Imo it’s more the other way around, but that’s not necessarily bad. Arch (and Linux in general) gives you a lot more control, while windows tries to block the user from touching the internals. In my experience Arch breaks more often though, but when it breaks I can usually fix it. In Windows things usually work, but when they don’t work you might be kinda screwed because the internals aren’t that easy to reach.
This isn’t something like an imo, that’s just a plain fact. The whole thing Arch is absolutely famous for is being super complicated to use but giving the user very much control.
Imo it’s more the other way around, but that’s not necessarily bad. Arch (and Linux in general) gives you a lot more control, while windows tries to block the user from touching the internals. In my experience Arch breaks more often though, but when it breaks I can usually fix it. In Windows things usually work, but when they don’t work you might be kinda screwed because the internals aren’t that easy to reach.
This isn’t something like an imo, that’s just a plain fact. The whole thing Arch is absolutely famous for is being super complicated to use but giving the user very much control.