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Hey all! I am Hyde302, can just call me Hyde. 20 years old from US. I might be the closest thing to a newb as it gets. I started using Linux in general about a year ago. I was just jumping from distro to distro using a live cd, just getting an idea of the user interface, nothing hardcore.
I decided to install Linux mint on my brothers laptop because his drive died. He enjoys using the gui, although I don't believe he knows anything about the terminal, at least not yet.
So far my most favorite distros are Arch, Manjaro, and Crunchbang. I still have very little experience with Linux to appreciate the awesomeness.
Last edited by Hyde302 (2014-04-15 21:15:16)
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Hello Hyde,
Welcome to Arch Linux. Just a couple points though. First, I am glad your brother resisted the temptation to violate Microsoft's copyright. We have a strong policy in that regard. Also, we ask for respect towards other operating systems and the teams that maintain them Critiques are fine, but we try to keep it professional.
Thanks
Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday
Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine. -- Alan Turing
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How to Ask Questions the Smart Way
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I think they are able to get unadultered long lost installation isos as long as you have a COA/product key in hand (and as advised from Microsoft forum mods).
I may have to CONSOLE you about your usage of ridiculously easy graphical interfaces...
Look ma, no mouse.
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Hello ewaller,
Fair enough, I apologize. I suppose the first thing I should have done was read the rules. That was completely my fault.
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Hello everyone! Joined the world of arch linux a few months ago, finally joined the forum as well. I love it. After hopping from one distro to another, i finally settled in here! So much fun tingling with such a system... I would like to thank all the devs that made it possible!
I'm new here.
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Just wanted to say a big hello and that I'm happy to say I switched from Debian to Arch Linux in the flavor of Manjaro.
"An it harm none, do what thou wilt"
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Just wanted to say a big hello and that I'm happy to say I switched from Debian to Arch Linux in the flavor of Manjaro.
Manjaro != Arch
If you need any support with your system please remember to ask on the Manjaro forums, this forum is for Arch Linux only.
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Hello. I'm lithuanian. Add me to Arch fans list!
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Hello. I'm Ryan.
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Hello,
Name's Eric. I'm a paramedic in the great state of North Carolina. I've been a linux user/supporter/advocate since the 90's when I ran my first instance of Red Hat Linux. Since those days, I've pretty devoutly run Slackware over the last decade or so. I decided to have a little fun with a new ultrabook I bought, and I decided I'd like to try something new out, so here I am. I just finished the last little bit of configuration and I'm running Arch with cinnamon with very little issue on an HP split X2 ultrabook. So far, pretty happy with this distro. Command line doesn't scare me, and the installation was a breeze. Pacman is a beast when you're used to no manager at all. It gets old having to maintain your own dependencies and compile everything yourself. Anyway, I'll stop rambling. Glad to be here.
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Best Place for Noobs Please feel free!!
Ask and extend your knowledge.(Knowledge is Power)
Mind itself is Heaven of Hell and Hell of Heaven-Anonymous
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Since those days, I've pretty devoutly run Slackware over the last decade or so.
Command line doesn't scare me, and the installation was a breeze.
Reminds me of the old saying, "If you need help with Linux, ask a Slackware user".
Pacman is a beast when you're used to no manager at all. It gets old having to maintain your own dependencies and compile everything yourself.
I experienced something like that after running Slackware for about one year back in college. I then tried Debian and the apt package manager and realized just how amazingly easy my Linux experience could be. I do sometimes miss the feeling of checking websites myself for new packages, downloading them, and building them and their dependencies into "/usr/local". But I don't miss it THAT much.
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Yea, you definitely learn command line in Slackware. Of course, back when I first started using Linux, Xfree86 was a shell of what desktops are like nowadays. They were horribly ugly and had limited capability. I never even booted a desktop environment. Even for IRC, we used IRCii. Hell, I always used Lynx text based browser lol.
I'm not sure I'll ever want to go back to manual installations. I am getting spoiled by pacman. Just like earlier... I had an issue with my WLAN. I accidentally hit the hard block switch on my laptop. I released the hard block, but I couldn't get the soft block that had now appeared to go away. I referred to rfkill, and I was informed that apparently my base install didn't add it. Solution? Plug in an ethernet cable and type pacman -S rfkill. I giggled like a little kid.
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Hello, folks!
When Windows Vista came around in 2009, I switched to Linux. First to Ubuntu, and when the Unity interface came around, I switched to Mint. On the advice of a friend, I gave Arch Linux a try, and I liked it immediately. I still do everyday's work on a Linux Mint machine, but those days may be countered. One of my favourite slogans, maybe apt for Arch:
Perfection is reached, not when nothing can be added anymore, but when nothing can be removed anymore.
Regards,
Jeroen.
Last edited by Strompf (2014-04-22 12:37:27)
Jeroen Strompf, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
http://devliegendebrigade.nl - System Maintenance, Webshops, Online Marketing
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http://devliegendebrigade.nl/wiki/index … nux_-_Arch - Arch Linux (Dutch)
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Hello, folks!
