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safe2266389 artist:coco-drillo230 sci-twi32723 twilight sparkle371160 pony1698668 unicorn580959 equestria girls267711 g42125992 arch linux22 equestria girls ponified5944 eyes closed147723 fake cutie mark1019 glasses95521 high res412902 hoof on chest1603 linux251 meme96722 messy bun22 messy mane11582 nerd1331 open mouth256741 open smile38959 proud635 simple background638261 smiling431275 smug9945 smuglight sparkle374 solo1504621 standing29606 text96459 transparent background300164 unicorn sci-twi1250

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BigBuggyBastage
Pixel Perfection - I still call her Lightning Bolt
Solar Supporter - Fought against the New Lunar Republic rebellion on the side of the Solar Deity (April Fools 2023).
Non-Fungible Trixie -
My Little Pony - 1992 Edition
Wallet After Summer Sale -
Not a Llama - Happy April Fools Day!

Go fsck yourself
Arch is fun to experiment with but 99% of the time I just want a quick and simple OS and don’t want to spend hours just installing on one VM everytime I create a new one.
I run both. 😛
I hopped on Manjaro about a year and a half, maybe two years ago now. After putting up with Ubuntu & Canonical’s antics for about 15 years, and consequently Linux Mint’s, I simply “outgrew” those (and Debian).
Don’t misunderstand: I really love and admire what the Mint team has accomplished, and it’s a great OS in its own right, but their OS is based on Ubuntu, and IMO it’s like being shackled to a corpse. The Ubuntu packages are simply too damn old for me, as is the kernel, and PPAs are a joke; don’t get me started on their asinine “Snaps”. I realized I didn’t need anyone to hold my hand anymore, and it was time to start using a Linux distribution that was much nearer the bleeding edge.
I couldn’t believe how great Manjaro was, when I started using it, and understanding what was really going on under the hood. The AUR, the up-to-date packages, the latest kernels, a great community, the visual themes, being able to use the Arch Wiki…! I was in love again.
Then the Manjaro team started doing ‘silly’ things, IMO. Things which I don’t believe normal users would know or care about.
For example, their obvious hatred of Nvidia. There has been more than one occasion where the devs have basically told users, “don’t use a computer with Nvidia hardware,” as a solution! It’s come up whenever there’s been friction between the latest Arch kernel and Nvidia’s proprietary driver — the latter is admittedly a nasty piece of shit, from a developer’s POV, but still infinitely better than the open-source Nouveau driver, from a user’s perspective. Nvidia has been openly hostile toward the FOSS and Linux communities, and I completely sympathize with developers from both of them. But pushing the onus on your users like that is over the line. Manjaro developers don’t seem to realize that not all users have a choice in the hardware they run.
Eventually, I found myself “getting good” with Linux itself, and, using the Arch Wiki, I installed Arch to a VirtualBox virtual machine, then real hardware. Yes, it is a bit more work to initially set up than Manjaro, but as long as you keep package lists and configuration files as I do, and you want or need that extra level of control, you can end up with a leaner, faster OS. On machines that aren’t my daily-driver desktop, that’s what I need. For my desktop and a spare laptop, they’re going to stay on Manjaro a little longer, and then I may give Endeavor OS a try.
ZhaoZoharEX
Solar Supporter - Fought against the New Lunar Republic rebellion on the side of the Solar Deity (April Fools 2023).
Non-Fungible Trixie -
My Little Pony - 1992 Edition
Wallet After Summer Sale -
Artist -

Keep moving forward
@BigBuggyBastage
Manjaro is better. Arch is fun to experiment with but 99% of the time I just want a quick and simple OS and don’t want to spend hours just installing on one VM everytime I create a new one.
A computer is like a car: it’s fun to tinker under the hood and maybe building my product could be superior, but I don’t want to waste time on it when I need to go to work.