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Hi everyone, I've been in the Linux world for some time, and after various distro hopping I finally arrived at Arch (and its derivative, which is EndeavourOS).
I'm not an expert, I'm still a novice, but I hope I can learn to use Linux and Arch in the best way, thanks also to your experience.
See you around the forum. Greetings!
When a mind does not know itself, it is flawed. When a mind is flawed, the man is flawed. When a man is flawed, that which he touches is flawed. It is said that what a flawed man sees, his hands make broken. (Dak'kon - Planescape: Torment)
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Hello everyone!
I'm incredibly happy to join Arch community!
Been hopping non-stop between multiple distros and all of them felt off.
It's time to sink some time and make something that would suit me.
I must say thank you for incredible documentation!
Used Arch for like a month, but already learned a lot more than I would have ever learned while using other distros...
Absolute rabbit hole, and I love it.
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Hello, Arch community! I received my new Dell mobile workstation on Friday (with an Ubuntu preload) and have just installed Arch for the first time, over the weekend. As a post shortly before mine says, it's a deep rabbit hole of learning, but that's a feature, not a problem.
I administered DEC ULTRIX, HPUX, and a tiny bit of IBM AIX in the late 1990s. From about 1997 to the early 2000s I ran Linux as my native boot with xfce desktop, but then I had to switch to commercial workstation o.s. because of customer requirements. For 20 years almost 100% of my Linux work has been on headless servers in data centers. My knowledge of the Linux desktop environment and the API stacks below is woefully out of date. I'm thrilled to be back on my o.s. of choice, but the learning curve is daunting.
My go-to distro for personal devices and VPS has been Debian or Ubuntu (with xfce4 if GUI), but I switched to Mint and Cinnamon just before upgrading my hardware. That's a great combination and was very easy to install and configure, but my 3D development tools were not happy with the age of the GPU driver and some of the system libraries. When my new laptop arrived, I decided to use the "greenfield" installation process to experiment with Arch because of the newer package versions available directly in the pacman repos and because of the rolling upgrades.
To be honest, the daunting learning curve was also part of the reason I chose Arch this time. I've used Linux on Intel-compatibles and on IBM mainframes for over 20 years. It's time to push myself to the next level of knowledge and skill. Instead of a friendly installer that asks me where I want to put the system then does it all, Arch made me learn the Linux installation process much deeper. Tasks such as setting up LUKS disk encryption under LVM2 and configuring firewall rules are intuititive to me because of my server experience, yet I struggle with things like sound drivers that are probably easy for others. Everyone walks a different path, and nobody is an expert in everything.
Finally, I want to close by commending the Arch community for the documentation on forums and the Wiki. Those writing the Wiki and answering questions on the forums demonstrate a keen understanding of Linux in general and (of course) Arch Linux in particular, and I've been able to find answers to nearly all of my questions in those two places. Thanks to all who contributed and continue to contribute to the pool of knowledge.
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Hello People
Im long time linux user. Yet im no linux guru, just a user. I earned my stripes on slackware and debian in the times when debian was not so nice as it is today and slackware being slackware without sackbuilds and all that nice stuff it have today.
I have one question hopefully one of the last.
Is it possible to read arch wiki during an installation using lynks , links2 or something.
Or is it possible to use for example debian live iso with some firefox and arch-install-scripts installed to use some arch tarbal dowlanded by wget or curl as a bootstrap base then setting the system via arch-chrot??
I searched that info against few keywords on wiki and there is non or im just an idiot who do not know what to type in search box.
Thx
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I am not sure if links2 is on the installation iso anymore, but one certainly can use links2 to browse the wiki.
If it is not installed, you could install it shortly after doing your arch-chroot and can use it inside your burgeoning new system while in the chroot.
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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ewaller thank you
And apprently im an idiot
Arch can be bootstrapped from other other live cd.
If I found this earlier i woldn't ask that
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Instal … ting_Linux
3.2.1 Method A: Using the bootstrap tarball (recommended)
Sorry for bother you people and take care
No more off topic from me
EOT
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And apprently im an idiot
Bah! Gathering the information for an install is kind of like drinking from a fire hose. I did an install on a vintage Macbook Air yesterday -- I had the luxury of separate working Arch box sitting next to me at the same desk.
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
Online
basically hello arch linux
ive used a lot of linux distros before and distro hopping was the way i used linux
but i guess arch is the perfect one for me after using it for a month already and not even thinking to switch to other one
// shyllis
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this is my first time using linux and i'm loving it.
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I'm new to Arch Linux and trying to install it for the first time. I've heard great things about its flexibility and how it helps in learning more about Linux, but I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed with the process.
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Hello
I've been using Arch Linux for almost 7 months now (212 days to be exact) and Linux in general for more than a year (378 days).
