Some cats are very protective of their food and think that you're going to steal it if you get too close
DaTingGoBrrr
In my country we have something called period panties. They has a kind of pad built in to the pantie. I bought some for my girlfriend and she tells me they work well. Just get a pair that are not too loose.
First stable release of Archinstall was 5 years ago according to the releases on GitHub so it already existed
I did it once, wrote down all the commands I used in order and then made my own install script. It was a great learning experience
Where did you get this information?
I never knew that. Thanks for the information! I will make an account on lemm.ee
I am using qemu with virt-manager gui and it works well
When it comes to Arch the wiki is your friend. It will tell you if additional configuration is required to get your packages working and what other dependencies can be installed. If something isn't working properly then the wiki probably knows why.
Arch comes with no drivers and additional packages by default. You need to install them manually. But you don't need to install every package for your system manually. If you need glibc it will most certainly get pulled down as a dependency.
You don't need to know every part of the system to use arch but you need to be interested enough to learn how your system works if something is not working or you want to configure your system in a certain way.
For starters I would recommend going with something Arch-based like Garuda or EndeavorOS if you want to learn Arch. I started off with my Steam Deck and later Garuda on my desktop. Once I was comfortable enough around Arch I decided to install vanilla Arch (manually, the wiki way) in a VM. When installing my system I wrote down every command I used and from that it snowballed in to my own install script for arch. That taught me a lot.
Arch is a make it yourself distro. It comes barebones and you install what you need (which in my opinion gives better knowledge about your system). And the packages are up-to-date which is good if you are gaming.
If you don't like to tinker then Arch may not be for you. Something arch-based could be a better fit. Like Garuda or EndeavourOS.
I get the same vibes from https://haveibeenpwned.com/Passwords
I know the site is made by a security researcher but still. It doesn't feel completely safe to give then my passwords.