Linux Mint 9 Xfce
Which distrobution you guys running?

Ubuntu 10.10 64-bit on an HP EliteBook 8530w (3ghz Intel Core2 Duo w/ 4gb ram and 320gb sata3 drive.)

In the past I've used mainly Ubuntu, with a few trips into Fedora, however after using Unity in Ubuntu 10.10 I eventually got somewhat annoyed at it, and switched to Linux Mint 10. Best distro I've used yet.

finally ubuntu 11.04! rocks!
After install compiz effects desappeared all from my destop, :(
I could not reppair and did all intalled again, now with no compiz effects. Does anybody had this problem? Does anybody found a solution? Solutions what I found on net chats aren't easy to perform, but I want to keep effects as the same until 10.10 version...

ubuntu 11.04 on an imac (had to stuff around to get the wireless working, but not too much). was my wife's old comp, so i stole it for a dev machine at home when she upgraded.

ubuntu 11.04 and looking for a good desktop envirement, like gnome 2 but not sure about gnome 3 and unity so i am trying the others now

ubuntu 11.04 and looking for a good desktop envirement, like gnome 2 but not sure about gnome 3 and unity so i am trying the others now
try openbox

I've been rolling with openbox for years... still the best WM out there. GNOME has gotten retarded in how overbearing its become. *sigh*
Alas, Openbox + tint + synapse == pure win.

@rafaettosta -- ditto. Ubuntu 11.10 was just too bloody "innovative" for me. Whenever new technologies are introduced, they should have a REASON... e.g. upstart... wtf? Why? Why do we need YET ANOTHER INIT SERVICE?
So, I'm back to Debian. And I loves it.

@ellge I run OpenBox w/ tint2, nitrogen, and synapse. I posted my OpenBox autostart.sh config at http://sodaphish.com/files/autostart_sh.txt if you're interested.
Its a nice, light-weight config that makes sure the "usual" nicities work (e.g. network manager.)
Cheers,
-C
I'm currently running Arch Linux (laptop) and Linux Mint 9 (desktop). I'm also a huge fan of Fedora and Ubuntu/Kubuntu.
But honestly I like pretty much all distributions, most of them are well made.