PumpkinEscobar,

Why no arch install?

EverythingIsALot,

cuz doing shit manually is cool

jjhanger,

I’ll respond when I’m done doing it. I plan on firing up my 15+ year laptop and install it the Arch way for the hell of it.

bloodfart,

It’s easy if you have a second computer or phone or something and can read and plan first.

It’s hard if you want to just click click click through.

spittingimage,
@spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

I’m a perma-noob and I was able to do it. Had to re-do a couple of steps because I interpreted instructions that were meant to be literal, but the wiki pages are very comprehensive. I just had to pay attention to the details.

uis,

Not as easy as Gentoo based on what I heard. But installing Gentoo takes quite some time.

xycu,

Gentoo has binary packages now, so install can be quite fast.

uis,

True. It also had binary packages for huge packages like firefox and libreoffice for a very long time.

737,

if you know your way around a Linux system, it’s really quite easy.

bjoern_tantau,
@bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de avatar

Watching other people on YouTube do it you should know what you want and have some knowledge about your PC.

collagenial,

In general, I would say it’s not hard, but it’s not easy.

When I did it, I had some moderate Linux experience but I was by no means an expert. I did a few practice runs on a VM and made myself a runbook before I completed the install on my real computer. This allowed me to get a real sense for what I was doing and what each step did, exactly. When I ran into differences on my actual computer, the time I spent researching and doing it on the VM helped me to overcome any confusion and complete the install successfully. The wiki has all the information you need.

So, from beginning to end, I spent a weekend on it, including the few dry runs I did on the VM and configuring my system after the actual install was complete. If you’re not already quite familiar with Linux, I think it’s wise to do it this way because you build in time to learn, as opposed to just getting a working system as quickly as possible.

rostselmasch,
@rostselmasch@lemmygrad.ml avatar

I did it few times between 2008 and 2010 when I was way younger. Idk how I did it, but after two times I was used to it and learned also a lot. Today I don’t have the nerves to install arch without archinstall or anarchy. The wiki helped me a lot. The wiki gives an excellent guide to install arch and to set up everything you need. It is well written enough, that no deep Linux knowledge is needed

The archlinux wiki is great for everything. I used it when I had Fedora, Debian or sometimes if I used OpenBSD.

krolden,
@krolden@lemmy.ml avatar

The reason to follow the archwiki install instructions is because it teaches you how to do a lot more than just install the OS. This will help you a lot down the line and not just with arch.

Andrzej,

It’s not rocket science. You might need a wired connection to begin with though

theshatterstone54,

Not really. This 1 minute video is all you need: www.youtube.com/watch?v=3zqITuprlL8

0x2d,

you can use iwctl

example:

list interfaces (usually wlan0)

$ ip link

enter iwctl:

$ iwctl

rescan:

$ <iwctl> station [interface] scan

connect:

$ <iwctl> station [interface] connect [ssid]

list networks:

$ <iwctl> station [interface] get-networks

exit:

$ <iwctl> exit

Andrzej,

Yes, but what if you need to download additional drivers for your wireless card

treadful,
@treadful@lemmy.zip avatar

As a very long time Arch user I wouldn’t say “easy” like everyone else seems to. I absolutely would not suggest it for a first distro for someone, which is what I would classify as the “easy” level.

But if you’re comfortable with using Linux, the terminal, and being able to follow written documentation you’ll be able to do it just fine maybe with a little frustration the first time. If you’re installing to a laptop, make sure to look up your model on the wiki first.

Evil_incarnate,

If you can put together Lego with the instructions or IKEA furniture, you’ll be fine. It took me three tries, and I learnt stuff from each mistake, so the worst that can happen is you learn.

GravitySpoiled,

archinstall is easy. The hard part about arch is maintaining it and keeping up to date with linux innovation. As long as you keep reading forum posts and news about linux and browse the arch wiki, there’s nothing wrong with it. If you do not ever read about advances on linux, then don’t use arch.

LadyMeow,

Its easy, follow the steps in the wiki and you’ll be fine.

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