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  3. Can we please, PLEASE for gods sake just all agree that arch is not and will never be a good beginner distro no matter how many times you fork it?

Can we please, PLEASE for gods sake just all agree that arch is not and will never be a good beginner distro no matter how many times you fork it?

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  • A [email protected]

    Veterans will always go back to Debian. It is inevitable.

    L This user is from outside of this forum
    L This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #266

    Debian is the stable friend who might not have all the answers but can help you with whatever you need to do, and does it without ever asking for anything in return.

    Debian is love, Debian is life.

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    • L [email protected]

      Arch is aimed at people who know their shit so they can build their own distro based on how they imagine their distro to be. It is not a good distro for beginners and non power users, no matter how often you try to make your own repository, and how many GUI installers you make for it. There's a good reason why there is no GUI installer in arch (aside from being able to load it into ram). That being that to use Arch, you need to have a basic understanding of the terminal. It is in no way hard to boot arch and type in archinstall. However, if you don't even know how to do that, your experience in whatever distro, no matter how arch based it is or not, will only last until you have a dependency error or some utter and total Arch bullshit® happens on your system and you have to run to the forums because you don't understand how a wiki works.

      You want a bleeding edge distro? Use goddamn Opensuse Tumbleweed for all I care, it is on par with arch, and it has none of the arch stuff.

      You have this one package that is only available on arch repos? Use goddamn flatpak and stop crying about flatpak being bloated, you probably don't even know what bloat means if you can't set up arch. And no, it dosent run worse. Those 0,0001 seconds don't matter.

      You really want arch so you can be cool? Read the goddamn 50 page install guide and set it up, then we'll talk about those arch forks.

      (Also, most arch forks that don't use arch repos break the aur, so you don't even have the one thing you want from arch)

      O This user is from outside of this forum
      O This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote on last edited by
      #267

      I wonder if there is something like a graph or diagram that shows the different parts that comform a distro.

      Like a visual aid where you can see what combination of parts or components you are choosing on a distro.

      Does something like this exist?

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      • A [email protected]

        I never liked debian or it's derivatives, but since moving to Selfhosting most of my services and needing sane defaults on my server (I'm a noob with server stuff) I've circled back to LMDE after 20 years of using primarily bleeding edge and DIY distros.

        I like it, it's nice that it's set and forget and doesn't need constant attention like my bleeding edge stuff always did.

        L This user is from outside of this forum
        L This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote on last edited by
        #268

        LMDE is great. I run it on my Thinkpad T14 G1. Runs like a champ, and after installing tlp, it manages to eke out almost 7 hours of battery life.

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        • X [email protected]

          IMO learning the basics of computing, go for as early as possible. Especially with this new generation of kids.

          2 months ago she didn't even know how to use a mouse properly, and now she's a whiz. The funniest is when you try to show her something on the screen and she tries to click it like it's a touch-screen and I have to be like "no, use the mouse!"

          It's a struggle to get started, but once they have that foundational knowledge they pick things up so quickly.

          P This user is from outside of this forum
          P This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote on last edited by
          #269

          😆 yea, I showed and let him play Rubiks Games (abandoned ware that I played in school (yea, fun teacher) in ~2006) that I got to run via proton and it was exactly the same! As soon as I point on something to tell him about it, his reflexes kick in and I have a new fingerprint on my 4k, lol

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          • M [email protected]

            Don't know about Cachy but Endeavour is not even a fork. It's just Arch with a fancy installer.

            anzo@programming.devA This user is from outside of this forum
            anzo@programming.devA This user is from outside of this forum
            [email protected]
            wrote on last edited by
            #270

            Didn't both distros have Btrfs auto snapshots. Same as Garuda. Anything broken? Just a reboot, arrow keys, and rollback.

            eggroley@lemmy.worldE 1 Reply Last reply
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            • Z [email protected]

              That was in 2004. So yeah, it went well, as I'm still running Gentoo.

              The installation went ok, but it took ages. I had Compaq Armada E500: Single core 900MHz Pentium III and 256MB of RAM.
              I had help from my friend who explained in detail what we were doing and why during the installation process.

              Next time I needed to install Gentoo I did it by my self. I had the Gentoo Handbook open on other machine and I followed it carefully. I was surprised by how smoothly the install went.

              Few weeks ago I once again installed Gentoo onto a new machine. 36-cores (two Xeons) and 256GB of RAM. It's always funny to compare how much more powerful my newest machine is compared to my first Gentoo machine. 😉

              Oh and welcome to Gentoo. 😉 If you need any help the forums are a great place to ask.

