After you get decently experienced with Linux, you're tempted to move to a "difficult-to-setup" distro for fun and more flexibility. Nothing wrong with normie distros, but these advanced distros are really good - you can strip down "bloat", pick your own init system, your own login daemon as well as your own job scheduler.
After you get decently experienced with Linux, you're tempted to move to a "difficult-to-setup" distro for fun and more flexibility. Nothing wrong with normie distros, but these advanced distros are really good - you can strip down "bloat", pick your own init system, your own login daemon as well as your own job scheduler.