent I'm always scared that Solus & Co.will cease to function, pull up stakes, and vanish, and I want a luxurious daily driver like this I can step right into to conduct the business of day to day living.

          I think that is the point of this thread. If Solus disappears, what would we use instead?

          brent But I very much enjoy others' POVs on distros.

          Me, too. Other POV's point me in directions I might not find on my own.

          brent the possibility that is just disappears one day is not zero, that's why I keep trying other things. My opinions have changed quite a bit over the years, and I really don't think there's anything as good as Solus. Apt is slow, pacman syntax make no sense (really -Syu instead of up or update), Fedora hates me, and SUSE just never made me feel warm and happy. I'd probably transition to Endeavour at this point and then start hopping again. I might give Gecko another look or Tumbleweed.

            Brucehankins after eopkg, apt and pacman confusing, fedora hates me too, suse hates me. tumbleweed/gecko is a fan club I always tried to join but would not have me on two computers. that was between an old lenovo desktop and a hand built abandoned gaming rig I don't game on. it's always rejected me.
            I know that possibility of solus going poof "is not zero" and it makes me nervous. it's as stable as win 7, prettier, snappier, and much more secure....and better than every distro I tested. If the Solus thing goes under I'm staying on the roller coaster of small/independent and I don't know why. My needs are not power computing obviously but I admire vision and authenticity foremost. Your post above is awesome.

            Hardware issues aside I'd head back to FreeBSD with a Mate hat... Much more work and fiddly but as snappy and sensible as Solus.

            Brucehankins I really don't think there's anything as good as Solus.

            Solus brings together a unique combination of a solid, efficient and stable OS layer, high-quality DE layers (my experience is limited to Budgie and Plasma) implemented flawlessly, carefully selected applications targeted at home desktop user, Flatpack, appimage and Snap support, and an intelligently implemented rolling release model. In short, a solid, kruft free, user-friendly, desktop-focused, quality designed/implemented top-to-bottom. Although there are other high-quality distros available, none bring all of those factors together as well as Solus.

            I've looked at quite a number of Budgie and Plasma implementations during the last year precisely because "the possibility that is just disappears one day is not zero". None of them are as good as Solus. The only two I'd consider at this point as Solus replacements or distros that I would recommend to friends wanting to come over from Windows are Ubuntu Budgie and Kubuntu.

              tomscharbach intelligently implemented rolling release model

              You hit the nail on the head. Outside of the same defaults and beautiful default theming choices the team.has made, a curated rolling model with weekly updates. Debian and Ubuntu are stable sure, but they get crusty quick, even if you hop from .04-.10. Arch and Tumbleweed are like a daily firehose of "here's the latest update" and it's a bit like what's gonna break roulette. Solus hits the sweet spot on all the fronts.

              a year later

              salexandarz Here I am 4 years later running solus on my old hp laptop and it's working pretty good. Btw, I'm also using arch on Lenovo IdeaPad 5 pro (amd) 😊

              Pop!_Os but with an additional repository for having a current Plasma.

              I've been distrohopping a lot recently and haven't found anything close to Solus for my usage (Solus have its problems, namely no flatpak graphical support -yet-, Libreoffice-common-dictionnaries not there by default and no Fonts app by default either, but it's so easy to solve and it's not a bug). I think the best distro I've been using apart from Solus is Fedora... but the problem with Fedora is having to wait for at least a month when an upgrade arrives because it's buggy. Solus doesn't have that problem.

              When the Solus Troubles unexpectedly hit us, and it was clear that it was not a short-term problem, I settled on a distro I'd beeen very fond of when I examined it for the "Other Interesting Distros" thread.

              In fact, I'm still so fond of Sparky Linux, that it's the only non-solus VM that I keep on my laptop, and update along with my Solus VMs every week or so. It's a little behind Solus when it comes to its Plasma version, but it's still quite usable. It's a rolling release that offers updates more often than even Solus does, and everything I ever wanted to install while I was using it was available as a .DEB file. I was able to set it up exactly as I did Solus, it had no problem accessing my NAS, and left nothing to be desired. There's even a friendly and helpful forum, much like Solus'.

              So, if Solus went away suddenly (again), I could maintain 99.99% of the same user experience with Sparky Plasma, and do it with very little configuration.

                Arch Budgie and maybe Debian Budgie but I need to explore it first