Also why does everyone seem to hate on Ubuntu?

  • blob42@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    IMO Despite some unjustified rumors Arch is a very stable distro. For me it feels the same as Debian stability wise while still being on the cutting edge side. The Arch wiki is the second most important reason.

  • notarobot@lemmy.zip
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    3 hours ago

    I installed arch before there was the official install script. It’s not that is was THAT difficult, but it does provide a great sense of accomplishment, you learn a lot, customize everything, and you literally only install things you know you want. (Fun story: I had to start over twice: the first time I forgot to install sudo, the second I forgot to install the package needed to have an internet connection)

    All of this combined mean that the users have a sense of pride for being an arch user so they talk about it more that the rest. There is no pride in clicking your way though an installer that makes all the choices for you

  • brax@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    I left Ubuntu for Arch because I got sick of Arch having everything I wanted and Ubuntu taking ages to finally get it. I was tired of compiling shit all the time just to keep up to date.

    Honestly glad I made the change, too. Arch has been so much better all around. Less bloat and far fewer problems.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    6 hours ago

    “I run Arch btw” became a meme because until install scripts became commonplace you had to have a reasonable understanding of the terminal and ability to read and follow instructions to install Arch Linux to a usable state. “Look at my l33t skills.”

    Dislike of Ubuntu comes from Canonical…well…petting the cat backwards. They go against the grain a lot. They’re increasingly corporate, they did a sketchy sponsorship thing with Amazon at one point, around ten years ago they were in the midst of this whole “Not Invented Here” thing; all tech had to be invented in-house, instead of systemd they made and abandoned Upstart, instead of working on Wayland they pissed away time on Mir, instead of Gnome or KDE they made Unity, and instead of APT they decided to build Snap. Which is the one they’re still clinging to.

    For desktop users there are a lot better distros than Ubuntu these days.

  • folaht@lemmy.ml
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    7 hours ago

    Arch is better because…

    • pacman, seriously, I don’t hear enough of how great pacman is.
      Being able to search easily for files within a package is a godsend when some app refuses to work giving you an error message “lib_obscure.so.1 cannot be found”.
      I haven’t had such issues in a long time, but when I do, I don’t have to worry about doing a ten hour search, if I’m lucky, for where this obscure library file is supposed to be located and in what package it should be part of.
    • rolling release. Non-rolling Ubuntu half-year releases have broken my OS in the past around 33% of the time. And lots of apps in the past had essential updates I needed, but required me to wait 5 months for the OS to catch up.
    • AUR. Some apps can’t be found anywhere but AUR.
    • Their wiki is the best of all Linuxes

    The “cult” is mostly gushing over AUR.

    • chellomere@lemmy.world
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      8 minutes ago

      Hmm, finding what package a file is in is absolutely possible on Ubuntu/Debian too. You can use the online Ubuntu/Debian packages search, or use apt-file.

  • Yozul@beehaw.org
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    10 hours ago

    Normal people who use Arch don’t bring it up much, because they’re all sick of the memes and are really, REALLY tired of immediately being called rude elitist neckbeard cultists every time they mention it.

    The Ubuntu hate is because Canonical has a long history of making weird, controversial decisions that split the Linux community for no good reason.

        • folaht@lemmy.ml
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          8 hours ago

          Unity would be the first example, and although Unity was actually a good DE,
          it was too bloated and almost non-modifiable.

          People jumped ship to Linux Mint that had its priorities straight.

          Mir and Snap were bigger issues though
          as Wayland and Flatpak were great replacements for
          X11 and AppImage and did not need another competitor.

          But the privacy issues were the straw that broke the camel’s back.
          People left windows for linux so they wouldn’t have to deal with this kind of nonsense.

          I actually jumped when Ubuntu jumped to Gnome 3.
          Gnome 3 was too bloated for me and it looked ugly.

          I decided to see what Arch Linux was about
          and eventually settled for Manjaro Linux.
          Arch + Xfce for the win.

  • Luffy@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    Arch Hits the great spot

    It has:

    • a great wiki
    • many packages, enough for anything you want to do
    • its the only distros that is beetween everything done for you and gentoo-like fuck you.
    • and the Memes.
  • NewOldGuard [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    10 hours ago

    Arch is amazing for what it is, hence the love. It’s what you make of it; by default there’s nothing and you design your own system from scratch. This leads to a very passionate and enthusiastic community who do great work for one another, for everybody’s benefit. Anything under the sun can be found in the AUR, the distro repos are fresh and reliable, and every issue that arises has a hundred people documenting the fix before it’s patched.

