I see. In that case I guess there's nothing much for it. Out of curiosity (and if it isn't too much of a power level) can you tell me some of the software that's missing?
There were several packages, but the most egregious example I can think of: ProtonVPN. It's explicitly a community-maintained PKGBUILD in the AUR, whereas Debian/Ubuntu and Fedora have dedicated,
official repositories. The ProtonVPN team themselves outright stated that official support for Arch is in progress... but they've had that notice up there for
at least four years at this point.
Fact of the matter is that when the AUR exists, there's no impetus for software developers to maintain an official repository that cleanly integrates into Pacman. Why go through all the hard work when you can just find a turbosped from the Arch community to do the hard work for you? ungoogled-chromium is lucky enough to have both binary and source packages available in the AUR... but again:
why the fuck isn't there a proper Arch Linux repository that cleanly integrates this shit into Pacman? A web browser is the
last thing I wanna faff around with updating by using
yay or
makepkg -si. The same is
doubly true for Brave Browser and LibreWolf.
Meanwhile: Fedora has all this shit
and more available with minimal, if any, friction whatsoever. Plus I'm using X11 via Xorg on Cinnamon, which is my preferred desktop environment anyway,
and I have the pseudo-rolling release cadence that pushes out the latest Linux kernel and Mesa stack. On Fedora Cinnamon, Fedora's GNOME repo works perfectly. There's an officially supported COPR repo for ungoogled-chromium. Brave, LibreWolf, Vivaldi, and all other manner of web browser already have RPM repositories up and running. I'm also tracking the latest
wine-staging from the
official WineHQ repositories for shits and giggles. All this shit is relegated the AUR in one form or another.
Fedora is Red Hat slop, I will concede... but again: the Cinnamon spin is "good enough" triumphs the alleged platonic ideal in my specific situation.