When Windows Vista came around in 2009, I switched to Linux. First to Ubuntu, and when the Unity interface came around, I switched to Mint. On the advice of a friend, I gave Arch Linux a try, and I liked it immediately. I still do everyday's work on a Linux Mint machine, but those days may be countered. One of my favourite slogans, maybe apt for Arch:
Perfection is reached, not when nothing can be added anymore, but when nothing can be removed anymore.
Regards,
Jeroen.
Maybe no more distro hopping?
I may have to CONSOLE you about your usage of ridiculously easy graphical interfaces...
Look ma, no mouse.
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Hello everybody.
Is this a good place for a first post??
Ok, ok, I know it is... Feels a bit weird coming to a forum like this and starting completely fresh. Jeez, post number one... Haven't done that in a while. Just so that everybody knows, I'm wearing a chain of garlic around my neck too, according to subtle warnings in the first post of this thread.
Ok, so... I've been a linux user and a contributor since... er... were the woolies still roaming back then? Yup, the times of the last glacial period, sounds about right.
Anyway, it was a bit cold so I started wearing a hat (was it a red hat? I think it was...) and continued to do so, occasionally looking over the fence to see how the Joneses are doing. When the fashion trends brought new and classy fedoras, I said to myself why not, and started wearing a fedora at home & at the office, while sticking to helmets... er... red enterprise hats at the construction sites I manage for my daily job. Safety first, and so on and so forth.
Lately, those modern fedoras seem to vary in style a but too much for me. A clear case of middle age crisis? We'll see, I guess...
Thinking about how to cope with this period of life, I remembered that a friend of mine has advised me some time ago that building a stone arch isn't a bad way to take one's mind off things. Or was he talking about taking up archery? Or just suggested making something explode with a big boom? Hm. I don't recall. But it seems like most of the folks in this forum do all of the above and more, so I thought I'd join... and see where this goes.
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Feels a bit weird coming to a forum like this and starting completely fresh. Jeez, post number one... Haven't done that in a while.
Hi! What other forums are you active in? Anything exciting?
Last edited by drcouzelis (2014-04-22 16:51:40)
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One of my favourite slogans, maybe apt for Arch:
I read that and said "Noooooo, I like pacman better !!"
There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots !
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I wouldn't trade pacman for apt if you paid me.
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Hi! What other forums are you active in? Anything exciting?
Nah, I don't think so... Not really. No clandestine organizations, medieval book clubs or projects attempting to send virtualized amoebae to nearby star systems... Nothing that would be even thinking of using an .io domain or reaching singularity.
I used to spend more time on various forums and mailing lists, I guess. As far as IT goes, even some cool ones, back when the hosting business was still relatively young and Linux or any form of virtualization was considered new and avant-garde. These days I just keep up a bit with Fedora, RHEL, OpenVZ and some programming frameworks, like Web2py... mostly pretty standard stuff.
I am open to recommendations, though!
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Pednick wrote:Just wanted to say a big hello and that I'm happy to say I switched from Debian to Arch Linux in the flavor of Manjaro.
Manjaro != Arch
If you need any support with your system please remember to ask on the Manjaro forums, this forum is for Arch Linux only.
No probs, that goes without saying, I actually opted for Antergos instead and am not looking back at debian at all.
Last edited by Pednick (2014-04-23 01:17:16)
"An it harm none, do what thou wilt"
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slithery wrote:Pednick wrote:Just wanted to say a big hello and that I'm happy to say I switched from Debian to Arch Linux in the flavor of Manjaro.
Manjaro != Arch
If you need any support with your system please remember to ask on the Manjaro forums, this forum is for Arch Linux only.No probs, that goes without saying, I actually opted for Antergos instead and am not looking back at debian at all.
Antegros != Arch either.
Regardless, welcome to Arch, but until and unless you run Arch, we won't be able to help you here.
Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday
Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine. -- Alan Turing
---
How to Ask Questions the Smart Way
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Greetings all! Just wanted to post in the NC now that I've setup my first Arch system in VirtualBox, complete with KDE Plasma desktop . I've been using Linux (mainly Mint 13) for over two years now, so I thought it was time to tackle an Arch install. To me, Arch is the 'Holy Grail' of distros. Eventually I'll do an install on the 'real iron', but for now, I'm pretty excited to have gotten this far.
I'd also like to say that I really liked the 'How not to post' thread - very nice!
well enough of my ramblings - I'm proud to be aboard.
(Edit to fix dyslexic moment and poorly worded sentence )
Last edited by RobertLM78 (2014-04-23 05:57:30)
~$ cowsay $(fortune)
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Pednick wrote:slithery wrote:Manjaro != Arch
If you need any support with your system please remember to ask on the Manjaro forums, this forum is for Arch Linux only.No probs, that goes without saying, I actually opted for Antergos instead and am not looking back at debian at all.
Antegros != Arch either.
Regardless, welcome to Arch, but until and unless you run Arch, we won't be able to help you here.
Like I said that goes without saying so there was no need to say it again, it's understood that I will ask arch supported questions if I have any. Blessed be.
Last edited by Pednick (2014-04-23 17:03:09)
"An it harm none, do what thou wilt"
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Hi all. Been using Arch for a long time, but never got around to registering for the forum until now.
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