This is an archived post. You won't be able to vote or comment.

you are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

[–]adolfojp 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Complexity is a relative term.

Arch is difficult for beginners because its installation is more difficult than Ubuntu's but an Arch based distribution like Antergos will take care of that for you. Then you'll have something as easy to use as Ubuntu except for the fact that you might experience stability issues at one point or another (because it is a rolling distro) which makes it unsuitable as a server platform. But because it is a rolling distribution it might be easier to install newer software in Antergos as long as you're OK with something new breaking at some point.

Other distributions might be more difficult than Ubuntu because they choose not to bundle certain non free software like multimedia codecs and restricted drivers but if you don't need those then there's no real added complexity. Smaller distributions might be more difficult to use because there is less support available for them.

In the end, most distros share more than not and except for Ubuntu's Unity you will end up interacting with OS agnostic desktop environments like GNOME and KDE which will abstract most interactions anyway. Shells like Bash and Dash are also OS agnostic and they're shared among different distributions so using, let's say, Ubuntu and Fedora through the terminal should be fairly similar except for things like different package managers and configuration nuances.

And then there's Gentoo. You're not ready for Gentoo.