Arch needed for Uni? Mate, how do I transfer to wherever you study at?
Arch Linux
The beloved lightweight distro
Probably by plane /s
This actually reminded me that planes don't fly over my country...
Ok, you got me. What is your country?
Ukraine
I mean, planes do fly over it, but uhhh...
If you don't want to go through the regular install, why not to just use archinstall
or EndeavourOS?
I need to pad word count so I needed things to talk about relating to the setup.
😄installing Linux on a macbookpro5,3 and get the grafic driver working would definitely have enough pad word count 🫣 well at least in the way how I did it.
They study at a based uni that made them go through the manual install, frfr
What do you mean "help pad word count"?
We have a word limit and the assignment I'm currently doing assumed you can get a work placement. Which I can't because no local companies are taking this year (The place I love has maybe 6 tech companies if you are generous). So I'm having to find other ways to display "A knowledge of best practices for tech in a workplace.
I didn't know Arch linux is a good skill to display. It's listed in a small portion of my resume but nothing huge.
It's not Arch itself that's the skill. It's how it's configured and used for specific purposes that counts to the marks.
I definitely think that putting Arch or any Linux distro for that matter shows technical know-how and troubleshooting skills. Being familiar in bash and shell is a big bonus in a lot of roles as well.
I respect the reach.
It's probably part of some homework and he has to describe the install process? Could have picked Gentoo for a higher word count IMO
I wanted to do Gentoo but compile times didn't count towards hours. And you can't really get a lot of words from "I waited 8 hours for Firefox to build."
And you can’t really get a lot of words from “I waited 8 hours for Firefox to build.”
You actually can if you describe the build process and how emerge works, how you can customize the packages with Gentoo's USE flags etc...
Yea but Arch has all of that already. I can't write about Portage outside of "It builds for your cpu. Which is great but everything is built for am64 anyways so it isn't worth the wait time" which I did. Sure you could write about use flags but it's university work and I atleast value some of my free time.
Yuki!
does arch take a long time to install? maybe its just experienced linux user talk, but getting a working arch install is maybe like, 5 minutes with somewhat decently fast internet. 10min maybe if you want a fancy desktop, or 30-40min if your DE comes from the AUR and you need to compile a lot
If you're not using an installer and you've never set up an OS via CLI, installing arch takes a very long time. The installation wiki isn't short, and it's fairly complex.
I still wouldn't say its a very long time, my nephew was able to run through it himself in around 25 minutes via the wiki.