once you get used to. there's a slight learning curve because of the config language it uses (like anything else that has its own config language). but it's nice once you get used to it. is rather nice to have every configuration from vim to users and groups to even your xserver all in one place. I can deploy my same config on several machines the same way and nixos won't care if it's a different machine.
so if you're interested in devops or automation (or just saving some time or even a standard config language), then nixos is definitely for you
if you are lazy and don't mind managing several configs and dotfiles through git repos on different machines which aren't synced then sure you might not care. honestly tho, I'd consider nixos for the lazy because then it's less managing as well
My way of managing things is bodge till it works, I can't be arsed to properly sync my configs
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