Hey I get this reference.
Hey I get this reference.
I started using Linux almost exactly 1 year ago and this is the conclusion I’ve come to. Although I do play around with nix on the server every couple of months, I’ll figure it out someday.
I started with endeavoros. Arch is fine for beginners the install is the only hard part
Nginx. I’m going to learn soon but I’m still new and it seems easy to screw up exposing things to the Internet.
Yeah that was my problem with nobarra I couldn’t find the packages I needed that and the update thing they were using seemed kinda weird
You just have to enable the systemd service
sudo systemctl enable bluetooth --now
Endeavour rocks I switched to Linux a bit over a year ago and have been rocking endeavour the whole time it’s easy mode arch with sick desktop images.
Someone posted this further up I remember when they came out but I don’t know much about them
I switched to Linux about a year ago and I agree with the poster you replied to I used fedora for about a week before switching to arch based endeavor OS and I’ve been on EOS ever since. The install truly is the only hard part of arch.
Pop is sick and absolutely shines on laptop.
I see people say this a lot and I have no experience with this but I wonder why you wouldn’t use a USB nvme SSD enclosure it seems a lot easier and idk if running it over USB would limit the speed but it could preform better than a USB stick.
This is my use case as well i run neofetch on ssh connect and disconnect so I always have a visual indicator of what machine I’m in.
Is Buah better than pamac? It’s got to be right? pamac looks great but actually sucks so bad I learned to use Pacman in the terminal.
I use Debian on my server and Arch on my gaming PC and laptop. Both distros offer minimal installs so I can just add the packages I need and avoid the ones I don’t. Debian offers a nice stable base for running my services with minimal downtime and Arch has the most up to date packages for all the cutting edge features I want on desktop.