Why does Arch seem to have a cult like following?
Spirits, I'm having my boss over for dinner, what should I cook to impress them? (Spirits say: BILE)
Spirits, I'm having my boss over for dinner, what should I cook to impress them? (Spirits say: BILE)
Spirits, I'm having my boss over for dinner, what should I cook to impress them? (Spirits say: BILE)
Spirits, I'm having my boss over for dinner, what should I cook to impress them? (Spirits say: BILE)
Spirits, I'm having my boss over for dinner, what should I cook to impress them? (Spirits say: BILE)
Incorrect warning: "Class 'list' does not define 'getitem', so the '[]' operator cannot be used on its instances"
Trump Official Threatens to Withhold M.T.A. Funding Over Safety Data
TIL you can order a reprint of an old NYT physical news page—for 60 dollars
Carl Lundstrom, Who Backed the File-Sharing Site Pirate Bay, Dies in Plane Crash
A Couple on a Flight Boasted of Illegal Hunting. Wildlife Officers Were Listening.
Not really with archiinstall, but indeed as you say reading the manual is an expectation. Their philosophy is "creating an environment that is straightforward and relatively easy for the user to understand directly, rather than providing polished point-and-click style management tools", as well-summarized by Wikipedia.
tbh that goes for every distro. It's just that Canonical is more hands-on with its approach. The major complaint with Snap besides performance issues is Canonical making it so that only the Snap versions of popular apps (most famously, the bundled Firefox) are available by default.