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General Linux Discussion Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="SeriousHoax" data-source="post: 1102601" data-attributes="member: 78686"><p>I see, that make sense especially not being default on Arch.</p><p></p><p>Yeah, ext4 is solid and reliable. I saw somewhere that apparently ext4 could have more impact on SSD's lifetime due to its journaling feature. I didn't verify this info though. I'm also making use of BTRFS compression feature to save disk space so that's a nice reason for me to use it.</p><p></p><p>Oh, didn't know about SpiralLinux but I know that it's default on Garuda but then again, Garuda being based on arch has no secure boot support.</p><p>Anyway, I think I'll stick to Arco Linux because VirtualBox hasn't been updated for Tumbleweed yet and manually downloading the rpm doesn't work because of some dependency issues. I need same version of VBox on both Windows and Linux otherwise old version can't run VMs that was opened with new version. On Arch I'm always with the latest version of literally any app so that has its benefits but of course that makes it also prone to bugs. Pacman also does somethings better by default like parallel downloading, showing currently installed apps version vs the version it is about to install, showing updatable packages in a column instead of all in one line and last but not least the overall speed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SeriousHoax, post: 1102601, member: 78686"] I see, that make sense especially not being default on Arch. Yeah, ext4 is solid and reliable. I saw somewhere that apparently ext4 could have more impact on SSD's lifetime due to its journaling feature. I didn't verify this info though. I'm also making use of BTRFS compression feature to save disk space so that's a nice reason for me to use it. Oh, didn't know about SpiralLinux but I know that it's default on Garuda but then again, Garuda being based on arch has no secure boot support. Anyway, I think I'll stick to Arco Linux because VirtualBox hasn't been updated for Tumbleweed yet and manually downloading the rpm doesn't work because of some dependency issues. I need same version of VBox on both Windows and Linux otherwise old version can't run VMs that was opened with new version. On Arch I'm always with the latest version of literally any app so that has its benefits but of course that makes it also prone to bugs. Pacman also does somethings better by default like parallel downloading, showing currently installed apps version vs the version it is about to install, showing updatable packages in a column instead of all in one line and last but not least the overall speed. [/QUOTE]
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