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I dont know what I really thought.
Last edited by sleepyoh (2018-08-15 18:23:01)
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I want a rock solid, dependable desktop OS that doesn't need to update often, doesn't break with every update, respects my time and privacy, and doesn't install Candy Crush. I've used OpenBSD for some time but it's too much hands on for desktop use so now I'm on Debian stable. I keep a bunch of VMs for experimenting, testing and packaging including Arch. AUR is nice.
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I want a rock solid, dependable desktop OS that doesn't need to update often
Khm?
Rules for problems.
Everyone has problems. Animals have problems. And buildings. And cats, and trees.
Problems are your friends. Treat them well.
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sjmulder wrote:I want a rock solid, dependable desktop OS that doesn't need to update often
Khm?
> now I use Debian stable
Arch doesn't really fit the use case, hence the answer is the posed question is no, for me. But I do use it to play around with new shiny things!
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Arch is my daily driver and the Wiki is my Bible (although sometimes I find it difficult to understand my age ...)
This isn't right. This isn't even wrong.
-- Wolfgang Pauli --
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When I first installed and began using Arch last year, I was tripple-booting with Ubuntu and Windows. As I dove deeper and explored the Arch universe, I was logging into the other OSes less and less, until finally I barely ever logged into them any more. Once I realized that Arch was my new home, I wiped Ubuntu and Windows from my hard drive, and even installed Arch on two other hard drives (I now have three separate Arch installs across two computers, a laptop and a desktop). Arch is now indeed my daily driver, aside from having Windows in VirtualBox VMs.
Last edited by tydynrain (2019-11-15 08:26:19)
Registered Linux User: #623501 | Arch Linux Principles: Simplicity - Modernity - Pragmatism - User Centrality - Versatility => KISS
Arch Linux, the most exciting thing since Linus created Linux and married it with GNU/GPL.
Arch Linux for Life, Arch Linux Forever!
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Yes, this is the only distro I feel so comfortable in. I was able to ditch Windows once I was able to install Vulkan to fill my gaming needs, which are, for some reason every day less.
Other than that, there is nothing that I cannot do on my Arch system compared to Windows.
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Been my daily driver for 2+ years. Virtually zero complaints here. Barely ever an issue with updates and since I set everything up with scripts and dotfiles I hardly ever have to tinker around, unless I want to.
Had far more issues with distros like ubuntu and mint in the past. Maybe that's because I've learned more since then, but I also have Arch to thank for that.
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I have sorted end up in a weird situation, I love trying things and seeing how things feel in a day to day use. Mind you, I know you can experience every package in up to date on Arch, but sometimes drunk on a weekend i LOVE LOVE trying new distros. I DD images to my 240gb sata ssd, boot and install to nvme pcie ssd.
If you have ever installed Linux from a usb drive, You have no idea how Blazingly fast it is to install from ssd to ---> faster ssd. Usally have 500Mb/s transfers, and love trying things on a regular basis.
That said, my server needs to be rock solid, but I more mentally then practical also want to be more up to date then old crap for no reason. Also have packages in official repos that I depend on, wich no other distro seams to easily have. (teamspeak server? was in Aur not anymore) It's been running for more then 700 days, from statistics I reboot every 10 days after updates. Have newer Ever had any problems, except like one or two times I decided to change stuff after many beers... Solved easily day after.
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I have two home computers, my main computer which is where I do just about everything, and that one has been running Arch for quite a few years now. I can't imagine using any other distribution as Arch suits me perfectly. My second computer is a tiny laptop, on which I used to run Arch, but switched to Debian since I hardly ever use it. It's mostly just my travel computer, so it can be unused for up to six months, which is why I decided Debian was a better choice.
I also have a Linode on which I run Debian.
But it is on my Arch system that I do pretty much everything, including hobby coding, testing, browsing, and lots of gaming.
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Arch Linux has been my daily driver across multiple machines for at least 10 years now.
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I´m a photographer, I sometimes edit videos, I play games and all other internet related stuff exclusively on Arch, since about 6 months or so back. And I have since, installed Arch on my HTPC/Mediacenter and laptop.
So yeah...Arch it is !!!! :-) <3
Arch...the way it was meant to be !!
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My arch is running 18 months without reinstall. Meantime, i transferred the entire system onto ssd. I did not have any issues with the system. The only minor problems were related to the upgrades like printer not working.
I am surprised how stable arch is. This is my favourite distro. I'd like to try linux from scratch, but I think arch is my limit.
Recently i have managed to get rts5227 working. Was not a hard job...
Only wayland was causing problems. Laptop was randomly hanging up. I decided not to solve it and came back to xorg.
Last edited by ad4ms3 (2019-09-11 22:11:56)
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Arch is my daily driver for sure
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Arch has been my daily driver @work for 2 years now. They offered me a MacBook at first, but after 2 months of dongle-hell and weird command line logic, I ditched it and got a crappy Lenovo ThinkPad as a replacement - installed Arch and have not looked back since. Has been working like a charm and I get stuff done in a humane manner.
@home I have been distro-hopping between Manjaro and Arch but for the last few years, only Arch could quench my thirst for building a slim, not bloated setup which I could call my own - also it happens that Arch does not break like Manjaro due to the fact that Arch does not mess around with your configuration files.
But for what it's worth, yes, I still keep windows boot around as well @home just for gaming.
... and then there are multiple PI's running arch arm for cameras, nas and a media center.
Last edited by Kallestofeles (2019-10-11 21:32:54)
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I have went the Arch way a few weeks ago on my desktop PC at home after tasting it in a VM for months. Now I hate to come to my office to boot this excruciatingly slow Windows 10 machine. Unfortunately I have to keep a Win10 install on my old-as-hell laptop (which for most of the time is locked in my closet), as a few government and business sites in the country only really work with Internet Explorer, and we use some weird Microsoft Office add-ins at work so I need those if I need to open the files at home for some reason.
The only way... is all the way!
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I only use Arch.
Since I need to use AutoCAD frequently, I use it in a Windows virtual machine. That's the maximum extent to which I use windows.
CAD alternatives aren't an option at their current development stage, and as far as I know Autodesk doesn't plan to release a native Linux version, unfortunately.
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Laptop uses arch, pi uses raspbian, cloud server uses debian.
And everything runs smooth as butter.
Last edited by s6 (2019-10-27 07:42:03)
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I use only Arch Linux from 2010 as my main laptop system. It is installed on my wife's laptop too. We don't use other OS than windows in Virtualbox.
Before I was a debian guy, and sometimes I tested ubuntu and gentoo distributions.
I love archlinux: the last STABLE kernel release + the last STABLE DE release + the last STABLE apps releases. The upstream developers decide what is STABLE.
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Using it for past 2 yrs. No turning back !
Last edited by pradeesh (2019-10-28 07:04:02)
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Yes.
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Arch on my primary laptop! I love the wiki, the community is cool, never get stuck on Arch, things are logical. I've been a lot on Ubuntu related distro before and I always bumped into unsolvable problems at some point
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I don't even own a computer
Cloud Engineer | Kiwi | Coffee Lover | Did you read the manual?
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I don't even own a computer
It's all in the Cloud ☁️™️?
Mods are just community members who have the occasionally necessary option to move threads around and edit posts. -- Trilby
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Yep. I have two laptops running Arch, and have to admit I'm very happy with them.
"For, as long as but a hundred of us remain alive, never will we on any conditions be brought under English rule. It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom – for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself."
Aye well maybe we'll redeem ourselves one day.
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