I find that many Linux users have a misconception about immutable distributions without knowing what it actually is. There is a lot of misinformation and generalization in the Internet about immutable distributions being “locked down”, “inflexible”, etc., when we could argue the same with many traditional distributions. In this article, we’ll look at what makes an immutable distribution, the concept of an immutable distribution versus implementations, misconceptions about immutable distributions (both pro and con), and why they exist in the first place.
I’ve used Fedora kinoite for at least a year now, it’s pretty good
I was just looking at that today. Im in my search to leave ubuntu after 10 years
You can try fedora. The workstation if you love GNOME, otherwise the KDE spin.
Silver blue and Kinoite are the same thing but immutable.