When I say arch I mean the arch distro and all of its offspring.

Endeavouros

Arch-gui

Manjaro

Artix --maybe not though

My first enjoyable distro was manjaro, the manjaro element less so but using arch clicked for me. But even so if my first experience was using arch and archinstall then yes its not the easiest but its also not that difficult, arch is treated like a boss battle in darksouls.

So when a pre configured GUI arch is recommend I would like to see less scar mongering.

    • cbarrick@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Yeah, if you’re not up to the challenge of maintaining your own system, Arch isn’t for you.

      • gh0stcassette@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        11 months ago

        I’d agree, but this is true of most distros tbh. Like obviously loads of stuff is gonna break on arch just due to the bleeding edge release cycle, but I had fewer issues running arch than Ubuntu, mainly due to PPAs and snap bullshit

  • ian@feddit.uk
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    11 months ago

    I agree with the OP. But swap the term “newbie” for “casual user” or “non IT user”, and more people would agree. Even the nerdiest IT Pro was a newbie whenever they use a distro for the first time. Avoid the term “normie” too, as people have different ideas of what normal is. There are more non IT, power users who have a deep knowledge of their applications, than all Linux users put together.

    So this discussion is all around a sloppy choice of terminology.

    • anamethatisnt@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I agree that the descriptors have to change. It’s insulting to linux beginners when you assume they’re illiterate non-it users that can’t read the paragraph explaining the install options.

      • ian@feddit.uk
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        11 months ago

        But, for a non IT person, installing Linux, using the typical GUI tools is not specially hard to do. Write an ISO to a USB stick. Boot the PC. Answer the installer questions like language etc. And if something doesn’t work, try a different distro. The problems come when people suggest users use unfamiliar UIs, such as the command line or fiddling with config files, where, if you don’t know the exact magic words, it fails to work.

        • anamethatisnt@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          While a linux beginner who’s been developing apps in proprietary microsoft systems for 20 years might be looking for an OS that’s easy to manage from CLI.

          • ian@feddit.uk
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            11 months ago

            Yes. Then the newb is typically happy to learn the Arch ways. Showing that “arch bad for new users” is a bad choice of words.

  • z3rOR0ne@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    Most desktop computer users want a system that works out of the box, never breaks, and hides away the complexity behind a “we’re doing magic under the scenes, give us a second” style screen.

    And it appears that some distros, like Ubuntu, Mint, and PopOS, ElementaryOS, and ZorinOS, have either outright achieved this lofty goal or gotten very close (I am on Artix and haven’t used these for any considerable amount of time but from the outside it looks like they’ve done so).

    From my limited perspective, it appears the main reason behind noob friendly distros being even possible is the long release cycle of their base distro, Debian. Thusly configuration scripts for these variants are easier to upkeep than on Arch based distros because there simply isn’t this rapid fire bleeding edge schedule that needs to be kept up on Debian.

    I’m not opposed to recommending Arch for computer savvy noobs to Linux, even those that aren’t necessarily familiar with the command line. As long as they show a genuine willingness to learn it over time. Especially if they want to be an engineer/ developer of any kind, they should become familiar with the command line regardless of which OS they use.

    But if they’re a normie, who just wants to try Linux because they’re tired of MacOS or Windows and just want a simple OS that they can use for basic office tasks, browsing the web, answering emails, playing video games, watching videos, etc., then don’t send them down the Arch rabbit hole. They’ll simply not want to spend the time figuring it out and they’ll just go back to Windows or MacOS. Recommend they try ElementaryOS, Linux Mint, Ubuntu, ZorinOS, or PopOS depending on their use case.

    Arch requires constant maintenance and a bit of discernment/vigilence to keep going and that’s something most users aren’t willing to go through.

    It’s like getting people to learn how to drive vs becominng your own mechanic. Sure, people are willing to learn to drive, they can immediately see the value in it, they want to get to places and have their own autonomy. But Arch is becoming your own mechanic (with Gentoo being like also being your own machinist). Most people don’t want to be their own mechanic, most of the time they just want to drive from point A to point B.

    • squid_slime@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 months ago

      Hell if someone seemed like they didn’t want to read the wiki or learn some bash and it was case of a youtube-machine, then I’d not recommend arch. But I do think some newbies are smarter and willing than the community will give them credit for.

