“Unstable as hell”, “breaks for no reasons”, “seriously insecure”, other distros “work perfectly”. I find this kind of uninformed hyperbole tiring, but probably entirely descriptive of your own user journey. Arch is intended for technical users, not “average users” (Whatever that means), and people should not be recommending that their uninitiated friends start their Linux journey there unless they’re prepared and capable of providing technical support. I used Fedora and Ubuntu for decades before moving to Arch a few years ago, and I’ve never loved an OS more than I love this one. But that’s my journey.
What’s more important is impressing upon people how configurable Linux is. If your first distro was a bad experience, try a second distro. Try a third! Try a different DE. Switch from GNOME to KDE.
“Unstable as hell”, “breaks for no reasons”, “seriously insecure”, other distros “work perfectly”. I find this kind of uninformed hyperbole tiring, but probably entirely descriptive of your own user journey. Arch is intended for technical users, not “average users” (Whatever that means), and people should not be recommending that their uninitiated friends start their Linux journey there unless they’re prepared and capable of providing technical support. I used Fedora and Ubuntu for decades before moving to Arch a few years ago, and I’ve never loved an OS more than I love this one. But that’s my journey.
What’s more important is impressing upon people how configurable Linux is. If your first distro was a bad experience, try a second distro. Try a third! Try a different DE. Switch from GNOME to KDE.