Arch In Depth 27
The LinuxTimes Editor wrote in to alert us to a LinuxTimes article entitled Arch In-Depth, discussing the Arch Distribution. From the article: "First of all, let me go ahead and say I'm not approaching Arch with a completely clean slate. I've heard things about Arch Linux before. I've heard that it resembles Slackware in the way it was lean and meant for "advanced users". I've heard about its package manager called Pacman which is supposed to be all the rage. I've heard it's optimized for i686 by default which can arguably improve performance. I've heard it's Gentoo without "all that compiling". So when Arch 0.7 got out a few days ago I simply had to try it out."
Reviewing the review (Score:4, Interesting)
OK, so much for this reviewer.
OK, so much for Arch. (Turns out you have to pacman gnome-extra to get everything.)
Turns out that Arch is extremely minimalist; you get only what you asked for and sometimes less than you asked for. This is probably good for, say, embedded systems, but for most of us with our 100GB+, 200GB+, drives, there's not a whole lot of point to leaving things out. Though there are people who will be quite happy with this.
I'm not one of them.
I wouldn't be surprised at all if every Slackware user dropped Slack and went to Arch. It sounds like a much better Slackware than Slackware. But, again, this approach is not for me. Ironically, my favorite distributions are Gentoo and Fedora (in that order). Yes, I'm weird.
More reviewing the review (Score:2)
And no, they didn't use actual thumbnails for the images, they link these monstrous images and resize them with HTML.
I don't just not trust the reviewer, I don't trust the site! That is some seriously stunning incompetence for a website.
(Of course, this will either be fixed, or you later "readers" won't be able to get through to the hammered server.)
If you
Re:More reviewing the review (Score:2)
Re:More reviewing the review (Score:2)
Seriously?
Nope, that's not "stunning" incompetence anymore, but it's still incompetent.
The correct format choices were ".gif" (864,054 -> 4961) or ".png" (-> 4370), and these are lossless.
Still not impressed; it really only adds to my initial impression of incompetence, not removes it.
Re:More reviewing the review (Score:2)
Re:Reviewing the review (Score:3, Insightful)
Whenever I install some generic media package from the install CD, I get 5 image viewers and 3 mp3 players and 6 text editors. And of course, 1 image viewer scales up cleanly, 1 scales down cleanly, 2 have a slide show, and 1 plays movies.
Compare
Minimalism? Great! (Score:1)
So, why do I applaud yet another entry in this gladiatorial matinee? Because it seems to be (as others have already mentioned) gentooish without being gentoo. As much as I love the ideology behind
Re:Minimalism? Great! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Minimalism? Great! (Score:1)
Indeed, I wanted to try Arch on a spare P166 (48MB RAM), but alas, it's just i586, whereas Arch has packages compiled for i686.
I ended up installing Gentoo on the poor box - from stage 2, and it took just a bit over 24 hours (of course, with help of distcc and one other box :) ).
Re:Minimalism? Great! (Score:1)
[John Cleese in A fish Called Wanda, caught naked in someone's flat]:
"Well, that changes things a bit..."
Not "Gentoo without all that compiling" (Score:4, Insightful)
I doubt that those precompiled 686 binaries would appeal much to Gentoo users with AMD64, PowerPC, UltraSparc, Alpha and MIPS systems.
And as for "all that compiling", Gentoo allows you to install from binary packages if you must. But I compile away some of the bloat via USE flags; you can't do that with Arch binaries.
Re:Not "Gentoo without all that compiling" (Score:1)
Re:Not "Gentoo without all that compiling" (Score:2)
Combine distros (Score:2)
I haven't scripted it yet but will do soon
(chroot
I may check out this distro to replace Ubuntu
Re:Combine distros (Score:1)
I'm not trying to troll. I just want to know why anyone would do this for performance? I understand things like VMWare that allow multiple virtual machines on one physical machine, but why add Linux onto Linux "to run other stuff"?
Re:Combine distros (Score:2)
gentoo's debconf? (Score:2)
I would argue that etc-update is significantly easier than debconf, but maybe that's because I don't know vimdiff at all.
Re:gentoo's debconf? (Score:1)