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<blockquote data-quote="lokamoka820" data-source="post: 1102568" data-attributes="member: 108773"><p>If I remember well, Tumbleweed uses a "snapshots" update, which make it more stable but larger compared to other rolling release distros. And I think all distros install recommended packages by default "you can disable as you mentioned" but not Arch and Arch based distros, they always thought other distros are bloated for this reason "MX disabled it by default too". I still use ext4 even when I use openSUSE, just because it is still the standard on Linux world, not because I have problems with BTRFS. About updating period, I used to update Manjaro one every 10 days - month without a problem, but compared to point/fixed release distro the size is big, and I don't need every component of the system to be updated frequently.</p><p>By the way, BTRFS Snapshot is not just for openSUSE alone now, SpiralLinux implement it over Debian and Garuda Linux over Arch.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lokamoka820, post: 1102568, member: 108773"] If I remember well, Tumbleweed uses a "snapshots" update, which make it more stable but larger compared to other rolling release distros. And I think all distros install recommended packages by default "you can disable as you mentioned" but not Arch and Arch based distros, they always thought other distros are bloated for this reason "MX disabled it by default too". I still use ext4 even when I use openSUSE, just because it is still the standard on Linux world, not because I have problems with BTRFS. About updating period, I used to update Manjaro one every 10 days - month without a problem, but compared to point/fixed release distro the size is big, and I don't need every component of the system to be updated frequently. By the way, BTRFS Snapshot is not just for openSUSE alone now, SpiralLinux implement it over Debian and Garuda Linux over Arch. [/QUOTE]
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