Thank you for your input!
NixOS sounds very intriguing to me but it also appears to be an absolute beast. I'd need time to dive into the Nix world, but I definitely will do so!
Thank you guys so much for all your recommendations and thoughts!
After some further analysis I decided to install Bazzite for the following reasons:
shares a lot of similarities with other Atomic distros
but has all the nice gaming related things pre-installed and configured and it uses a properly pre-installed Steam (not the Flatpak version) (the main reason why I chose it over Aurora, which would have been my next best pick)
my qemu virtual machines run perfectly fine (also the shared folder)
some dev stuff already pre-installed (don't think I need more than there already is)
fast and the OS feels like made out of one block, very consistent
I was ready to use my machine like I want to in basically no time
I already love the atomic way of handling updates
so far no issues
The only thing left for me to do is to figure out how to properly install SyncThing and Zerotier-One, then I am absolutely set.
I think I will opt for one of the atomic distros like Bazzite or Aurora, since yes, it seems very interesting and a nice project, but learning Nix just to get eventually a working system running again won't be the right thing for me.
But I will definitely load it into a VM and try it out when I have more time at hands!
The problem is with Arch. Not that it is by design bad, it is just that with software under heavy development will add new issues more easily, especially if you roll out updates very fast, which happens with a rolling distro.
And like the other user already said: not updating your system is a bad idea.
Wayland is super fast, free of tearing and can handle completely different monitors working together without issues.
It is not wayland that makes it unstable, just that there is much more going on development-wise which can cause things to break more easily in a rolling distro.
But I also had issues non-related to wayland but with Plasma, for example that after a plasma (and Dolphin) update, my NTFS partition could not be mounted anymore. Using pcmanfm-qt solved it.
Having a distro that tests things more or at least makes it easy to rollback, would help in such situations. When I was a student, these things did not nother me to much. But now with a demanding job, I just don't want to put too much time on this things anymore.
This ready like an almost atomic distro, haha. Good job!
Also sounds interesting, so definitely something that I will consider!
Thank you very much for sharing!
Void sounds interesting to tinker around with it but I don't want to tinker anymore. It is fine for me to have a reasonable learning curve in the beginning, but I just want something that works once set up and that goes out of my way.
Additionally, Void is still a rolling release distro so the same downside to it applies to Arch and vice versa. Arch is not unstable per se, it just depends on the packages you are using.
OK, so I tested Peersuite with a friend and I have to say: wow!
We have collected a bit of feedback we would like to share:
Positive:
The audio, video and screenshare quality is outright amazing and much better than Discord. We had no crackling, delays or any other disturbances in any of those features. The UI is simple and functional, and everything is snappy and fast.
It is also very easy to setup a workspace and to find yourself around the overall UI.
Negatives:
There appears to be no option to also share audio while screensharing, which currently is a major drawback for us.
There is no dedicated audio channel. As soon as someone starts an audio call, you'll hear the person no matter what. Only if you purposely join the call, will the others hear you. Opting in and out of an audio channel like in Teamspeak or Discord would be nice.
When my friend started a video call, the audio input of the webcam's microphone got activated, so I heard him twice. When he turned off the video call, the webcam's microphone stayed activated.
Once someone shared their screen or their webcam and turned it off later, you would still see them in the video and screenshare menu but with the picture being black. We would expect to be gone when closing the stream.
There is no option to adjust the volume of an individual user.
It would be nice to assign users to carts or columns on the Kanban Board.
It would be nice to adjust the size of the Collaborative Whiteboard.
It might seem like we are complaining a lot, but we actually really like the experience so far, so thank you very very much!!
Once you can also share audio with your screen, and once we can setup our own persistent server (and maybe be able to adjust the volume or mute a user, and have the audio room a bit more isolated from the rest), we are ready to jump ship.
Wonderful! The possibility to spontaneously hop on the server to look whether a friend is online or not is very important at least for us compared to the necessity of having to set up the room each time (which would require us to coordinate beforehand that we want to hangout in a voice channel).
He would loose friendship by asking for support, if there was true friendship in the first place.
Although it is hard for OP to see how these ppl tread him, at least he got to know their true faces.
This looks like a very solid remaster where they also fixed some glaring issues with the original like the outragious leveling (and therefore to some degree the scaling-) system.
I am not a huge Bethesda fan but they did many things right with this.
I hope that this remaster will be available on GOG at some point as well.
Thank you for your input! NixOS sounds very intriguing to me but it also appears to be an absolute beast. I'd need time to dive into the Nix world, but I definitely will do so!
Yes, so far I am happy with it.