Why should I use Void over Antergos or Manjaro?
Why should I use Void over Antergos or Manjaro?
cooler name
this
better logo
Uses runit, not systemd
It's a lot better imo
Fucking this
I can understand arguments about void vs. gentoo, or slackware, or de-systemded arch. But why the fuck would you considering something pozzed like manjaro
Okay select manjato lunix
is devuan a meme
Never used it myself, but I heard it was almost dead? Not sure, check how active it is, and how recent the packages are, that should give you an idea.
There's always void or gentoo. If you don't want to install gentoo there's a ton of installers, such as funtoo or cloverOS.
No systemd.
And has a musl version.
And xan be source-based if you want.
install gentoo
>uses an inferior init with numerous fatal flaws
>a lot better.
are you people all just completely addled?
Cool logo
Cool name
Repo is not that bad (and you don't need to rely on an obscure aur)
No systemd
Werks
Easy package manager that werks
No bloat
You can install it with an easy and fast installer
Maintainers are not cucks
Not based on another distro
>supporting NSA software inside LINUX
Get out.
then use LSB standardized inits because at least they support actual dependency management and retarded shitware will likely ship with the 100+ lines of poorly written shell code to start them.
Void is retarded as fuck.
Elaborate on these fatal flaws
What is the point of the runit in the first place?
Just use Debian (net iso). If you don't like systemd, Install Gentoo. Void is hipster and has bad documentation. Void is a hobbiyst distro, like bloated Arch.
this was literally the reason I chose Manjaro over Antergos
well, maybe the logo too
It's kind of hard to install Arch(based) distros on non-x86 platforms.
What is the point of an init system in the first place, by your logic?
Will I have to worry about things breaking all the time if I use funtoo/Clover?
Currently using Fedora, will I notice any major differences switching over?
>funtoo
I have no clue, I never looked at it at all.
>clover
is basically a preconfigured gentoo that uses its own binary repository. Nothing will break, and you can extremely easily get normal gentoo source packages if you want.
Thanks for the response, I'll give Clover a go tonight. The goal is to swap to Gentoo after getting used to the system.
Have fun user, I've actually been planning to do exactly this myself but I'm comfy with my Void so I've never gotten around to it.