What you’ve said is true, though it’s a bit of a trade-off
Yes, and that's why after more than 10 years I still use Arch. I like having the latest version of things and I'm confident enough in my abilities that I know that if something breaks I can always either find a fix, or at least identify the offending package, hold it back, report the bug and wait for the issue to be resolved.
There are times where it can be trying though. The first plasma 6 releases for example were rough. More recently, I've also been having issues with 6.11 and 6.12 kernels and my ax200 wifi that I only recently found a fix to. My wifi would freeze whenever I started streaming video from the PC to my TV, but only in kernels after 6.11. Turning off TCP segmentation offloading with ethtool resolved it (ethtool -K wlan0 tso off
). You don't want to know how long I had been pulling my hair out at that issue until I found the fix.
Here's the thing: your answer is both invalidating and ignorant, and it shows a lack of understanding of what differentiates Arch from a stable distro.
None of these issues were a fault of my own, all I did was
pacman -Syu
, and none of this would happen on a stable distro. I'm not saying Arch is shit because of this, I'm saying: beware of what you are getting into when you choose Arch: for every single package on your system, you are effectively at the mercy of whatever "upstream" decides to shit out that week. Being delusional about that fact and having guys come crawling out of the woodworks everytime this is mentioned, saying platitudes like: "I nEvEr HaD aN iSsUe" doesn't help anyone.