Manjaro 2.0 Synopsis This document covers the organizational, technical, management, and other changes we (the Manjaro Team, et al) like to see applied to the Manjaro Project. The goal of this document is to serve as a point of discussion, and ultimately, once a consensus on its contents and written goals has been reached, as a guide for the organizational restructuring of the Manjaro Project. Motivation The Manjaro Project has been declining over the past decade. It managed to sustain a sizabl...
If you don’t like the immutability then use nobara.
Tbh I don’t think the issues with immutability are CURRENTLY there.
you said this:
“Entirely community-driven (so suffer much less from corporate influence, and are better from the Linux “freedom” standpoint compared to Fedora, OpenSUSE, etc.)”
give me one example of a time this mattered
“Widely adopted (have extensive communities supporting the repos, a large knowledge base and active forums)”
fedora obviously has this.
“Not heavily opinionated (allow proprietary programs, work with systemd, etc.)” And this.
i conclude that you have still not made any case that there is even one reason to use manjaro that isn’t the cost of switching.