Fedora is the new Ubuntu - Fedora Long Term Review

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  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @ozrencupac
    @ozrencupac 2 года назад +1749

    They just need an installer that humans can use and its going to be perfect

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  2 года назад +315

      Hahaha yeah

    • @Parallax9999
      @Parallax9999 2 года назад +189

      the installer is actually getting a rework, according to them. Don’t know when it will be pushed out, though.

    • @walking_on_earth
      @walking_on_earth 2 года назад +80

      LOL it’s not that bad but maybe if you needed to do a bunch of partition management it would be cumbersome? The interface seems a little wonky compared to Calamares but I had no problem getting through it personally

    • @thedude4795
      @thedude4795 2 года назад +36

      I went with Fedora because of the installer. I needed a RAID setup and when it comes to unorthodox setups Red Hat has made it way easier, and it shows by a mile.
      Test yourself, try to set up RAID or some other atypical setup on Arch, Manjaro, what have you, and on Fedora its the easiest.
      Have to say though, the bleeding edge repo's on Arch though is light years ahead of Fedora, and I sincerely miss them.

    • @YvanDaSilva
      @YvanDaSilva 2 года назад +31

      Ouch. Burn....
      But yeah. Installer is solid, but the UX is horrendous for Mr everyone.

  • @RustyLoaf
    @RustyLoaf 2 года назад +487

    I feel like having vanilla GNOME is one of Fedora's strongest advantages over other distributions. I absolutely use extensions, but I'd rather be the one choosing them and having a clean install out of the box. My extensions are just, like, hiding the top bar unless I'm in the overview, adding a middle click to close windows in the overview, a couple minor menu tweaks, things like that. I don't want my distribution to hack a Start menu or persistent dock paradigm onto a DE that's fundamentally not designed for it and is, frankly, much better than other DE's strictly because of its overview paradigm.

    • @xucongzhan9151
      @xucongzhan9151 2 года назад +15

      Exactly! I think going vanilla GNOME makes things much more consistent and reproducible across installations and devices.

    • @andybruce6825
      @andybruce6825 2 года назад +3

      I feel the same way, it's easier to start from vanilla and add what you want rather than start from a mess and get it to where you want :p

    • @softwarelivre2389
      @softwarelivre2389 2 года назад +9

      @@ps5hasnogames55 I don't give a damn about desktop icons. They are not good and you're better using your file manager.

    • @softwarelivre2389
      @softwarelivre2389 2 года назад +3

      @@ps5hasnogames55 it is actually bad

    • @emjaycee
      @emjaycee 2 года назад +16

      You will always struggle to convince me that Gnome in its vanilla form is a user-friendly or newbie friendly desktop environment. I'm just an old-fashioned (and old lol) mouse point and click sort of person. I don't 'want' to change, I don't 'want' to learn a new and different desktop paradigm. To me, personally, Gnome is a bit like Arch, it's better for people who are technologically competent and who enjoy fiddling with their systems to get them exactly where they want to be. And, I understand that Gnome probably is really good for people who use their computers for 'work'. For the basic, simple, day to day computer user who likes using a mouse and a GUI, I could never recommend either Gnome or any 'pure' version of Arch... just too high maintenance... IMO :) Oh, the Gnome exceptions are Zorin Core and perhaps Manjaro Gnome... for 'me' :) And the only version of Arch I will ever use is Manjaro. I follow a few simple rules on Manjaro and so far it's always been good for me (I'm talking stable for years now as a basic user) - I avoid the AUR if at all possible, I stick to an LTS kernel wherever possible, and I always do major updates in TTY rather than on the desktop itself. Maybe one day I'll come unstuck on Manjaro... I also accept that nothing is perfect :) DEs and distros are very much an individual user thing and probably always will be. Manjaro and Fedora ARE my two favourite distros, Cinnamon is my favourite DE, it does everything that 'I' need it to do :) Oh, I don't mind Mint and MX either... and Zorin :)

  • @kevinbreen4510
    @kevinbreen4510 2 года назад +328

    I couldn't agree more. Linus from LTT kept knocking Fedora as a meme but he really missed out on a stable user friendly distro. Personally I use arch but my wife and mother are both using fedora and I'm debating about switching back as I'm getting a bit tired of random things breaking and like you said... most things have an RPM or flatpak version nowadays.

    • @LampJustin
      @LampJustin 2 года назад +29

      Believe me been on arch for a long time, it's not worth it. There is more to love on Fedora. Yes, it's on arch first, but you don't need to manually switch to latest new thing as it will come by default with a new release. Think of pipewire. It's manual work on arch and meanwhile on Fedora pulseaudio will automatically be swapped after an update. And you can be quite certain that the switch won't be rushed or unstable.