      I wish I was recommended arch off of the bat as I kept dipping my toes in Debian based distros for years before I’d face the darksouls boss. It was detrimental to my transition to Linux. Some people move from windows wanting that control over they’re systems.

      Anyway I posted this as an IT professional posted earlier about there unsuccessful and painful transition to Linux through Ubuntu and distros alike and a commenter mention arch and instantly got chewed out.

      “Arch isn’t for noobies” is a catch phrase at this point and I see people repeat it mindlessly

      • z3rOR0ne@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        I’m in general agreement on that. If the person is coming from a somewhat technical background, or is simply curious about learning the ins and outs of their system, then Arch is as good a choice as any imho.

        In some cases, Arch is a better choice if you need more up to date software (although 3rd party packagers like Flatpak appear to solve many of these issues on scheduled release distros as well).

        There sadly is a lot of gate keeping in the Linux community which leads to a lot of blanket statements that pervaid discussions, especially when it comes to how best to grow the Linux community. And “don’t recommend Arch or Arch bases distros to noobs” is one of them.

        Should you recommend Arch to a new Linux user? The answer is never a direct “yes” or “no”, but rather, as always, “it depends.”

    • squid_slime@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 months ago

      I struggle to understand what wouldn’t work, if I was to download a pre configed GUI arch iso, load it up on my PC I’d be met with plasma/gnome/or any other wm/dm and would most likely have working networking, a GUI application installer and a browser…

      • balancedchaos@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Some functionality is missing, like USB plug and play, certain network file sharing capabilities, printing…so in addition to learning pacman, having to learn all the package names, you have to look up how to give the OS certain functionalities…it’s a lot as a newbie. If you don’t love working on computers, you may not make it through that phase.

        And I say this with all due respect, as an Arch user myself.

        • Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          11 months ago

          EndeavourOS might help with all of this but even then I wouldn’t put a newbie who just wants to try Linux on it. Arch doesn’t even have a proper GUI-based way of installing packages and there’s not really an incentive to (Arch users say it’s because PackageKit is shit, Arch developers say it’s because PackageKit doesn’t work with Arch’s rolling package releases). PackageKit isn’t actually supported on Arch and KDE Discover will go out of its way to tell people that it’s not supported on Arch. Maybe someone who has experience with the command line I’d recommend Arch/Endeavour for, since you WILL be using it on Arch, no way around it.

        • squid_slime@lemmy.worldOP
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          11 months ago

          Same could be said if I told someone to use Debian, but we tell people to use mint and its all taken care of. Manjaro had no issue with USB, and pacman in my opinion is the easiest package manager ive used but even so if it is that difficult then they can use a GUI package manager that would come pre installed on most GUI arch based distros

          • bustrpoindextr@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            pacman in my opinion is the easiest package manager ive used but even so if it is that difficult then they can use a GUI package manager that would come pre installed on most GUI arch based distros

            Recognizing that’s your opinion, in my opinion it’s the hardest I’ve used. The commands are all flags, so you have to remember letters instead of “install” or “upgrade” if you want to use any packages outside of the like 4 in the official repos, you have to enable AUR, which is effectively just installing from source from some random person’s GitHub repo, in which any number of things can go wrong. I mean, there’s a reason there exist a bunch of different wrappers for pacman.

            • squid_slime@lemmy.worldOP
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              11 months ago

              sorry it doesn’t click for you, I grow up with severe dyslexia unable to read and write till the age of 18 which coincides with when I became interested in computers, so maybe for me flags are easier then apt get install update commands and the orders they go in

              And I stopped using git commands once I found yay

              And every GUI app store ive dealt with has an option to enable aur packages

          • balancedchaos@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            Well even a bare bones install of Debian has USB plug and play, networking, printing…they include a bit more than Arch, even if you do have to install your own programs.

  • pastermil@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    While it’s not as bad as it’s used to, it certainly can never beat Ubuntu & Linux Mint regarding user-friendliness.

    Do keep in mind that most people might be way less tech savy than us. Even in this platform.

  • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    How long have you been using Manjaro? How long had you been using Linux before you tried Manjaro? Were you using it during one of the 4 times they let their SSL certificate expire? Have you been using it for long enough to have AUR packages break because of the planned delay?

