I don't intend to become one of those Arch-fanatics who victim blames everyone, but I do have to say that this is the one system that actually does not fail on me because of peculiarities between updates. Takes some…
That still would have to be Arch. From what I have heard elsewhere, I would suggest Debian for its extreme stability. You won't get the newest stuff, but Debian is really focused on making sure nothing breaks between…
I left Ubuntu for the same reason. When I still had a lot of time to tinker with my PC, I didn't mind as much, but these days I just want a computer that is stable for years. For the past four years, that was Manjaro…
It's an interesting piece if you can muster the strength to make it through the irksome writing style. Either way, I don't think your comment adds much. Why not suffer in silence?
As well as the Dutch ones.
I don't intend to become one of those Arch-fanatics who victim blames everyone, but I do have to say that this is the one system that actually does not fail on me because of peculiarities between updates. Takes some…
That still would have to be Arch. From what I have heard elsewhere, I would suggest Debian for its extreme stability. You won't get the newest stuff, but Debian is really focused on making sure nothing breaks between…
I left Ubuntu for the same reason. When I still had a lot of time to tinker with my PC, I didn't mind as much, but these days I just want a computer that is stable for years. For the past four years, that was Manjaro…
It's an interesting piece if you can muster the strength to make it through the irksome writing style. Either way, I don't think your comment adds much. Why not suffer in silence?
As well as the Dutch ones.