              C This user is from outside of this forum
              C This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote on last edited by
              #271

              The forums are great and in general the Gentoo community just seems much more willing to point you in the right direction. Compared to arch where RTFM just boils down linking a wiki page without further guidance.

              Thank you I felt very clever when I came up with it.

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              • L [email protected]

                Arch is aimed at people who know their shit so they can build their own distro based on how they imagine their distro to be. It is not a good distro for beginners and non power users, no matter how often you try to make your own repository, and how many GUI installers you make for it. There's a good reason why there is no GUI installer in arch (aside from being able to load it into ram). That being that to use Arch, you need to have a basic understanding of the terminal. It is in no way hard to boot arch and type in archinstall. However, if you don't even know how to do that, your experience in whatever distro, no matter how arch based it is or not, will only last until you have a dependency error or some utter and total Arch bullshit® happens on your system and you have to run to the forums because you don't understand how a wiki works.

                You want a bleeding edge distro? Use goddamn Opensuse Tumbleweed for all I care, it is on par with arch, and it has none of the arch stuff.

                You have this one package that is only available on arch repos? Use goddamn flatpak and stop crying about flatpak being bloated, you probably don't even know what bloat means if you can't set up arch. And no, it dosent run worse. Those 0,0001 seconds don't matter.

                You really want arch so you can be cool? Read the goddamn 50 page install guide and set it up, then we'll talk about those arch forks.

                (Also, most arch forks that don't use arch repos break the aur, so you don't even have the one thing you want from arch)

                snailmagnitude@mander.xyzS This user is from outside of this forum
                snailmagnitude@mander.xyzS This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote on last edited by
                #272

                It's a really simple system meant to 'just work' and provides an idiot sheet you can copy and paste from for those who don't ever want to RTFM

                as long as the system isn't doing anything important Arch is great for noobs fucking around, it's high grade spoonfeeding and doing what you are told.

                Power users use RHEL, Ubuntu, Gentoo. Governments, armies, tech giants and that kinda stuff, Arch is more for newbie weeks karma farming on r/unixporn

                0 tin@lemmy.blahaj.zoneT 2 Replies Last reply
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                • snailmagnitude@mander.xyzS [email protected]

                  It's a really simple system meant to 'just work' and provides an idiot sheet you can copy and paste from for those who don't ever want to RTFM

                  as long as the system isn't doing anything important Arch is great for noobs fucking around, it's high grade spoonfeeding and doing what you are told.

                  Power users use RHEL, Ubuntu, Gentoo. Governments, armies, tech giants and that kinda stuff, Arch is more for newbie weeks karma farming on r/unixporn

                  0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #273

                  I'm pretty sure "Power users" don't use Ubuntu.

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                  • M [email protected]

                    There’s a good reason why there is no GUI installer in arch (aside from being able to load it into ram).

                    This is the dumbest conceit of the arch community. I learned Linux using Fedora back when regular usage required more know how than installing arch does and it was enormously helpful to have something you could click and install and THEN learn in a functional environment. Also following the guide isn't THAT hard its just a waste of effort for a million people to do so.

                    0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                    wrote on last edited by
                    #274

                    I remember installing Debian before Ubuntu was born using an ncurses type interface and spending five minutes selecting the packages I want to install, (only for it to tell me that one package was incompatible with another and the installation couldn't proceed!) but being able to do it somewhat graphically made it so much easier than simply by text.

                    An OS stays out of your way and lets you do what you need to do. Having to essentially create the basics is unproductive and a waste of the user's time.

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                    • A [email protected]

                      Absolutely agreed! Arch wiki helps with this as well.

                      Although Ive been using linux for 2 years now, and i still want an installation manager with sane defaults.

                      0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #275

                      Although Ive been using linux for 2 years now, and i still want an installation manager with sane defaults.

                      Have you heard about our Lord and Saviour, Debian?

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                      0
                      • M [email protected]

                        I struggled to find things to learn because I installed it and had an out-of-the-box windows experience

                        And that's a good thing! Non-technically-inclined ppl are wary of instability issues and having to work with the terminal to fix their daily driver. If the OOTB experience is good and the UX is comparable or better than Windows - they will be more likely to stay.