    • @kevinbreen4510
      @kevinbreen4510 2 года назад +12

      @Modzilla I agree. The manual work in arch is getting old. It was more about if I could and less of if I should. 😆

    • @accessiblelinuxgaming
      @accessiblelinuxgaming 2 года назад +26

      I kind of facepalmed when he poked fun at Fedora.

    • @kanishcktewatia597
      @kanishcktewatia597 2 года назад +59

      I switched to linux ater the LTT videos and everything i learned since then tells me linus was an absolute idiot. He made the worst possible decisions at every step, almost like he wanted to point out bugs and scare his nooby audience/create drama rather than try to make it work.

    • @accessiblelinuxgaming
      @accessiblelinuxgaming 2 года назад +39

      ​@@kanishcktewatia597
      I've been gaming on Linux for quite some time now, and to be completely fair, they did make some good points in that series. The truth is, is that Linux isn't Windows, and it's easy to forget that in terms of games, we are often jumping through a compatibility and translation layer to get those games to work. There are challenges associated with that. The trouble comes in when people expect Linux to behave just like Windows, and close their mind to learning a new way of thinking about things. Those people tend to have a very very hard time. And Linus seemed to be a little stuck in that rut during his segments. There are elements of the Linux experience that need work, and elements that should be made more accessible, but Linux doesn't need to be like Windows to be great. I think a lot of folks get stuck on that.

  • @totomaiden08
    @totomaiden08 2 года назад +130

    This all started on Fedora 32, since then it went from meh, to surprisingly good, to the best distro for EVERYONE. Coders, scripters, everyday users, whatever you want to do, Fedora is for you. Hats off to Fedora and their developers, every release they set the bar higher for everyone

    • @Lodinn
      @Lodinn 2 года назад +13

      I see what you did there.

    • @oraclejmt
      @oraclejmt 2 года назад

      @@turanamo Bios plan got rejected. Comment aged like milk

    • @jimmywoods7404
      @jimmywoods7404 Год назад +4

      @@turanamo How old are you talking. As my HP Elitebook from 2013 has UEFI. Even some machines before then also have UEFI.

    • @deth3021
      @deth3021 Год назад

      ​@@jimmywoods7404well efi is from the 90s.
      The problem is there were many compatability issues with uefi for many years.

  • @nootums
    @nootums 2 года назад +91

    Been using fedora since fedora 32, and it has been an amazing experience.
    The biggest hassle I faced was the extension support when gnome went from version 3.38 to 40, I had to wait months, or find a replacement for most of the extensions I used.
    Other than that, It has been great. Having nothing but a small bar on top is so much better for my productivity.

    • @tomate3908
      @tomate3908 2 года назад +4

      @@ps5hasnogames55 Imagine being a manchild like you

    • @hammerheadcorvette4
      @hammerheadcorvette4 2 года назад +2

      I've been on Fedora since the early 20's release. The only update that was unbearable was F26 because of the kernel 4.4 and the Nvidia GPU issues.Immediately after that, It has been flawless.

    • @Gerlige
      @Gerlige 2 года назад +2

      I've been using Fedora since version 7. It was pleasant ride all the way. :)

  • @nategraham4027
    @nategraham4027 2 года назад +167

    I agree 100%. I've been on Fedora KDE for several months and I feel like it's my new long-term distro; no more temptation to distro-hop! It's great for users, and it's great for developing on top of. And the KDE version is not a second-class citizen! The worst feature is the installer, but hopefully you'll only have to see it once...

    • @Deserio2004
      @Deserio2004 2 года назад +1

      I remember installing RH 7.3 being better than fedora nowadays, it's a pity

    • @4n0nmann5
      @4n0nmann5 2 года назад

      I thought you guys use daily built KDE Neon?

    • @nategraham4027
      @nategraham4027 2 года назад +14

      @@4n0nmann5 Some of us do. But Neon Unstable is actually better for QA than development. For development, you generally build everything from source yourself (because you're hacking on it), so you don't need a distro in which everything is built from source every day for you. For developers it's more inortant that supporting software libraries are kept up to date, and for this a rolling release distro or semi-rolling distro like Fedora is better. But Neon Unstable is quite useful for dedicated QA people, bug triagers, etc.

    • @emjaycee
      @emjaycee 2 года назад +4

      @@ps5hasnogames55 Yes, Fedora KDE does need to 'modernize' some of their 'older' apps into newer and more viable ones... but, you can still elect to use X11 rather than Wayland at the login screen. Still, not sure if that is really Fedora's fault with the apps or KDE's fault :)

    • @darin7553
      @darin7553 2 года назад +3

      I love Fedora. I have had absolutely 0 issues. I can not say the same for arch

  • @JeffGeerling
    @JeffGeerling 2 года назад +190

    After building my first desktop PC in 20+ years, and trying Ubuntu first... I ultimately went with Fedora 35 + Windows 10. Fedora's been working great, and the most annoying thing so far (which is completely surface-level) is that OpenRGB requires a bit more work to get it running on Fedora.
    And sometimes other packages assume you use a Debian derived OS, and you have to compile or manually install something on Fedora.

