backseatjuan
Banned
a). it's easy to install, with zen installer literally 10 minutes.
b). it is more stable than Debian based systems, reason being is that Debian based stuff is frozen 4 years in the past and new stuff breaks things when mixed with old stuff. No such thing with Arch, everything is new and everything works. Stability on rolling release is a myth, from my experience.
c). it does not slow down. Unlike for example Ubuntu, which after several months get bugged down, slower and slower for whatever reason, Arch is always fast and ultra light, even if you use all the same software.
d). it optimizes compiled code for your architecture whether you have sandy bridge or ivy lake, little differences add up.
c). it has the largest software repository, AUR. Forget about going to sites and downloading rpms or debs or adding additional repos, everything is in AUR, even stuff that is only available on github, you open up nice GUI and type the name of software and usually you are presented with several things, like binaries, stable version you can build and optimize for your architecture, or bleeding edge version you can build and also optimize for your architecture.
e). there are no dev packages, each package already includes source which results in less overall packages being installed.
f). there are dozens of kernels available, such as zen and xanmod which do speed up graphics and io.
So if you're doing your Linux adventure, the answer is Arch. Not manjaro because it's not arch and not endevouros because it has wrong screenfetch icon, and not ubuntu or mint because it's crap, and not fedora because they managed to take stuff that works in arch and make it work poorly in fedora. The answer is a proper rolling release, the answer is Arch. It's your final Linux that will run trouble free for years to come without reinstall.
Beyond Arch is only Gentoo, you compile everything and optimize everything for your architecture, which will be even faster and lighter than Arch. Unfortunately Gentoo does not have an easy installer like zen.
If everyone would start with Arch, Linux would be easy. Too easy! For you to install wifite2 you have to go to github and follow instructions, for me, open up GUI and install wifite2, done.
b). it is more stable than Debian based systems, reason being is that Debian based stuff is frozen 4 years in the past and new stuff breaks things when mixed with old stuff. No such thing with Arch, everything is new and everything works. Stability on rolling release is a myth, from my experience.
c). it does not slow down. Unlike for example Ubuntu, which after several months get bugged down, slower and slower for whatever reason, Arch is always fast and ultra light, even if you use all the same software.
d). it optimizes compiled code for your architecture whether you have sandy bridge or ivy lake, little differences add up.
c). it has the largest software repository, AUR. Forget about going to sites and downloading rpms or debs or adding additional repos, everything is in AUR, even stuff that is only available on github, you open up nice GUI and type the name of software and usually you are presented with several things, like binaries, stable version you can build and optimize for your architecture, or bleeding edge version you can build and also optimize for your architecture.
e). there are no dev packages, each package already includes source which results in less overall packages being installed.
f). there are dozens of kernels available, such as zen and xanmod which do speed up graphics and io.
So if you're doing your Linux adventure, the answer is Arch. Not manjaro because it's not arch and not endevouros because it has wrong screenfetch icon, and not ubuntu or mint because it's crap, and not fedora because they managed to take stuff that works in arch and make it work poorly in fedora. The answer is a proper rolling release, the answer is Arch. It's your final Linux that will run trouble free for years to come without reinstall.
Beyond Arch is only Gentoo, you compile everything and optimize everything for your architecture, which will be even faster and lighter than Arch. Unfortunately Gentoo does not have an easy installer like zen.
If everyone would start with Arch, Linux would be easy. Too easy! For you to install wifite2 you have to go to github and follow instructions, for me, open up GUI and install wifite2, done.