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Arch was getting popular 20 years ago because it suited all the advanced users who had the time to learn use Linux on it's own with minimum of default helpers or preinstalled software, beginning with the installation process. It was one step behind Gentoo because you didn't need to compile and optimize everything to your specific hardware.
Arch is still cool and popular today because we got series of forks, from more user friendly like EndeavourOS (currently my favorite) to DHH's Ruby development distro to gaming optimized SteamOS. When you think about it it's the set of pacman, AUR (+ helpers), Wiki and general DIY community that kept it popular and successful for so long.
Although I'm a long term Arch user for PC use I rather quickly ended up with Debian on servers. Because I don't have to deal with rolling release frequent updates, ease of use, ease of upgrade, vast collection of software and any remotely popular app usual has some kind of .deb repo or builds that you can readily install and integrate. And it's stable as Linux can be.
I choose Debian 12
There's not much of a difference in production between the two, both are very reliable and stable, just use the one you're more familiar with.
You can try surfing the web.
https://www.resf.org/about
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_Enterprise_Software_Foundation
You can also read this:
https://hackernoon.com/the-case-against-rocky-linux
Windows 98 and Windows 95
Ubuntu 24.04 is my favorite now. Nothing special, just easy to use with a looooong enough lifecycle. I don't like to upgrade distros from time to time, I mean, at all.
I wouldn't really agree here.
BSD's are not really meant for "everyday use" by individuals, so yes, I can see how things like the update process can seem a bit slow and cumbersome. And yes, the ecosystem is smaller, BSD does not run the latest and greatest whatever niche software and it does not have all the bells and whistles. If that is what you are looking for, use something else.
But BSD's are extremely effective when used correctly and their licensing allows them to be used in proprietary software without GPL poisoning. Big players like Netflix, Citrix, Checkpoint, NetApp, Juniper, Whatsapp etc all run their appliances and software on BSD.