This is more of a few comments then a review and what my experiences of Archlinux have been over the last 6 months. The title of 0.8 Voodoo does not mean as much as it could with other Linux distributions as Archlinux works with a rolling release, so it really is just the latest installer. Of course the latest packages are included. I am not a developer just a Linux user with a couple of years experience running various distributions.
Installer
Improvements have been made with the installer over 0.7.2 which you can read about
here. The installer is simple and works well and gets your system up and running quickly, but it does not hold your hand. Configuration for most aspects of the system is done by editing text files and you are giving the option of doing so on installing. If you are new to Linux there maybe better systems to wet your feet with, if you want to dive in, then you have to be prepared to do some learning.
Pros: Simple, fast, choice to install as you want
Cons: Time and knowledge needed to setup to individual tastes
Package Management
This is all taken care of with pacman and configured through pacman.conf. You can choose to include current, extra, unstable , community or custom. Also available are packages from
ArchLinux User-community Repository (AUR). This gives a huge selection of up to date packages and a simple installation.
Pros: Simple, up to date, effective and huge list of packages
Cons: I have found searches can be slow with pacman
Using the system
I often was frustrated with some "easier" distribution's when they went wrong and there was no GUI to fix it and then having to understand what goes on underneath was a nightmare. The simple structure here makes things a lot easier to work with. Of course with this you need some knowledge, but a lot of systems are over complicated in order to try and make it easier for us. Over the last six months most of the problems I have encountered have been from my own mistakes. A couple have been from bugs that have got through and this is one problem with cutting edge. One was a kernel bug that got through. I don't think this was a common problem, but effected my laptop and I lost use of the CDROM for a week. An update came through and fixed this.
Pros: Cutting edge
Cons: possible sacrifice of stability
Conclusions
I think Archlinux is best if you immerse yourself in it. Keep an eye on updates and bulletins, become part of community, learn how it works. It is a great distribution and to play with and learn about the system. It is certainly one of the "best" I have used for this. After being burned the only question I would have would be stability, but similar things have happened with Ubuntu Edgy and others. I am currently looking to "settle down" with a Linux distribution after numerous affairs. Part of me is going towards the stability of Debian and part of me loves the nature of Archlinux. I have yet to decide, but it is always good to know that Archlinux is an option.