Well, it's true it depends on each person's preferences and needs.
But for example in Debian I had to manually install gedit, since the only editor that came was nano. And nano is fine, but I mean, unless you know the command, in the graphical interface you have no link for it. It's a little confusing at first. What I call the "Ubuntu experience" is having a system that is not only prepared with the tools you need, but also the easy of use the intuitiveness, the fact that it all works in the correct order and you are lead not to make mistakes. Of course, there is a fine balance between this experience and "losing control over the system", I think that's why we have so many distros out there each more appropriate for a certain type of user. But yeah, I usually like to tweak my own "Ubuntu experience", lol. For example, I could only use a system that supports Tor software (Tor browser, Torbirdy, etc). BSD systems are catching up on that.

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