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SaaSHub
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Personally I'd stay far away from it and just go for an Archlinux installation. Especially given how many accidents Manjaro's team have allowed to happen ( documented here on https://manjarno.snorlax.sh/). Most of them easily preventable which is the takeaway given the question of why they've been allowed to occur so frequently.
As for the actual reasons why people would disagree with your post, I don't use Manjaro nor have I ever, so I don't really have a credible opinion here. But I can point out links like this one that outline some plausible-sounding reasons why people wouldn't like the distro.
Rolling-release distros are bad for gaming. New kernel, new problems! New library, even more problems! What might be a novel approach is using OCI containers as a transport and delivery mechanism for operating system content that you can reimage safely if there are updates, and those updates have been proven to work on common gaming hardware.
It's horrible, the "distro bros" stay perpetually on the surface of the OS. Without becoming experts in anything, they change distribution at the slightest inconvenience. I'm a Manjaro user and do my own research for optimization. The problem is not with Manjaro, it's with Linux. The information is fragmented in little breadcrumbs that you have to follow around the internet in searches on Reddit, old forums, twitter threads, etc. Arch's wiki is the only source of worthwhile information.
Related posts
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Why is Manjaro considered bad
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Screenshot of a Linux thing I had been working on, and posted about. Feel free to ask any questions.
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All my Homies avoid manjaro
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I wanted to try KDE, because I've never used it and if I like it, I might switch permanently. I'm considering kubuntu or maniaro KDE. How is the security of both systems? I mean everything that would make my computer safe for daily use: web browsing, gaming and work.
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What is Arch-Linux? Without any experience to installing os’s could I install it and learn how to work it?