0

I am currently using KUbuntu 22.04 LTS. I had thought that LTS meant long-term bug fixing, and not needing to reinstall / upgrade weekly or monthly, and getting stability and bugfixes.

I have discovered that while I have stability, I do not have bug fixes. In particular, plasma is still on the 5.x branch, with bugs and missing settings.

As I understand it, the "current best" I can do is every two years, update to the next LTS -- starting with 24.04.01 next month. (People are still saying to avoid the .0's in April). And even then, only getting updates every 6 months, and significant bugfixes only every 2 years.

That's not a desired state for me.

What I want: Relatively up to date KDE (sorry, I really dislike Gnome). Not "bleeding edge" / weekly dev updates, but rather "Yep, this has been tested and works". Updates to the system packages and login system (... why does the login screen / lock screen ignore my settings, and use a non-adjusted set of settings that includes things like "You closed the laptop lid? I'll move all your windows to the external monitor, and stay awake; why would you assume that's shutting down?").

I am not asking "What's the best distribution for my needs" (I'm asking that elsewhere); I am asking, "What's the best way to change distributions".

Am I required to reinstall to get a new distribution? Is there a way to just switch "Here are where you get packages" / "these are the packages for this distribution"?

What issues are likely to come up from swapping distributions? Is it safe? (which gets back to "do I have to reinstall")

And if I do have to reinstall, is there a good way to do so onto a second SSD? (I have seen some distributions that rely on fully automated installs that won't let you use partitions or second drives as you want -- they force reformats / specific install layouts.)

1 Answers1

2

Reinstallation is required for non-experts. A different distro isn't like changing a theme. The differences are very deep and changes very invasive. Changing distros is a complete brain transplant.

You change distributions by:

  1. Backup your data to a different media.
  2. Clean-install the new distribution using that distro's installer. This usually involves reformatting the storage partition, so all your data and settings and customizations will be deleted.
  3. Restore your data from the backup, if desired.
user535733
  • 68,493