One little tip, when running "archinstall", use the "--advanced" flag. It currently only adds one additional option, which is setting the number of parallel downloads pacman will use during the installation. By default it only uses one, but you can select up to five, which can substantially speed up the process of it fetching packages. I also personally always make this permanent in /etc/pacman.conf post-installation.
Hi, since you have a larger drive you do not need to necessarily format it everytime as it wears the usb out. You can install something called Ventoy to your drive and you can just drag drop the iso files to your usb and have multiple isos without erasing them
Your videos are very good. Thanks for that! I seriously wonder why davinci doesn't make their software work for the most common distributions? It's incomprehensible that someone like you has to fix an installer. Does such misbehaviour completely bypass the makers? I don't understand it.
Typically packages from the AUR (where he was downloading and fixing the PKGBUILD from) are done by volunteers that use the product. It just so happens that whoever maintains it hasn't been keeping up to date with it (This happens when people get busy, people don't care about the project, etc.). Think of it as someone makes a cool little install script that anyone can use that's on an Arch based distro. The thing that does upset me however is for a video editing software that prides itself on Linux support they do kind of a shit job explaining things and just let the community figure a bunch of things out. I.e nvidia / amd crashing on launches for the longest time were super common and they had no documentation about it. I really do appreciate people like Steve that give quick concise how to fix answers (i.e editing the PKGBUILD) which you can do on any AUR package (or even make your own). It'd make more sense if davinci themselves made a flatpak that most people could just get up and running (though my knowledge on it is quite limited) i'd assume that would be the most universal and easy way to install for the average person.
Great! Nice Video!! - More on Media production, Content creation and Gaming, specially on Arch Linux expected. Thanks...By the way, Da Vinci Resolve works very well on my PC with the inbuild Intel530 iGPU in Windows. But the same does'nt happen in Linux. Any way???
00:00 - Introduction and Goals
01:00 - Creating a Bootable USB Key
05:20 - Verifying ISO Integrity
08:00 - Partitioning and Encryption Setup
12:00 - Installing Desktop Environment and Drivers
15:40 - Setting Up Fonts, Browser, and Essential Tools
18:00 - Fixing DaVinci Resolve Installation Issues
22:00 - Final Setup and Scaling UI for 4K Displays
Thanks for leaving out the background music, Much more pleasant to listen now to you! And, great contents btw!
One little tip, when running "archinstall", use the "--advanced" flag. It currently only adds one additional option, which is setting the number of parallel downloads pacman will use during the installation. By default it only uses one, but you can select up to five, which can substantially speed up the process of it fetching packages.
I also personally always make this permanent in /etc/pacman.conf post-installation.
A tiny tip for using paru: if you want to search packages, you don't actually need -Ss flag like with pacman, you can just use `paru package-name`
Hi, since you have a larger drive you do not need to necessarily format it everytime as it wears the usb out. You can install something called Ventoy to your drive and you can just drag drop the iso files to your usb and have multiple isos without erasing them
Love ur videos, keep it up😄😄
I'm glad you dropped the bg song
Your videos are very good. Thanks for that! I seriously wonder why davinci doesn't make their software work for the most common distributions?
It's incomprehensible that someone like you has to fix an installer. Does such misbehaviour completely bypass the makers? I don't understand it.
Typically packages from the AUR (where he was downloading and fixing the PKGBUILD from) are done by volunteers that use the product. It just so happens that whoever maintains it hasn't been keeping up to date with it (This happens when people get busy, people don't care about the project, etc.). Think of it as someone makes a cool little install script that anyone can use that's on an Arch based distro.
The thing that does upset me however is for a video editing software that prides itself on Linux support they do kind of a shit job explaining things and just let the community figure a bunch of things out. I.e nvidia / amd crashing on launches for the longest time were super common and they had no documentation about it.
I really do appreciate people like Steve that give quick concise how to fix answers (i.e editing the PKGBUILD) which you can do on any AUR package (or even make your own).
It'd make more sense if davinci themselves made a flatpak that most people could just get up and running (though my knowledge on it is quite limited) i'd assume that would be the most universal and easy way to install for the average person.
Great! Nice Video!! - More on Media production, Content creation and Gaming, specially on Arch Linux expected. Thanks...By the way, Da Vinci Resolve works very well on my PC with the inbuild Intel530 iGPU in Windows. But the same does'nt happen in Linux. Any way???
6th try to install Arch lets hope this time smh
I has used Arch for 3 years until updates broke it and I went back to Kubuntu
Fedora