> I've always thought Arch was interesting, and a bit ago decided to give
it
>.a try. So I set up a VM, pointed it at the Arch installaiton medium and
> watched it not even be able to get past it's own setup.

Arch is great.  I did an install of it yesterday and after 3 hours
was relieved to have it working.  I know 3 hours is a lot, but I'd
had problems with Debian, Slackware and also Fedora so it
was kind of my next choice.  Debian seemed to mess up my
root password during the install.  I don't remember what the
problem was with Slackware.
Fedora installed fine, but I ran into a problem building clang 3.4
on it and it seemed like a difficult problem.  So I went with
Arch.  It was a little bit of a pain, but I did get it working and
it has clang 3.4 as it's default version.  Anyway, I also agree with
David Wagle's point about Arch being efficient.  It doesn't start
junk that other distros do.  I don't want to have to stop a bunch
of stuff whenever I reinstall.

I'm still a little fearful of Arch installs.  I also tried Archbang.
Don't remember what the problem with that was either.
Arch is a little bit tough, but also pays you back if you hang
in there.  That sounds like C++.  Maybe it's no coincidence
Arch is one of the few distros that understands the need for
clang 3.4.

I was installing from a thumb drive.  My guess from what
you wrote is you were doing a different kind of install.

-- 
Brian
Ebenezer Enterprises - In G-d we trust..
http://webEbenezer.net
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