Currently I use Fedora KDE spin because it fully suits me out of the box and while it's packages are not bleeding edge, they are still relatively fresh. I had some stability problems with Void when I used it on my primary machine last time, so this was the only reason to switch to Fedora. I used Void for many years, and nowadays if I get some poor hardware (like old laptops or PC's) I prefer to install Void. Can't say if it any lighter than Fedora, but for me tinkering with Void is much more enjoyable
I just deleted my u/truejeta account, which was almost 5 years old. Still don't know if I'm gonna miss Reddit, but we'll see. Anyway Lemmy looks very promising, so I'm happy to be here
Linux mint I guess. As from my experience, it have almost everything needed by a regular user:
- Great application center with flatpak and Flathub enabled out of the box, which already covers almost every application needed by a regular user
- Graphical driver installer
- Ability to install apt packages without terminal
- Good pack of preinstalled applications - it's already possible to do almost everything regular user needs, like browsing the web, working with office documents, reading PDF files and so on
- Driverless printer support out of the box
Also it looks awesome out of the box (especially after recent redesign), and works fine even on not so capable hardware
The only thing I don't really like about it is it being based on LTS release of ubuntu, which may lead to some problems on newer hardware. Still can be fixed by installing mainline kernel and adding ppa repositories, but it's not really easy to do without using terminal