    Here’s the thing, Arch distros are bleeding edge, and they make assumptions about the user behind the keyboard, one of those assumptions is that you will read the arch news, for example just looking at the news in the homepage now, if you had been using budgie desktop you would have encountered a problem preventing you from updating just a few months back https://archlinux.org/news/budgie-desktop-1072-6-update-requires-manual-intervention/ . This is not serious or unexpected, in fact if I saw the error that comes from that I would immediately know what to do without having read that news, but a newbie using Manjaro and their graphical UI would just be frustrated that their system is not updating anymore. And making matters worse if they asked on an arch forum about it they would essentially be told that they’re using Manjaro and should ask on a Manjaro forum, and since those are way less active it would be a while before someone told them what to do, if they ever managed to get the output to explain the actual issue. And that’s just one example, Arch distros break backwards compatibility daily, it’s just not expected that you’ll have packages out of date, so anything you installed manually might just break, whereas other distros are a lot more careful about what they upgrade.

    • squid_slime@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 months ago

      I wouldn’t recommend manjaro, the devs have made way too many mistakes. Hense I crossed out manjaro in the list.

      • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Did you read the rest? The HTTPS one is the only specific manjaro thing, most points apply to all Arch based distros.

        • squid_slime@lemmy.worldOP
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          11 months ago

          I did but you mention menjaro a lot it felt as if you’d skipped what I had posted.

          Ive used Linux since Ubuntu 12 but had no understanding of the deep Linux system so I never stuck with it, then budgie came out (the os) which was great but limited, soon after moved to manjaro where I found out aur packages would brick my machine so move on to arch where I have stayed. Ive not had many issues and when I do I know how to handle them, ive never looked at arch news (maybe a sign of complacency) but even so ive been able to fix what minimal issues ive had (in my experience)

          For some people who are new user, having system with more controls is a compelling position, one that the community needs to understand and not repeat the same 3 distros or chew out others for suggesting arch.

          If a new user shows genuine interest beyond web browsing then arch and its variant deserve a mention.

  • euphoric.cat@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    11 months ago

    I agree, I’ve used a lot of distros from popos, manjaro, fedora, nobara, kde neon, but until I found endeavouros (and steam deck) I just thought linux was in a bad limbo state that I could never see myself switching to.

    unlike the other distros, I know for certain any problem I’ve had with endeavouros has been my own fault.

    although, I still hope someone can jump in and make the experience more user friendly, like valve with steamos.

  • akash_rawal@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Here is a trick that has been tried and tested over the years: Install another distro, and use that to install Arch. This way, you can rely on an already working linux distro till your Arch install works the way you want.

  • Bel - [Space] Lion@pawb.social
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    11 months ago

    My experience is that arch isn’t for the first time users (with rare exceptions). I think that Arch is the ‘wrenchable car’ equivalent.

    When a is person learning how to drive the aim isn’t to immediately train them on how to do mechanical work on the car… It’s to learn how to make it do its primary task of transporting people and goods.

    Once they have basic competency in driving it’s a laudable idea to teach then how to maintain the vehicle so they don’t have to spend a large amount of money on experts (mechanics, IT). If the only vehicles they ever drive are super complex then they won’t be able to understand how it works. This is where the ‘wrenchable car’ comes in. Choosing a vehicle that has manageable complexity and isn’t hard to do the work on.

    Arch requires you to assemble the system as part of the installation. The documentation is fantastic, but it’s still written like a service manual. Arch also does poorly if you fail to do maintenance like keeping updated. Choosing a more beginner-focused OS like Pop or Mint is going to set a new user who doesn’t have any understanding up for more likely success. Once they know how to get the system out of park and can drive it around the digital block, it might be time to show them how to build that self-assemble kit that lets you change the color of the dash lights.

    Arch happened to be the final step I needed to walk away from windows, but that came after flirting with various distributions for more than a decade. One of those attempts was Gentoo, and that was a disaster. I don’t think that I would have been successful if I had tried arch much earlier than I did.

  • Kanda@reddthat.com
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    11 months ago

    Artix should be mostly good for even new users, just look past the whole init system thing