- Joined
- Sep 16, 2018
In light of the Windows 11 reveal being a boring pile of fuck, I've gotten back to work in preparation for switching away from Microshit for good. Picked up a laptop I had lying around from almost a decade ago, nuked the drive on it since it already only had a fresh Windows installation and started using that as a test machine for Linux stuff.
There are surprisingly many ways to make the experience a lot easier on yourself the first time around even on a distro that everyone memes as being one of the hardest to learn. Not only does Arch now have the dedicated archinstall script for guided installs, but projects like Luke Smith's LARBS make it really easy for newcomers like myself to get to grips with ricing and functionality even for things like Suckless programs. Even as someone not used to using tiling managers I've found it really satisfying to learn the basics of dwm and vim along with some configuration little by little just by referring to the help PDF included. If you don't mind putting in the time to readjust and accustom yourself to not doing things the Windows way, I'd highly recommend that approach as well either on old test hardware or just a VM.
Considering what I've done so far, I'll also second this. In the past I've had experience with more simple Debian-based distros like Mint just for most gaming and occasional Proton tweaks in the terminal, plus Raspbian for occasional RPi projects both in and out of school, though this time I figured I'd try jumping into the deep end and getting to grips with Arch.I would go against the grain and advise people to get into as technical as a distribution they can stomach if they want to understand their computer and OS more than as consumer items that are just meant to work. You'll learn things, you'll learn to fix things, you won't get surprised by things that break and you'll even understand why some distributions are bad and distro maintainers often are the forums jannys of the linux universe. There's kind of a deception going on to sell distros as proper custom OSes the distro-maintainers brewed up when they're really just a software collection with custom skin most of the time. You can do anything linux in any distro and the differences are often purely academic at best.
There are surprisingly many ways to make the experience a lot easier on yourself the first time around even on a distro that everyone memes as being one of the hardest to learn. Not only does Arch now have the dedicated archinstall script for guided installs, but projects like Luke Smith's LARBS make it really easy for newcomers like myself to get to grips with ricing and functionality even for things like Suckless programs. Even as someone not used to using tiling managers I've found it really satisfying to learn the basics of dwm and vim along with some configuration little by little just by referring to the help PDF included. If you don't mind putting in the time to readjust and accustom yourself to not doing things the Windows way, I'd highly recommend that approach as well either on old test hardware or just a VM.