    • @LampJustin
      @LampJustin 2 года назад +9

      Great to see that you landed on Fedora! I'm a RX600XT user on F35 myself and it's great. You should read up on dnf as the package manger, it has some awesome features like downloading rpms (or cloning full on repos), rolling back transactions based on a bash like history, not breaking over a wonky ssh connection (not great on apt ....), updating the repos without running update and installing rpms directly from URLs with depency check and everything.

    • @MrSmitheroons
      @MrSmitheroons 2 года назад +4

      Packaging would be my main concern for switching to Fedora as well. I think of it as probably a cooler distro than Ubuntu, but less effortlessly practical due to not being the default/most mainstream choice. I also don't want to learn a new package manager and package repo/package ecosystem... Hmm.

    • @LampJustin
      @LampJustin 2 года назад +8

      @@MrSmitheroons it's actually not hard at all. Instead of debs you have rpms that you can install with dnf install ./my.rpm . To do all other stuff it's quite similar to apt, you just don't need to update the repos all the time, dnf does it automatically. So to update use dnf update. And if you want to install software from the repos use dnf install xyz. That's it. All of that can also be done in gnome software, so don't be afraid.

    • @ledgermanager
      @ledgermanager 2 года назад

      fedora new king of bloatware?

    • @dreamyuki
      @dreamyuki 2 года назад +4

      @@MrSmitheroons with flatpak is not really a problem anymore, for GUI apps ofc

  • @dstinnettmusic
    @dstinnettmusic 2 года назад +172

    Those Ubuntu 10.10 clips gave me nostalgia and reminded me of why I used to love it so much. I loved Unity too.
    Good for Canonical for being able to turn a profit, but maybe it would be better if they exited the desktop space. Or make Ubuntu Desktop a full community project.

    • @AdiPrimandaGinting
      @AdiPrimandaGinting 2 года назад +1

      They need to keep some influence on the Desktop although if it is minimal, Ubuntu Desktop can be a profitable in the future

    • @dstinnettmusic
      @dstinnettmusic 2 года назад +5

      @@AdiPrimandaGinting a perfect world would be if they went the Red Hat route.
      A community distro that acts as upstream for a commercial distro.

    • @AdiPrimandaGinting
      @AdiPrimandaGinting 2 года назад +2

      @@dstinnettmusic I don't think Fedora is completely community run. Redhat has a lot of stake to drive Fedora in a way that would turn profit for them

    • @dstinnettmusic
      @dstinnettmusic 2 года назад +6

      @@AdiPrimandaGinting Correct, it is not completely community run, but it is largely community managed,
      Fedora is run by the Fedora Council (great name btw), which is made up of members of both the community and Red Hat Employees.
      The Council Chair is selected by Red Hat and approved by the Fedora Council.
      The idea is to let Fedora function independently but make sure it stays on a path where it can act as upstream for RHEL.
      Contrast with Ubuntu, which is made in house by canonical.

    • @AdiPrimandaGinting
      @AdiPrimandaGinting 2 года назад +1

      @@dstinnettmusic Not correct on Ubuntu part. Ubuntu is like the fruit of labor between community and Canonical although I think Canonical has always have more power being the financier of the project. Ubuntu community has its own community structure with community council and technical board being on top. Although from your comment, I think Fedora community has more power than Ubuntu community in deciding the life of their respective distro.

  • @juliensaab
    @juliensaab 2 года назад +59

    In my experience Fedora is one of the best distribution. I like the default features, the look and feel, and the stability. Especially when developing applications, the performance is perfect. But, the only issue that I faced is some libraries being incompatible when working with machine learning. Ubuntu has a bigger community when talking about ML, which comes in handy when I get stuck on something related to libraries and packages dependencies.

    • @pranaykhalkho1698
      @pranaykhalkho1698 2 года назад +3

      Using guix or nix on fedora as a overlay. Is the ultimate dev setup

  • @geetube79
    @geetube79 2 года назад +15

    I like this channel a lot. The exact stuff I want to know in order to move to another distro as my daily driver is covered here. I wish I had more time to experiment with more distros but as a freelance web dev time gets scarse 😞, however I agree and share these feelings of Ubuntu and after using it for years I'll move to fedora and feel excited about the experience of working on it full time and see how it goes. Thanks for that!.

