Yeah I do. “On your own” is used very loosely here. You get a graphical installer, you pick from a list of DEs or WMs, make sure you want all the default software, done. You don’t have to do the Arch thing, which is the hard part, and you still get an Arch desktop. And once Arch and your environmemt are installed, it’s so much more user friendly than Ubuntu or Debian, you’re “on your own” with any Linux system once it’s installed and working, it’s not like you have to dig into the guts of the system just to use it with any of them.
I installed Debian with XFCE a while back and it didn’t even have curl installed. Ubuntu tries to force you to use snaps. I installed EndeavorOS, I haven’t had to do anything extra except install the programs I want to use personally, all the graphical and terminal utilities you’re going to need are just there and work the way you expect them to.
Yeah I do. “On your own” is used very loosely here. You get a graphical installer, you pick from a list of DEs or WMs, make sure you want all the default software, done. You don’t have to do the Arch thing, which is the hard part, and you still get an Arch desktop. And once Arch and your environmemt are installed, it’s so much more user friendly than Ubuntu or Debian, you’re “on your own” with any Linux system once it’s installed and working, it’s not like you have to dig into the guts of the system just to use it with any of them.
I installed Debian with XFCE a while back and it didn’t even have curl installed. Ubuntu tries to force you to use snaps. I installed EndeavorOS, I haven’t had to do anything extra except install the programs I want to use personally, all the graphical and terminal utilities you’re going to need are just there and work the way you expect them to.