TheAppleCore
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2007
- Messages
- 5,510
Any fellow desktop Linux nerds in here?
I'm sure they're a solid choice for cloud infrastructure and whatnot, though I never really clicked with Debian/Ubuntu-based distros on the desktop. But man... I fucking love Arch and Arch derivatives. It's hard to pinpoint exactly why, but I think it's because the Arch community is clearly just a bunch of passionate geeks who love pushing computers to their limits, and Arch Linux itself is a playful expression of that passion. While corporate entities like Canonical and Red Hat create their distributions as a tool intended to accomplish a specific task, I view Arch more like a... crazy video game with a limitless skill ceiling.
I just tried Manjaro GNOME for the first time yesterday, and man, I'm impressed. The installer is super slick, and the desktop comes pre-loaded with almost every extension that I'd be manually installing in a stock GNOME environment, which is fantastic because it's not only less work at the outset, but it means that most of my essential desktop functionality should upgrade seamlessly with the rest of the system.
If anyone uses Linux on a workstation PC, and hasn't done so yet... definitely check out what the Manjaro team is doing.
I'm sure they're a solid choice for cloud infrastructure and whatnot, though I never really clicked with Debian/Ubuntu-based distros on the desktop. But man... I fucking love Arch and Arch derivatives. It's hard to pinpoint exactly why, but I think it's because the Arch community is clearly just a bunch of passionate geeks who love pushing computers to their limits, and Arch Linux itself is a playful expression of that passion. While corporate entities like Canonical and Red Hat create their distributions as a tool intended to accomplish a specific task, I view Arch more like a... crazy video game with a limitless skill ceiling.
I just tried Manjaro GNOME for the first time yesterday, and man, I'm impressed. The installer is super slick, and the desktop comes pre-loaded with almost every extension that I'd be manually installing in a stock GNOME environment, which is fantastic because it's not only less work at the outset, but it means that most of my essential desktop functionality should upgrade seamlessly with the rest of the system.
If anyone uses Linux on a workstation PC, and hasn't done so yet... definitely check out what the Manjaro team is doing.
Last edited: