Oh I see... I read this in your blog and assumed from that that your installer is based on the "cnchi" installer (developed by Antergos)?
Here's the entire quote from my blog:
I strongly believe in giving credit to where it’s due. The Fu-rch installer is based on the cnchi installer developed by Antergos Linux. These guys have obviously put a lot of good ideas and hard work together into creating the cnchi installer and I want to congratulate them on doing a great job.
As for your previous question, I stand by my answer to it. My installer is called Fu-rch and it installs Arch, not Antergos.
So again, I make reference to and praise the Antergos project in this thread. My project is based on theirs, Arch, GNU, Linux, bash, Xorg, etc, etc. ...
I'm not sure what your point is or what you're getting at, but just in case you didn't know I'll try to explain something to you. Most Linux related and
open source projects utilize already written code, modify it, and then reuse it it. Thats why open source projects use the various open source licenses, such as the GPL3 in this case. Most of the Linux distros out there reuse, I would guess, 90+ percent of the code base in their distro. All use the Linux kernel, which again guessing, less than 10 percent actively participate in the development of.
So, how did the Fu-rch installer work for you?