The Arch Dilemma. If you never update the system, it will never break. To update without breaking you have to carefully check every package update, but it’s time consuming. So you either spend time productively on an outdated but working and stable system or you spend time carefully keeping up a bleeding edge updated system.
Garuda is an Arch distro that creates a system snapshot every time you upgrade. That way, if the upgrade breaks something, you can roll back to a previous, stable system.
As someone who gradually went from arch to Manjaro to Ubuntu because I kept breaking my installs or not having time, this resonates lol.
Manjaro likes to break on its own during updates in my experience
The Arch Dilemma. If you never update the system, it will never break. To update without breaking you have to carefully check every package update, but it’s time consuming. So you either spend time productively on an outdated but working and stable system or you spend time carefully keeping up a bleeding edge updated system.
Or you take system snapshots so you can roll back when an update breaks.
Garuda is an Arch distro that creates a system snapshot every time you upgrade. That way, if the upgrade breaks something, you can roll back to a previous, stable system.