    Ubuntu has a bad reputation for inconsistency, privacy invasive choices, etc. I don’t think all the hate is deserved, as they corrected course after the Amazon search fiasco, but I still won’t use it because of Snaps. They have a proprietary backend, so even if I wanted to put up with their other strange design decisions I can’t unless I wanted closed source repos. That goes against my whole philosophy and reasoning for being on Linux to begin with, and many feel the same.

  • juipeltje@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    I feel like it isn’t really specific to arch, every distro has a following, but some are more “passionate” about it than others. I think arch, NixOS, and gentoo are the most notable.

  • hankthetankie [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    10 hours ago

    I’m quite experienced in Linux but I wouldn’t use either. Arch is great if you like to tinker, Ubuntu sucks for the not so libre approach , corporate ties, telemetry etc. I distrohopped before but today I just install my debian based distro and shit works… Ubuntu I’ve installed twice before when I was new to Linux, and have had a major issues every time due to official updates that broke internet drivers and other things, that’s a fun one when you only have one PC . Not to mention its so bloated that shitty computers that I like to thinker with it have a hard time catching up. The arch thing is also mostly a kind of meme, targeting the more unbearable nerds. People I hated when I was a noob (they will let you know you are) But they are found everywhere and in general I don’t think there’s more of those people in arch community than anywhere else. It’s more of a stab at elitism than arch specifically.

    I see a point in arch but zero in ubuntu.

  • sudo@programming.dev
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    15 hours ago

    About 10 years ago it was The Distro for first time linux users to prove they were a True Linux Enjoyer. Think a bunch of channers bragging about how they are the true linux master race because they edited a grub config.

    Before Arch that role belonged to Gentoo. Since then that role has transitioned to NixOS who aren’t nearly as toxic but still culty. “Way of the future” etc.

    All three of have high bars of entry so everyone has to take pride in the effort they put in to learn how to install their distro. Like getting hazed into a frat except you actually learn something.

    The Ubuntu hatred is completely unrelated. That has to do with them being a corporate distro that keep making bad design decisions. And their ubiquity means everyone has to deal with their bad decisions. (snap bad)

    • MimicJar@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Before Arch that role belonged to Gentoo.

      To add, before the change the Gentoo wiki was a top resource when it came to Linux questions. Even if you didn’t use Gentoo you could find detailed information on how various parts of Linux worked.

      One day the Gentoo wiki died. It got temporary mirrors quickly, but it took a long time to get up and working again. This left a huge opening for another wiki, the Arch wiki, to become the new top resource.

      I suspect, for a number of reasons, Arch was always going to replace Gentoo as the “True Linux Explorer”, but the wiki outage accelerated it.

    • NotSteve_@piefed.ca
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      14 hours ago

      This is it mostly for sure. I used to be that True Linux Enjoyer. I still install arch sometimes but I only ever use an arch-derived distribution now that comes with an installer. I already feel like there’s not enough time in the day without having to manually copy files off a USB stick

      • exu@feditown.com
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        9 hours ago

        None of the usual installers can do what I want unfortunately, so I’m stuck doing it myself.

  • TwiddleTwaddle@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    16 hours ago

    The shortest answer -

    Arch has really good documentation and a release style that works for a lot of people.

    Ubuntu is coorporitized and less reliable Debian with features that many people dont need or want.

      • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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        6 hours ago

        The biggest one: Snaps.

        I switched from Ubuntu to Debian, and it’s basically the same thing, just faster since it uses native packages instead of Snaps. Ubuntu might as well run all it’s apps in Docker containers.

        You could rebrand Debian to Ubuntu and most users wouldn’t even notice.

        • Papamousse@beehaw.org
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          5 hours ago

          I agree, I switched from Ubuntu to MX Linux in 2016 or so, MX is based on Debian, always up to date, just works, Xfce, .deb, no snap, etc

      • Sina@beehaw.org
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        7 hours ago

        These days it’s mainly snap and how you can type apt install and the system will do snap install instead, for firefox for example.

          • anon5621@lemmy.ml
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            10 hours ago

            In some release they removed gdebi package installer so it made unavailable to install deb files with gui

      • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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        16 hours ago

        “Bloat” the less system there is (while still working as a modern system) the better. If i need something i can install it myself.