Screenfetch thread

Screenfetch thread

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=DtsKcHmceqY
github.com/dylanaraps/neofetch/wiki/Images-in-the-terminal
wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Kernels#Precompiled_kernels
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

i should be sleeping

Babbys first Arch

Still learning

OP show your monitor setup

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> 4.12

Is this the power of Arch?

This looks very good

I think I opted in for the LTS-kernel for
>muh stability

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>stability
>Arch
Choose neither

Why do Arch fetches always look the best?

Because you are a teenager and haven't developed proper taste yet. Don't worry though you will grow up and look back with embarrassment at the arch scrots you used to like. It's all a big part of growing up kiddo.

Maybe I got lucky with my hardware etc but I've literally had 0 issues with stability so far, from what I've understood I can just select to boot with the LTS-kernel in case a bleeding edge one causes issues and I'll rather run 4.12 from July, 2017, I mean Linux 4.4 was released on Sun, 10 Jan 2016.

I-is this what autism looks like?
Because we care, we also do things like shower regularly (unlike Gentoo users)

who /comfy/ here?

youtube.com/watch?v=DtsKcHmceqY

t. angry mint brainlet who can't figure out how to change his wallpaper

Arch has always been a simple distribution in terms of the developer
perspective, not the user one. Using systemd made it simpler than ever
in that regard because much more work is taken care of by both the
systemd developers and all of the projects shipping unit files.

It has never been a minimalist distribution. Splitting packages is rare
compared to other distributions, and dependencies aren't made optional
whenever possible.

It has also never been a distribution offering much user freedom /
choice compared to Gentoo and even Debian. There are very few cases
where there are multiple packages offering different configurations of
the same project. There's no equivalent to update-alternatives or the
comparable uses of USE flags. Changing /bin/sh from Bash will be broken,
as will changing the python symlink to point to python2 instead of
python3 even though this works on some other distributions. It doesn't
strive to offer choices like this, and never has. It would mean a *lot*
more complexity on the development side of things along with major
deviations from upstream.

Arch is the *opposite* of a user-centric freedom. The opinion of users
has no weight here. Only the developers have an opinion, and there
aren't voting systems as there are in Debian. Technical decisions are
made based on merit via consensus among the developers, not popularity.

What WM is that?

Why did you tag me in this autism, friend? I like Arch because it justwerkz and I can do anything I want with it. It doesn't come pre-bloated or anything and it has the (amazing) AUR which no other distro has anything close to. Tell me why I can't like Arch? Or is it a case of 'stop liking what I don't like'?

Certainly not minimalist, but those other two claims are questionable.

Arch has *never* been minimalist... a Linux kernel with every module
available and every feature enabled at least when there's no non-bloat
related cost, feature-packed/complex GNU tools, nearly all optional
features enabled across all the packages, etc.

Where did I say it is minimal?(even though it is and you can run under 200 packages) I said it doesn't come prepacked with a bunch of bloat apps like Ubuntu and shit do. What's questionable about the other 2? Arch has had one issue that required manual intervention in the last X amount of years(and it was a 1 minute fix), and as for the AUR, what comes close to it?

Arch is the opposite of a distribution with lots of user freedom. Users
will come and go based on whether they like the technical decisions made
by the developers. The popularily of those decisions has no impact on
how things are done, regardless of how vocal users are about it.

Are you posting copy-pasta or are we having a discussion? I can't tell.

Nice wall, post it?

> which no other distro has anything close to

Layman/Portage overlays > AUR

How did you managed to show that image on terminal?

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Arch users gush about the AUR which I think a good indication of what the arch user base is like. Too lazy or stupid to sort things out themselves so they rely on this ramshackle collection of broken/insecure/abandoned packages that have been cobbled together by other idiots are stupid as themselves.

By spending too much time on /r/unixporn

It's less about that, I could autistically compile all of my own packages (every arch user could) but why bother when I can type yaourt and have it done in 3s? I've never had an AUR package break my installation, I don't get unstable gits though.

