• floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 month ago

      Unironically my most headache-free Linux experience in 10+ years. The handful of times an update doesn’t go through you just need to visit the homepage and follow the manual intervention steps outlined in the announcement.

      At least, once I freed myself from Nvidia x)

      • Quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I know CachyOS, at least, shows recent Arch announcements during the update process before installing anything. Unfortunately there’s been a recurring DDoS attack on Arch’s servers for months, so this check tends to fail and you aren’t always notified of breaking changes.

    • Ooops@feddit.org
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      1 month ago

      Back then it was for many simply the first rolling distro they tried… to suddenly realize that without tedious (and rarely unproblematic) release upgrades the reasons for a new install (thus trying out yet another distro) also vanished.

      • wltr@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 month ago

        I have reinstalled Arch on the same machine only once, after SSD of my super old MacBook Air got corrupted. I haven’t used the laptop for like five years. Weirdly, a reinstall went well, and it looks like the SSD works well so far. Apart from that, my oldest system is about 7 years old, and it’s running well. I have no reason to reinstall. That very machine is a server. Also, I had a MacBook Pro broke keyboard on me, I simply rsynced my entire system to another MacBook Pro, and was done within about two hours. Needed to update /etc/fstab and maybe something else too. So, apart from Arch becoming a bit of a meme, I cannot recommend it more. It taught me quite a lot too. It was mostly stable for me.