I really like GNOME, but I'm so used to my Sway/i3 keybindings I've been using for nine years without any change... I just cannot switch. I'd also miss tiling.
Meanwhile, the two things I dislike with Sway:
the way window borders look
nm-applet can't be clicked to open a list of wifis, so I rely on nmtui (although it works on i3)
But I use a lot of GNOME software, especially on my phone. :D
Several different operating systems, such as FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonflyBSD (the latter one having a live system and being the easiest to try out). Those have their history based in BSD. But thatʼs all bit too much to fit in s reply here.
Unlike Linux distributions, those projects develop a kernel and the other parts together and make an OS.
Most software will be available on BSDs and on Linux distributions.
Just that. Also, most research I've seen claim no difference to be found, but surely that also depends and neurotype and several other things, so it might still be helpful for some groups.
Testing does not have dedicated security work and issues could be unsolved for a couple more days. You can use testing, of course, but read Debian security advisories. Upgrade packages from Unstable if there's something critical and do not wait days for a fix.
It's called unstable because packages are constantly upgraded, unlike Debian Stable, which stays the same until the next release and only gets patches. It is NOT called unstable "because they do not guarantee that it will work", for that you'd need paid enterprise support from some company.
Linux community, post about an OpenBSD review... On DistroWatch, not DerivativeWatch (lol)
No, it's fun, I'm just amused. :D