# Arch Linux Infamous for being hard to install, not that hard if you know how to read instructions from the [ArchWiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/) (it even has a guided installer now, although not very complete compared to others). Said ArchWiki will become your Bible if you want to become a Linux poweruser, regardless of your distribution although not everything might be applicable if it is not Arch-derived. However, I will never recommend it to any Linux newcomer, you need to somewhat know what you are doing if you want to properly use it (or if you want to learn with it, be ready to accidentally bork your system). Its main strengths, on top of the ArchWiki, are the [AUR](https://aur.archlinux.org/) (an additional user-powered package repository on top of the official ones), powered by the ease of creation of Arch packages with [PKGBUILD files](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PKGBUILD) (See? The ArchWiki!), and its initial minimalism. It can become whatever you want, really. But don’t expect a GUI to be there on a fresh install, you’ll have to add it yourself. Also, unlike some popular belief, ArchLinux is quite stable as long as you follow some proper etiquette when maintaining your system. I had way more Debian-based distros getting borked during an upgrade than with ArchLinux (especially with Ubuntu). In fact, even most of my servers run on Arch and only one runs on Debian. And `pacman` is better and faster than `apt`, fight me. ArchLinux uses [`pacman`](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Pacman) as its package manager. * [Homepage](https://archlinux.org/) * [Download](https://archlinux.org/download/) For advanced users, I’d also recommend taking a look at [this project](https://git.harting.dev/anonfunc/ALHP.GO). The `x86-64-v3` repositories aim at bringing to Arch packages compiled with CPU instructions found in most modern CPU, unlike the ones found in the regular repositories which aim to be as compatible as possible with `x86-64` CPUs. Packages from these new repositories can perform a bit better, and I have yet to encounter any significant bug. Be aware any package that is not compiled (like most Python scripts for instance) cannot be found in these as they cannot be compiled (like all packages flaged with the `any` architecture); therefore they are not included but can still be found in the regular `core`, `community`, and `extra` repositories.