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Rolling release is the biggest difference, Arch releases new packages shortly after they are released while Debian and Ubuntu stick to the same version for months or years. Network manager handles more use cases itself, with networkd you'd need several different systemd services to do the same thing. You can't easily keep your /boot folder encrypted or on a filesystem like btrfs. Systemd-boot is very easy to set up, but lacks any complexity that may be needed. I know my questions are general and all over I'm not looking for an "answer" but more a direction that might get me to understanding the wiki better. I don't know where/how I might be making some of the bugs and want to learn. What is the difference between smd.service and rvice and samba? Is it systemd stuff?
Gentoo install git lfs tv#
I've watched a bunch of learn this and that youtube channels like, linux for everyone and learn linux tv (i need to get back to jay's tutorials they are great) but feel like i'm not "getting it" in some areas. I know the ArchWiki is a great resource but a fair bit of the time it is in "college" terms and I'm not there yet. What are bigger differences between arch based and debian/ubuntu based distros and how does it affect my user experience? Is one actually better or is it "make a choice and master it"? Network manager vs systemd-networkd? how do they act, separately or interact? Why grub or systemd bootloader? is it just a choice or are there reasons for one or the other? Here's a few Questions/topics I'm curious about: I am now at the point where I am asking the type of questions and where it's more a choice/option (opinion based?) and would like to separate facts from emotions. finally built MY Arch with the things I know and like. I feel like I have gotten to "the bottom rung" of the Arch learning curve, manjaro, arch-install,arch-gui(they had a lot of bugs to me), arch tutorials on you-tube. Notably contains an important corruption fix.