                        If someone is accepting the fact that shit might go sideways, is willing to learn through experiencing issues first-hand or simply likes to spend time fiddling with their OS to find the perfect setup for them - that should be the Arch- and Arch-derivatives audience.

                        0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                        wrote on last edited by
                        #276

                        If someone is accepting the fact that shit might go sideways, is willing to learn through experiencing issues first-hand or simply likes to spend time fiddling with their OS to find the perfect setup for them - that should be the Arch- and Arch-derivatives audience.

                        But once you leave the comfort of your parents house, time is money and no one has a spare twelve hours to get a functional OS together when another distro would do it in minutes.

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                        • U [email protected]

                          I'm not sure what a flatpak version could possibly do any better than the version I use.

                          The official OBS flatpak supports more codecs and integrations than some distro packages.

                          Stability is also a factor, especially on rolling or cutting edge distros. Fedora RPM release of Blender did not work for me at all with an nvidia GPU, for example.

                          0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote on last edited by
                          #277

                          nvidia GPU

                          No flavour of Linux works well with them. That's the joke or something.

                          Q 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • N [email protected]

                            Stable doesn't mean what you think it means. Stable means not updated.

                            0 This user is from outside of this forum
                            0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote on last edited by
                            #278

                            Stable means not updated.

                            Oh no! I haven't got the latest push from 30 seconds ago. My operating system is so out of date and I'm so uncool!!11

                            N 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • G [email protected]

                              Debian doesn't support PPAs. That's an Ubuntu feature. Even if you somehow managed to enable a PPA on Debian, the packages will be for Ubuntu and are likely not install or work correctly.

                              M This user is from outside of this forum
                              M This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote on last edited by
                              #279

                              ahh its been so long since I used regular Debian in school I thought it had ppa since raspbian does

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                              • L [email protected]

                                I can not agree more not everyone that uses arch is like this but every one of the Linux users that wants to be elitist about their distro runs arch based on how hard it is.

                                If you want to be low level to learn you run Linux from scratch. If you want bleeding edge you run tumbleweed or debian sid. If you want to run a distro that is only mildly harder to configure than a debian bootstrap install but less hard than running debian or redhat back in the 90s just for bragging rights you run arch.

                                0 This user is from outside of this forum
                                0 This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #280

                                less hard than running debian or redhat back in the 90s

                                Zoomers will never know the pain... and the joy and actually getting it installed!

                                L downhomechunk@midwest.socialD 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • L [email protected]

                                  Arch is aimed at people who know their shit so they can build their own distro based on how they imagine their distro to be. It is not a good distro for beginners and non power users, no matter how often you try to make your own repository, and how many GUI installers you make for it. There's a good reason why there is no GUI installer in arch (aside from being able to load it into ram). That being that to use Arch, you need to have a basic understanding of the terminal. It is in no way hard to boot arch and type in archinstall. However, if you don't even know how to do that, your experience in whatever distro, no matter how arch based it is or not, will only last until you have a dependency error or some utter and total Arch bullshit® happens on your system and you have to run to the forums because you don't understand how a wiki works.

                                  You want a bleeding edge distro? Use goddamn Opensuse Tumbleweed for all I care, it is on par with arch, and it has none of the arch stuff.

                                  You have this one package that is only available on arch repos? Use goddamn flatpak and stop crying about flatpak being bloated, you probably don't even know what bloat means if you can't set up arch. And no, it dosent run worse. Those 0,0001 seconds don't matter.

                                  You really want arch so you can be cool? Read the goddamn 50 page install guide and set it up, then we'll talk about those arch forks.

                                  (Also, most arch forks that don't use arch repos break the aur, so you don't even have the one thing you want from arch)

                                  B This user is from outside of this forum
                                  B This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #281

                                  I started with mint more than 10 years ago because a friend of mine told me it was one, if not the best, distro for newbies (that was a fucking lie). Idk how mint is doing today but back then was kind of a mess and dealing with it wasnt easy, so i dont really know how or why i switched to debian for a while. With debian i had a lot of problems with some software, mostly proprietary drivers for esotic hardware i was running back then due to me buying the cheapest laptops available, so i started distro hopping for a while. Every distro but fedora was debian based so it felt a lot like a more of the same experience and I felt stuck in a loop where i was eventually gonna reinstall my whole system after breaking something i didnt even know existed.