I feel pretty comfortable daily-driving Arch, but I want to dig deeper into Arch and Linux in general and learn more about the system internals.
I hope that I can one day contribute code to Arch Linux. I think I have a working knowledge of bash, C, and C++, and I would love to use my skills to help give back to Arch.
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Hello everyone,
It's been a few days I'm trying to install Arch Linux, I'm not familiar with Linux at all (so you all must understand the struggle haha)
I managed to install it a few times, I'm almost getting comfortable with the process, but I'm currently facing the screen flickering issue, that doesn't allow me to login (I can log in, but if I try to open the Settings, or the Console) I get sent back to the login screen.
I'm not giving up, but I'll keep trying!!
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Hi all,
I've been a Linux user on and off for many years now but first time Arch user! I've been using Arch for ~7 months now and it's been fun! (even through all the ups and downs ). I dumped my Mac and my T480 running Arch is now my daily driver. Anyway, looking forward to contributing to the community.
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I installed Arch in January on a frame.work and had been running it as my backup laptop. I recently made it my primary laptop (dumping my mac also). This distro is both fun and challenging and I also look forward to contributing to the community- both here and with the frame.work community. I've a lot to learn, relearn and hopefully share. I've been using and/or supporting linux since 1998. Mostly in the server sphere. But to be honest, I needed this. Thank you to all the contributors and developers!
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Hello everyone
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Hey everyone,
I've been used Linux for 2 years now. My main distro before was Ubuntu but when I find out Archlinux as a lightweight distro, I totally switch to Arch to learn it. In the beginin, I was using DE like KDE Plasma but I wanted something very special, only the things that I want. So I figured out what a WM (or Windows Manager) was and I setup the lightweight dwm WM only with what I needed. One of the best decision in my Linux experience. And now I'm running Archlinux with dwm and some other suckless.org utils like st, slock, dmenu, or also dwmblock with my personal config that I can easly backup and re-setup the same env. in a another Archlinux.
For the moment I know Python3. But I want to learn C++ too, so I will be able to contribute to Arch one time ^^
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Hello!
been using Linux on and off for a few years now but decided to nuke Windows and only use Arch with i3wm. never looking back .
Thanks for having me
<3 be weird.
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Hello there!
I've been fiddling with an Arch installation for a year now, and am starting to get deeper in the weeds in the hope of making it my main OS.
Nice to meet you!
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I am happy to join Arch Linux community!
Have a great console, everyone!
Last edited by modev (2024-07-08 21:59:01)
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Here I am to learn from this amazing community
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Hey there!
Used ubuntu for the last 2 years, but I'll now be joining EPITA school in September, and wanted to have more experience with UNIX. I've therefore decided to install Arch on my computer
For now it's quite a journey, but hey it works, apart from the fact that it doesn't really charge and there's no sound
I'll eventually find how to fix this and will then be able to enjoy my new OS (and probably restart from scratch/clean install in September once I understood how Arch really works, I figured it takes a couple installs to make a clean one haha)
Cheers!
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It took you 2 weeks to setup, your pc was unusable meanwhile, you had to try like 25 times and made 2 reddit posts that you immidietly deleted because you knew you missed something. But then, the unthinkable happened: you totaled your bike BUT you got hyprland arch install baby. What's more worth.
ez
You can only be shown the doors; You are the one that has to walk through them.
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Hello everyone.
I have been one on and off Linux user for more than 20 years now, and I have been fiddling with Arch for 10 years now.
This year I finally made Arch my main system for all my computer needs.
I am in love with the depth of information on the wiki, and even though sometimes not everything makes total sense to me, I still work my way into reading as many things as I can to get the knowledge so i can do things...and stuff!
So massive thanks to all of you for making things happen, and I hope your day is a good one wherever you are.
Long overdue hello post since I am a member here since 2017
Peace!
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Greetings to the whole forum, I'm a new member, I'm not very expert in archlinux, but out of necessity, having a low-performance laptop I had to opt to install mabox, even if in reality I prefer arch to other distributions. Generally I have no problems, except that every now and then I have problems installing AUR packages, the compilation gives me errors, and I think it's just a local problem with my installation. Thanks for any help you can give me, see you next time. I apologise for my english
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I started with Ubuntu because the terminal environment looked so cool, even though I only knew a bit of Python. Building my own system on Linux has been incredibly fun. Then I discovered Arch Linux. The idea of building my OS from scratch, starting with nothing, is so exciting. I hope to learn programming thoroughly and contribute in some way. Thanks to all the contributors!
Although the translation might sound a bit off because it’s done by ChatGPT, I still appreciate it. Thank you!
Last edited by m4verick (2024-07-20 13:26:00)
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