Yesterday I got my first ARM machine, a Raspberry Pi 2, and after trying out OpenELEC on it just to compare the performance of it against my existing Nvidia ION machine, I wanted to get Arch Linux installed for playing around with it some more. When I saw in the installation instructions that it required me to write an EXT file system, I figured that wasn't going to happen on my Macbook laptop, at least not directly, so I ended up making a dd-able image on my Arch Linux server.
This made me however think that other people perhaps would like to be able to just download a dd-able image, either to quickly try out Arch Linux, or perhaps just to save the hassle of having to build the image yourself, in order to get to the interesting part: configuring the applications on the system.
I can see images previously was made available from the Raspberry Pi website and there are some opinions on why official dd-able images shouldn't be provided. I do however think that there's some value in providing ready images, especially for new users who just want to try it out, even though the images will have to come with a disclaimer regarding them not being officially supported, and users will have to expand the file system to take up the entire SD card.
From what I can see, it should be a fairly simple job of setting up an automated system to build the images, whenever a new file system version has been pushed to the mirrors it will trigger a script which updates the images.
This is something I would enjoy setting up and maintaining and would be a way for me to contribute to the project, but the question is if it's something there is a need for and if it perhaps already exists but I just haven't come across it yet?