Double that if he is a vegan arch user.
CrossFit vegan Arch…
How are you?

Real Linux users use nyarch
Electricity (optional)

AI’fying your waifus might not be the worst use case scenario
You have to install it separately , it’s not installed by default, it’s just some open source runner they gave an anime makeover
I know, but it’s still a huge red flag when it’s their second biggest selling point
Of course that’s a thing…
And non-ironically it’s really good, it’s like “easy to configure arch”.
…. For weebs
Never to late to become CIA_catboy :3
Meow! Let’s kill the Malaysian prime minister! …. I dunno feels a little forced
But Arch is easy to configure.
All I would be getting is the weeb bit, which, pardon me but, 🤮
Easy to configure for avg person, not normal Linux user I mean - I only know about it because my kid loves anime and it was funny to install on her laptop -
I dunno. I consider myself to be an “average person” lmao. I just happen to be able to read text and follow instructions. Anybody being able to bake simple cookies or boil pasta should be able to install and configure Arch Linux.
But if you’re really into the weeb bit, like your kid, that’s great lol.
No way my man! You are way above average! Celebrate yourself king/queen!
ngl, I guess reading text and following instructions really is above average these days, huh. 💀
Arrow needs to be blue and number needs to be 325 to apply here.

Always nice to see knitting needles being held the correct way in cartoons! It must be incredibly difficult for him to do with those claws, though.
He was kind of a Kim possible in his own way.
$ . /etc/os-release && echo ${NAME} Arch Linux
Curious, what do you like about Slackware? I had a look at the web page and the post on the front page is from 2022. Is that really the kernel version that comes with Slackware now?
Is Slackware intended to be like an offline distro? Or am I misunderstanding how the release model works?
Slackware is the linux arch users wish they could maintain. I keep a machine with it installed. If you want to know how it all works then slackware is a good place to learn. Having said that It has a near vertical learning curve for new users.
Slackware is the linux arch users wish they could maintain.
Could you uh… go into more detail? I don’t ask for anything else from my Arch install so I’m curious what Slackware has to offer that’s better than Arch.
It’s a distro that maximizes stability and KISS design. If you used it 20 years ago, you’ll still feel at home today.
And it’s so simple, it’s basically just a selection of software and a number of bash scripts.
The release model is “whenever Patrick Volkerding decides it’s ready”.
Slackware looks dead at first glance. The last stable release took 5 years, the website isn’t updated, all official online documentation is outdated.
But the people involved coordinate on linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/ , the Current branch is as active as Arch, and the up-to-date documentation comes in text files that are right in the directory where you need them on an installed Slackware system.So like, you aren’t using packages from 2022, then? Or, you are if you’re on the stable branch? Am I getting close?
No, you’re getting updates.
I’m on the Stable branch. My Firefox and Thunderbird from this branch are newer than the versions released as Flatpak, for example.Huh, interesting.
Maybe I’ll understand better if I try to install it in a VM or something. 😁
It worked well from that perspexrive. Remember that when it started, always-on connectivity rich enough to download hundreds of megabytes was a novelty, but you could get a Slackware CD that just worked.
So all the package versions really are locked to the Slackware version from 2022 then? Is that how it works? If so that’s very… stable.
No, my Firefox and Thunderbird for example are newer versions than the Flatpaks.
In practice, Slackware doesn’t have the manpower to fix version numbers and backport security fixes, so if there’s a vulnerability or critical bug, they’ll often pull a newer version from upstream and push it to the stable repo after testing it.
Noo, now my environment is full of variables I don’t need
bash -c '. /etc/os-release && echo $NAME'
If this happened in the fediverse it would immediately become one of the highest rated posts on lemmy.
I’ll never reach those.
Windows 11 has been better for me than any distribution of Linux by far.
Hahahahhahaha
Interesting. Which distros have you tried so far?
[with comical timing] None?
No but joking aside, which distros? I’m genuinely curious, if you were serious. 😊
Not Santa, but I’ve tried a dozen or more distros over the last 15 years. Multiple pains in my ass see me going back to Windows, every time. Headless Linux as a server OS rocks out.
The fact that you have to ask is a major point against the Linux desktop.
I upvoted you because this has been my experience.
When W10 got cut off, I made one more bid for CachyOS and enjoy it, but even then, I had to prep myself with “I’ll run into stupid shoot that annoys me, question is, is it more stupid shit than I get on Windows”.
I genuinely hate all the Linux ads that try to use the Mac “It just works” mantra without recognizing all the stuff people will have to do, not to mention the discovery process of those things.
“Want to install an app? Simple! Just ‘sudo pacman -S app’! Want to find the name of a package to install, so you can start figuring things out for yourself instead of doing exactly what the tutorial prescribed character by character? Er, sorry, not in this guide, also your wildcards are used wrong!”
The fact that you have to ask is a major point against the Linux desktop.
I softly disagree with this statement. I was just following what they said in their comment, and what I was really fishing for was use case and circumstances, down the line in the conversation. 🙂
Probably not surprisingly, it came down to gaming and kernel-level anti-cheat software.
But your experience matters, of course. A lot of efficient and lean Linux distros can’t really afford to do a lot of handholding in order to be so lean. And reading documentation and following along with instructions definitely isn’t for everyone. But really that’s all I did to install my distro of choice. I just read the installation guide on the Wonderful Wiki™️ and I came out flying.
Linux really has matured a lot in the recent decade though, even more in the last couple of years. So maybe you’d find something you like if you gave it another go now.
I’m happily gaming and working and just regular-old computing on my PC with Linux. It can be done. I feel like maybe you had bad luck with the timing in combination with what you wanted to accomplish or achieve with your PC, or something. I dunno.
Anyway, long reply is long. Take care!
I’ve tried Fedora, Linux Mint Cinnamon, Arch, Ubuntu, Hanna Montana and PonyOS but I haven’t been able to get Fortnite to run properly on it.
😆👌 I see lol
So do you dual boot or do you have a computer mainly for Fortnite? Or maybe just gave up on Linux overall?
My computer just boots straight into Fortnite now it saves me minutes a day.
Awesome. I wish I could just boot right into scoring the first goal in Rocket League as well.
Me too and I’ve tried Linux on and off for 15 years. Also, I have never once had any of the issues lemmy tells me I’m having. Apparently that pisses lemmy off because I get hella downvotes for merely stating my experience. I think 97% of the hate comes from people with awful experiences at work or they think “Windows” is what they get from their laptop manufacturer. Installing a base ISO is a way different experience.
Some article comes out that an update is doing something bad? I wouldn’t know, hasn’t happened to me, or the Windows fleets I’ve managed, for nearly a decade. I’d say over a decade, but I dodged that update that borked CMS systems because, duh, I manage updates instead of letting them roll.
Linux is my go-to for servers, every time. I’ll only deploy Windows if I must, such as a domain controller, or our software has to run on IIS, stuff like that. Otherwise, I can’t imagine using Windows Server. It’s not so much that it sucks, but why pay for a slower system?!








