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Well, it differs from AUR/yaourt in quite a number of ways:

- With AUR, you need someone to maintain the package. With Bedrock Linux, you can use packages aimed at other distros without alteration.

- With Bedrock Linux you don't need to compile anything - you can grab the binary package straight. Or you can compile if you want - with Bedrock Linux, you can use AUR/yaourt/packer/etc from Arch or portage from Gentoo, if you wish.

- With Bedrock Linux, the special stuff is integrated deeply into the system. AUR/yaourt is optional on Arch - on Bedrock, if you ignore the Bedrock-specific subsystems you'll have an extremely minimal and near useless system.

- Bedrock Linux's design results in some neat side-effects for things like robustness against broken packages/clients. I completely fubar'd the /lib -> /usr/lib move in my Arch client on Bedrock, and most if not all of my Arch packages broke. However, the core system continued to work, and I could still use packages from other distros. So I installed whatever packages I cared about from Debian Sid for the time being. Then, later, I blew away my Arch client and installed it again fresh with the /lib -> /usr/lib move completed. There really isn't an equivalent with AUR as far as I am aware.



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