Thanks for the video - you can install rkhunter with this command - yay -S rkhunter - freedom and choice were words that sounded important to you - ArcoLinuxD will provide more freedom over the coming months to come - choose your elements on the fly in calamares is the underlying idea - kernels, nvidia, services, display managers, desktops, applications...
Thanks arco linux, I usually install rkhunter from the tar ball, there are some problems with it on other distros when taking it from the package managers that I have repeatedly run into, so just a habit I guess. I will give the AUR version a try and see if that works well
as I've mentioned before I am new to Linux and one of the first distros I loaded into a VM was ArcoLinux. I like it a lot and still use it. I have also experimented with 'D' and set that up by following the scripts provided. That also worked out well. I have not tried 'B' yet. I have a bunch of distros loaded in VMs so I can get a taste of each one and for the most part I find all the distros to be quite good. All boils down to personal preference. Videos like yours do a lot to help people like me. Your videos are among the best on youtube. Thanks for all you do and the in-depth reviews.
This with the rootkit check is a new one for linux reviewers that I have seen and it is important,good advice.I used Arco without any issues,its a good distribution that also helps you learn more about linux in general if you want to.
I think new to linux users are the ones that would appreciate the ArcoD install, or any distro that requires text based installer since GUI installers are beginner friendly already.
Always install to a VM and test to see if you like it first before real hardware. If you like it and it tests good, then you can move it to real hardware.
For x86 that is certainly true, however for the ARM SBC that would be difficult for a couple of reasons 1) most of the distros come as a pre-configured, pre-installed iso which is dd'd to the boot disk and most of them have virtualization disabled (SBC)
Hey DJ....I may have missed it cause I've not seen all your vids...but can you do a video on your personal preferences? Your distro and maybe some of your Apps...thanks!
I am really enjoying your channel, found your video on Alpine especially interesting. By the way, `pacman -Q` only lists the installed packages on the system. If you want to search for packages in the repository that aren't installed, you can use `pacman -Ss `.
Thanks for the video - you can install rkhunter with this command - yay -S rkhunter - freedom and choice were words that sounded important to you - ArcoLinuxD will provide more freedom over the coming months to come - choose your elements on the fly in calamares is the underlying idea - kernels, nvidia, services, display managers, desktops, applications...
Thanks arco linux, I usually install rkhunter from the tar ball, there are some problems with it on other distros when taking it from the package managers that I have repeatedly run into, so just a habit I guess. I will give the AUR version a try and see if that works well
@@CyberGizmo I tried it while listening to the video - it works fine
@@arcolinux5876 Thanks for checking that out, and glad to hear ArcoLinux doesn't have the update issue that some of the other distros have(had)
Erik Dubois is machine, I mean about 1400 video's!
He certainly is Johan B. and does really good videos too
as I've mentioned before I am new to Linux and one of the first distros I loaded into a VM was ArcoLinux. I like it a lot and still use it. I have also experimented with 'D'
and set that up by following the scripts provided. That also worked out well. I have not tried 'B' yet. I have a bunch of distros loaded in VMs so I can get a taste of each
one and for the most part I find all the distros to be quite good. All boils down to personal preference. Videos like yours do a lot to help people like me. Your videos are
among the best on youtube. Thanks for all you do and the in-depth reviews.
Unix Guy 1 : When I started out, we only had ones and zeros.
Unix Guy 2 : Yeah, well when I started out, we only had zeros.
nice Shane :) I don't remember even not having 1 and 0's but now charging capacitors and tossing them to co-workers was kinda fun
This with the rootkit check is a new one for linux reviewers that I have seen and it is important,good advice.I used Arco without any issues,its a good distribution that also helps you learn more about linux in general if you want to.
Thanks Victor always something new to learn in linux
Thanks DJ, nice video for good distro, well done.
Thank you abobader
I think new to linux users are the ones that would appreciate the ArcoD install, or any distro that requires text based installer since GUI installers are beginner friendly already.
Always install to a VM and test to see if you like it first before real hardware. If you like it and it tests good, then you can move it to real hardware.
For x86 that is certainly true, however for the ARM SBC that would be difficult for a couple of reasons 1) most of the distros come as a pre-configured, pre-installed iso which is dd'd to the boot disk and most of them have virtualization disabled (SBC)
Hey DJ....I may have missed it cause I've not seen all your vids...but can you do a video on your personal preferences? Your distro and maybe some of your Apps...thanks!
Sure, Lee, most of my systems are ARM, and just one X86 Workstation, this is the video I did on it ruclips.net/video/lpHb2aO0T7Y/видео.html
Maybe next time you do a review via VM, use ArcoLinux simple screen recorder so the whole VM screen is captured.
Afraid that wouldnt work due to the way I route video to recordings, but thanks for suggestion anyway.
Do you check the sha value of all ISO or just the ones downloaded from SourceForge?
I check all of them where the devs have supplied the sums to do them, just don't always do it on camera
please make depth tutorial on FreeNAS
I am really enjoying your channel, found your video on Alpine especially interesting. By the way, `pacman -Q` only lists the installed packages on the system. If you want to search for packages in the repository that aren't installed, you can use `pacman -Ss `.