this post was submitted on 22 Jan 2024
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I think an arch user would know to wear the antistatic band on the wrist that's grounded... but maybe that's just me. /pretentious_sniff
Would they? Arch users strike me as coming in two flavors.
Competent users who have a significant amount of IT knowledge, that happen to enjoy an incredibly lightweight Linux distro which is fully configurable. This group is akin to a racecar driver with a project car in their garage.
Random people who lack basic knowledge but drink whatever Kool aid they're given, and just happened to fall into a FOSS community where that Kool aid was Linux. They install Arch because someone said it's the best, and their ability to do so gives them an air of superiority and the belief that they're competent like group 1. This group is more like a teenager with a KIA, who believes their glued-on hood scoop gives them more horsepower.
Due to social media the second group far outpaces the first. So I'd wager most of them don't even know what the acronym ESD stands for, let alone how grounding works in basic electrical theory.
Grounding moves the magic smoke from one component to another, preferably, to one you don't own.
No, no, you want to keep the magic smoke inside your components!
Sheesh, noobs these days...
Of course, but you wanna move it to another location, like your pesky neighbour's computer.
you forgot about the part of the arch community where we forcibly require arch users to manually install arch linux. You don't just wake up and accidentally install arch linux manually, you have to know what you're doing, even if being a bumbling idiot during the process, you're still doing it the hard way.
Jokes aside, arch by nature is more tempting to "real linux users" the average "i use linux kid" is going to use kali or something.
I didn't say group 2 did it accidentally, I said they pretend that the specific skillset required to install Arch via terminal somehow means they're certified professional IT.
All you know is how to use a CLI specifically with Linux syntax, that's a good start but it's somewhat like pretending you're a mechanic because you know how to change a tire.
i meant accidentally as hyperbole. The point being if you managed to install arch manually that you had some level of knowledge. Or at least gained it through the experience.
I'd say it's more like pretending you're a mechanic while having a fairly comprehensive understanding of how cars work. The difference here is the environment, and the experience. You aren't gonna become an IT professional unless you've had years in the industry or "certification" anyway. But you can certainly roll your own maintenance if you tried.
That is also downplaying a manual install of arch quite a bit, but that's beyond the point.
There was a day, when I woke up and accidentily installed Gentoo. It is so sticky, still running on my PCs since more than 15 years.
it was simply meant to be. You cannot question it now.
Trust me, there is no need for that nowadays, most components have serious anti-static protection in them.
Wasn't really all that needed even twenty years ago, you could keep yourself grounded to the case easily without one
Yeah, do agree. Grounding your wrists has been pretty much obsolte for the past 20 years or so. In the 80's, 90's, yeah, it was preferable that you're grounded.
I just quickly touch the earth pin in the nearest outlet. I don't think it does anything, but it can't hurt either.
Just touch the PSU. It's grounded and then you are as well then Touch it regularly and static never builds up.
I live in a super dry place with static sparking on the sheets when I move, so these are actual words of wisdom.
is that necessary with the gloves?
Duh, the whole maid outfit is purely functional
Fabric friction creates static charge, so it would be worse.
having worn gloves like that, if i were to work on a computer wearing them that would be the first time i'd actually bother using an electrostatic bracelette