What's the usage like? I've never used Gentoo, just seems too next level autism for me.

man neofetch && kys

Text looks so small, it'd do my head in dude. Although I can't see shit from more than 2 metres away.

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>broken/insecure/abandoned
Who gets broken or abandoned packages? Are you a brainlet?

>What's the usage like?
It's a distro that actually allows the user the level of control, choice, and minimalism that arch users want.
>Are you a brainlet?
Calls someone else a brainlet while relying on the AUR instead of just DIY. Nice

>It's a distro that actually allows the user the level of control, choice, and minimalism that arch users want.
At the cost of contracting autism.

>autism.
>Is on Sup Forums. Uses arch.

I love it. It's only used as terminal and programming font. I have regular font elsewhere, as other people use the computer for normie stuff as well.

You just talk like you've never even used arch, but you're determined to shit on AUR and put some garbage Gentoo meme over it which probably offers

Arch is normie-tier on Sup Forums

github.com/dylanaraps/neofetch/wiki/Images-in-the-terminal

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I gave arch a solid year of daily use before coming to my conclusions. I ran it on multiple machines and used it for a number of different purposes. Not only is it a terrible distro, the user base consistently gave me PTSD.
>boot
Using a distro that requires rebooting.
>offers
There lies the major difference. I don't use a proper ditstro for the packages it ""offers"" as I can easily make an ebuild and run what I want without have to rely on someone else to do the hard work.
The world is bigger than Sup Forums

I like it, hate that gay ass h4ck3r font though.

Community memes don't define the distribution, technical choices by the
developers do. It's clearly not based on what you say it is, and *never*
has been. It has always used significantly more disk space and a
measurable amount of additional memory than Debian and especially Gentoo
as a consequence of keeping things simple (again, from a development
perspective).

>the user base consistently gave me PTSD.
Arch userbase has to be one of the most active/useful of all distros, you must have severe aspergers to not be able to take advantage of the knowledge-base on the forums and shit. Your argument basically seems to boil down to
>B-BUT YOU'RE NOT DOING IT YOURSELF! EVEN THOUGH YOU COULD IF YOU WANTED TO, AND HAVE NO PRACTICAL REASON TO...YOU SUCK BECAUSE YOU AREN'T
Yeah, think I'll stick with my 10s builds and back to work, rather than wank over ebuilds like you, Eugene.

>Official packages
>linux
>The Linux kernel and modules from the core repository. Vanilla kernel with a few patches applied.

>linux-hardened
>A security-focused Linux kernel applying a set of hardening patches to mitigate kernel and userspace exploits. >It also enables more upstream kernel hardening features than linux along with user namespaces (with >unprivileged usage disabled by default via a patch), audit and SELinux.

>linux-lts
>Long term support (LTS) Linux kernel and modules from the core repository.

>linux-zen
>The ZEN Kernel is the result of a collaborative effort of kernel hackers to provide the best Linux kernel possible for everyday systems.

wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Kernels#Precompiled_kernels

You know you can also compile your own kernel if you think there is too much bloat friend :^)

You can claim that the community is based on a set of principles, but it
has nothing to do with technical decisions by the developers. Memes
about minimalism and user freedom != actual distribution policy /
principles / history.

Gentoo has USE flags so features can be optional at compile-time. Many
of the packages with dependencies on systemd in Arch link against
libsystemd, and we don't split up the package as is the norm here. If
there's a package with an *unnecessary* dependency on systemd, you can
and should file a bug. I don't think there are many that depend on it
and don't use it.

Are you having like a schizo moment or replying to the wrong guy? I'm saying the AUR is good, he's screeching about DIY.

You can still use it, it's just becoming increasing more difficult at a
pretty steady pace. Those packages didn't suddenly pick up systemd
dependencies in the past few weeks / months anyway. The version control
logs disprove the claim that there are many recent changes.

> What's the usage like?

Install layman
List all overlays, add the ones you want
Install packages

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>trying this hard to be a mac