Why are distro communities turning linux more and more into Windows and Mac OS clones?

This is why I use Arch.

  • @seaQueue@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Friends don’t let friends use Manjaro

    Use EndeavourOS or another Arch derivative instead.

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        16 months ago

        And it’s a one-time thing, then you just pacman - Syu into the sunset. Consider setting up btrfs with snapshots, which is a life saver when an update goes bad. I use snapper on openSUSE Tumbleweed and it has saved me from bad NVIDIA updates a couple of times, which is the main reason I switched from Arch a few years ago.

  • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I’m usually a defender of opt-out telemetry in Linux, what with it usually being trivial to untick in the installer, the telemetry not being invasive, the telemetry being private and not being able to identify people, it being used to actually benefit Linux rather than make money, and because opt-in telemetry is useless (as repeatedly stated by multiple Linux projects that I trust, such as KDE and Gnome)…

    That said, holy shit this telemetry collects stuff it really should not be collecting. This is not what Linux telemetry should be. Doubly so from a distro with a troubled past in terms of management and security. This is a red flag.

    • @seaQueue@lemmy.world
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      86 months ago

      Manjaro manages to do just about everything wrong for one reason or another. They’re trying to be the Canonical of the Arch ecosystem and they’re not even close to competent enough to pull it off.

      I’m sure they’ll find some way to DDOS something with their own telemetry sooner or later.

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        46 months ago

        Yeah, I don’t understand why people use it, it’s just more buggy Arch. If you really don’t want to deal with the installer, use an installer like Endeavor OS.

        Or if you think Arch is unstable, use a different distro, because Manjaro is worse. I like openSUSE Tumbleweed (also rolling, but much more reliable), and there are tons of other great distros (Fedora/Garuda, Debian/Mint, etc). Use pretty much anything but Manjaro…

    • @Dezzorian@lemmy.world
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      46 months ago

      For gaming rigs, check out Garuda, imo a pretty nice Arch distro without telemetry and easy installation.

  • @MissyBee@lemmy.world
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    176 months ago

    Oh boy looks like my weekend will be spend learning and trying to install Arch without a graphical installer. To be fair Manjaro on my laptop was my first try at Arch. I never thought how much I will come to like AUR.

    EndevaourOS is already on my gaming rig so plain Arch for my laptop seems like a good challenge. Farewell Manjaro, I learned a lot

    • noodle (he/him)
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      76 months ago

      the archinstall script is officially supported and very straightforward. like, almost Calamares-but-in-TUI straightforward.

    • @seaQueue@lemmy.world
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      66 months ago

      It’s not that hard, just read the install guides and instructions. My first Arch install was like 8y ago and I expected it to be difficult - it wasn’t.

      • Akatsuki Levi
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        36 months ago

        Meanwhile my first Gentoo system… I was expecting to be not so bad… Holy f I was wrong

    • Akatsuki Levi
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      56 months ago

      After you figure out how to properly partition your disk, you learn how the entire setup is actually quite simple Basically, Mount partitions, pacstrap to install the base system, generate fstab, chroot in, create a unprivileged user and add it to sudo, setup grub, configure internet, exit chroot and unmount, reboot into the newly installed system, configure X11/Wayland to your liking

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        26 months ago

        Installing Arch is a lot easier than fixing a bad Manjaro update. I get that it’s intimidating, but it’s really quite easy if you can follow instructions, but budget a couple hours your first time because you’ll probably second-guess everything. The second time should be more like 30 min.

        • Akatsuki Levi
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          26 months ago

          'Till you figure out that, on Arch, if you missed/broke anything, you can boot into the Arch USB, mount your root into /mnt, and arch-chroot in to fix whatever is broken

    • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      16 months ago

      I highly recommend BTRFS as your root filesystem, and then configure snapshots. This way if an update goes sideways (pretty rare), you can roll back and wait for fixes.

      I haven’t used Arch for a few years, but my openSUSE Tumbleweed install came with it by default, and it has saved me a few times in the 7 or so years I’ve used it. Maybe the new instructions include that, idk, but you’ll be glad you have it.

  • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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    126 months ago

    If I were using Manjaro right now, at the first opportunity, I would be switching to something else. Too much enshitification happening everywhere, and people need to start voting with their “wallets” to stop these greedy fucks.

  • @rando@lemmy.ml
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    46 months ago

    I was just getting used to using Manjaro for my dev machines due to rolling release. Gotta find new flavor now.

      • @rando@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        Yup saw it recommended in one of the comments as well, I’ll look it up.

      • @rando@lemmy.ml
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        26 months ago

        Haven’t touched suse ecosystem since they were suse. Now I just feel comfortable with Debian or arch.

    • @IcyToes@sh.itjust.works
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      16 months ago

      Well Debian doesn’t have a rolling distro, does it?

      It was something that underpinned your choice and now it’s not. I’m not sure why you said gotta find when you already knew the answer.

      • @rando@lemmy.ml
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        26 months ago

        Got into rolling release very recently with Manjaro (realized Debian doesn’t have rolling release). Just started getting used to arch packaging. I wouldn’t consider myself knowledgeable in rolling release options