• Labna@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Gentoo obviously :
    To install, easy just get this iso, with no GUI, then whip your hard drive, create partition, copy the Linux core, config your core based on the hardware technical details of every components you have and will use, compile it, add extra core drivers, compile them, add all the software you’ll use to get a GUI (Desktop environment), compile them,. Now you can finally restart without usb stick! Add all the software, configure and compile them. And for every update of every software you may check the details to be sure it doesn’t break your config.
    Easy no? It just took you a month to get all the steps right!

  • dbtng@eviltoast.org
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    7 hours ago

    Ya there’s Arch. There’s NixOS. There’s still Slackware.
    But have you heard of 9front?
    9front is useless. You won’t be gaming or working with it.
    Mostly, you’d learn how operating systems are constructed.

    Or DoomOS or DoomLinux. It’s a basic linux system where DOOM is the shell.
    I forked this and tried to get it running. Learned some interesting things. Still doesn’t work for me. :]
    https://github.com/fl64/DoomLinux

  • HouseWolf@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    When I was first looking into Linux I asked the only friend I knew who used it and he unironically recommended me Arch…

    A year later I actually gave Arch a try, but by then he apparently hated Arch and switched to Gentoo and I stopped asking him for advice at that point.

    • Semperverus@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      I have been using Arch for a half a decade at this point and its worked out well for me. I like how its very stable despite being bleeding edge (relatively speaking). It’s made gaming a lot easier, and I was pleasantly surprised when Valve announced SteamOS was switching to it as a base.

      A lot of people have varying levels of purism when it comes to linux, and it sounds like your friend dipped his toes in with Arch and realized “not pure enough” and then jumped in on the deep end with Gentoo. At the end of the day, Linux is Linux no matter which distro you pick, but each distro highlights different strengths and weaknesses of it. Its all about the package managers, the repository contents, and the maintainers. Occasionally, technical support might matter.

      So, pick whichever distro you like, move around a bit to see what has the least papercuts for you, and then stick with that until you can’t anymore.

      • Lucy :3@feddit.org
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        15 hours ago

        very stable despite being bleeding edge

        Try testing. And be just as amazed as me on how stable even that is. It literally runs on my main server. The one that, if it goes down, everything of me is down. Yet, I never had problems, for years.

        • _cryptagion [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          13 hours ago

          Yeah, I used to run Arch myself, and I never had any issues with anything. Now, I’m no saying there aren’t people who have had issues, but it seems to me the reputation it has is undeserved.

          I run NixOS now, and lemme tell you it deserves its reputation, no matter how much I love it.

    • TwilightKiddy@programming.dev
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      17 hours ago

      I switched from Arch to Gentoo, for me it’s just the next step of taking advantage of every last bit of my hardware. But unless you are seriously invested, I would never recommend Gentoo to someone. If you just want something that’s up to date, go with Fedora. If you have some spare time, go with Arch. If you have no hobbies at all, go with Gentoo.

      • ragas@lemmy.ml
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        15 hours ago

        I dunno, apart from compile times, Gentoo is the simplest distribution ever. I have way more problems with my Arch or Ubuntu (Neon) installations.

        • TwilightKiddy@programming.dev
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          3 hours ago

          That depends on what your goals are. And with Gentoo you can have a lot more elaborate goals than with other distros. Mine, for example, was to get rid of initramfs. I spent a week compiling and recompiling the kernel with different configurations before I was able to see a TTY for the first time.

          Of course you can grab your distribution kernel and get default and perfectly safe use flags for everything, but, I would still be an Arch user if that was my jam.

  • OpenStars@piefed.social
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    18 hours ago

    To scare them? Windows.

    img

    It’s the absolute best way to make someone become a Linux user for life.:-)