Arch Linux: Control Without Handrails
Arch Linux isn’t a distribution for people who want things handed to them. It’s for people who want the full blueprint, the parts list, and the tools and are fine with getting grease under their nails.
Arch Linux isn’t a distribution for people who want things handed to them. It’s for people who want the full blueprint, the parts list, and the tools and are fine with getting grease under their nails.

Been lurking in the world of i3 last couple of days, initial plan was to use i3 with kde, bun than i realized, why man! why would you do that, why wouldn't you just use KDE with it's KWin window manager, what was the reason behind all this soul searching. It was minimalism, performance not depending on those heavy Desktop Environments.

Arch Linux, to the uninitiated, can appear as an operating system reserved for the brave—a mythical beast requiring taming by only the most skilled of users. However, to those who dare to explore its depths, Arch Linux reveals itself as a sleek, efficient, and immensely powerful tool, one that offers unparalleled control, customization, and performance. From my vantage point as an Arch Linux user, I see it not as a challenge but as a statement: that simplicity and complexity can coexist, and that an OS should serve the user—not the other way around.
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