                                  Then one day i found arch. Installing it wasnt as easy as clicking install on the live system's guy, but just by following the wiki general instructions i didnt have any issues the first time. It felt good. Building the system block by block helped me understand how things work, the package manager was the best i had seen and the newbie corner basically had the solutions for all my screw-ups, even more than ask-ubuntu did. Everybody in the community was super helpful (even some of the devs). Then there was the AUR, with almost every piece of esotic or proprietary software i needed, much easier than adding some random guy's repositories to apt or enabling backports on debian. Also i found out that i prefer having a rolling release. With arch i learned how to use and maintain my system, and i just stuck with it.

                                  That said, just how some use linux just to brag about it with their normie friends, many many people use arch to brag about it with other linux users, mostly beacause arch has the infamous reputation that it is hard to install, hard to maintain, easy to break. Which is actually not that bad considering that all these people are gonna end up posting in the newbie corner lol.

                                  Truth is that arch is not harder than any other distro. It only comes down to your will to learn and RTFM
                                  What i think worked for me was the transparency. Nobody said it was as easy to use as windows, but nobody in the wiki said "dont do this unless you are an experienced user". Arch is not another fork of ubuntu pretending to be "even more user friendly", it's just arch.

                                  I think the problem is about distros like antergos (rip), manjaro, garuda, endevour trying to oversimplify something that only needs you to RTFM only ending up breaking something they tried to automate and hide behind a curtain that wasnt meant to be automated and was meant to be learned to manage, by hand

                                  Z J 2 Replies Last reply
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                                  • L [email protected]

                                    Arch is aimed at people who know their shit so they can build their own distro based on how they imagine their distro to be. It is not a good distro for beginners and non power users, no matter how often you try to make your own repository, and how many GUI installers you make for it. There's a good reason why there is no GUI installer in arch (aside from being able to load it into ram). That being that to use Arch, you need to have a basic understanding of the terminal. It is in no way hard to boot arch and type in archinstall. However, if you don't even know how to do that, your experience in whatever distro, no matter how arch based it is or not, will only last until you have a dependency error or some utter and total Arch bullshit® happens on your system and you have to run to the forums because you don't understand how a wiki works.

                                    You want a bleeding edge distro? Use goddamn Opensuse Tumbleweed for all I care, it is on par with arch, and it has none of the arch stuff.

                                    You have this one package that is only available on arch repos? Use goddamn flatpak and stop crying about flatpak being bloated, you probably don't even know what bloat means if you can't set up arch. And no, it dosent run worse. Those 0,0001 seconds don't matter.

                                    You really want arch so you can be cool? Read the goddamn 50 page install guide and set it up, then we'll talk about those arch forks.

                                    (Also, most arch forks that don't use arch repos break the aur, so you don't even have the one thing you want from arch)

                                    hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
                                    hiddenlayer555@lemmy.mlH This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #282

                                    IMO every distro should have a rolling release option. Kind of like how OpenSUSE has the normal version and Tumbleweed. You have normal version for when you need the OS to work (you're new to Linux, it's your main personal/work computer, it's a server, etc) and then you have the rolling release option for when you're willing to give up stability for the newest versions of everything as soon as possible.

                                    tin@lemmy.blahaj.zoneT 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • anzo@programming.devA [email protected]

                                      Didn't both distros have Btrfs auto snapshots. Same as Garuda. Anything broken? Just a reboot, arrow keys, and rollback.

                                      eggroley@lemmy.worldE This user is from outside of this forum
                                      eggroley@lemmy.worldE This user is from outside of this forum
                                      [email protected]
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #283

                                      EndeavorOS is not automatic but you can set it up with one terminal command.

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                                      • 0 [email protected]

                                        less hard than running debian or redhat back in the 90s

                                        Zoomers will never know the pain... and the joy and actually getting it installed!

                                        L This user is from outside of this forum
                                        L This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #284

                                        That what makes it so cringe that they want that with arch.

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                                        • despaircode@lemmy.mlD [email protected]

                                          That depends on what the beginner's goal is. Arch could very well be a nice beginner distro, as could Gentoo or Slackware or any other "hard" distro if you're determined to learn. My baptism of fire was on Slackware in the 90s (which I'm still on), long before "beginner distros". Trying and failing was a big part of the fun. If you're determined to learn, I don't see any issue with starting with a distro that doesn't hold your hand.

                                          Z This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #285

                                          Isn't the lack of dependency management a huge pain on Slackware? I think Gentoo is my forever distro, but I'm very curious about Slackware.

                                          despaircode@lemmy.mlD 1 Reply Last reply
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