  • @johannesdnaliew4428
    @johannesdnaliew4428 2 года назад +10

    You speak exactly from my soul. I've been using Fedora for a few years and the system runs and runs. I don't have to fix anything all the time.
    I would only change three things about Fedora:
    Flathub directly integrated
    Offer RPM Fusion completely as a third-party source.
    Installer also for beginners (but they're already working on that).

  • @OscarRobbing
    @OscarRobbing 2 года назад +24

    I 100% agree with everything you said here. Fedora is awesome because its not bleeding edge but is current. Provides stock desktop and apps instead of bloated messes. And uses the godly Flatpaks by default along with Wayland, Pipewire, etc. It's like legitimately my ideal distro.
    Fedora's only weakness is its installer. If it adopted the Elementary/PopOS installer it would be god-tier.

    • @folksurvival
      @folksurvival 2 года назад +2

      Flatpaks are shit, just install software with your package manager from the terminal using simple and easy to learn commands.

  • @quasigod1083
    @quasigod1083 2 года назад +27

    I've been saying this for a while. Fedora is my new goto recommendation for new users. It "just works*" more than Ubuntu far more often for me. Flatpaks by default is also good for letting new users avoid the terminal.

  • @KingKrouch
    @KingKrouch 2 года назад +40

    I've been using Fedora KDE, and it's really solid. A good in-between for those getting into Linux and power users that don't like the instability that Arch can have at times. It even has a UEFI boot logo screen, which is nice from a polish perspective.
    Only downside is that there's no option in the installer for Fedora KDE to automatically install NVIDIA Drivers, Flatpak, and RPMFusion.

    • @scooter4196
      @scooter4196 2 года назад +6

      Yeah, the default no third party packages can be a pain, but I think since it’s sponsored and basically owned by red hat, there might be some legal issues when hosting the software versus giving the software in a repo for you to install afterwards.
      That’s what a red hatter told me from the legal side of things.

    • @KingKrouch
      @KingKrouch 2 года назад +2

      ​@@ps5hasnogames55 Could just uninstall those pieces of software. Or just install regular Fedora, install KDE Plasma, and then remove the GNOME portion of it.
      So far, I've had less issues with that than KDE on Arch for example, which doesn't even install packagekit-qt5 by default, leading to Discover and a lot of stuff not working.

    • @KingKrouch
      @KingKrouch 2 года назад +3

      ​@@ps5hasnogames55 Not necessarily. It's more like the KDE Desktop environment option used for archinstall installs Discover by default without installing the dependencies that are required to use it.
      I definitely do agree that distributions should be more lightweight, and that Fedora should just give the option of installing an alternate desktop environment from the installer image rather than relying on a third-party for a good OOB experience. Manjaro from my experience is way more bloated than this spin of Fedora though, although that's not really saying much.

    • @thetapheonix
      @thetapheonix 2 года назад +1

      Ive always thought of Fedora as a Gnome distro, I might check out the KDE spin if people dont have the issues with KDE like we did in the past.

    • @sebKern91
      @sebKern91 2 года назад

      Interesting to hear that. In the past, I read about some people having issues with Fedora KDE. I read that the KDE spin isn't as well polished as the Gnome version. But if it's now stable, maybe I should give it a try.
      I currently use Fedora Gnome but I'm thinking about switching back to KDE. Gnome 41 is great but still I sometimes think that KDE is better suited for me.
      In the past, I used KDE neon, but with its Ubuntu LTS base, it has problems with outdated software. For example, you get a rather old version of the Flatpak platform, thus some apps like Eclipse won't work. You get old kernels, lacking features like proper NTFS support (kernel 5.15) or support for the Nintendo Switch controller (kernel 5.16). Pulseaudio showed some instabilities, while in Fedora, you get PipeWire, which just works fine (even with effect programs like EasyEffects).
      So I think about installing Fedora KDE anytime soon.

  • @walking_on_earth
    @walking_on_earth 2 года назад +47

    Fedora “just works”, which is good insofar as it keeps you focused on your work and the system is very stable. It’s a downside when you want to dig into the inner workings of the system. I love Fedora on my laptop, where the trackpad gestures and streamlined UI really take advantage of that device’s hardware. However for my desktop I’m sticking with Endeavour+KDE for now since it is more pleasant to customize to my liking, and KDE has a lot of useful features and powerful stock apps.

    • @StarlordStavanger
      @StarlordStavanger 2 года назад +1

      I'd use Fedora Gnome myself, but currently using EndeavourOS Gnome with pacman and AUR, and the EndeavourOS community its just so good I can't imagine using anything else right now.

    • @vicca4671
      @vicca4671 2 года назад +8

      Give Fedora KDE a spin, it's been really fine on my laptop for quite a while

    • @arnoldwolfstein
      @arnoldwolfstein 2 года назад +1

      @Sergio Cuervo yeah I was gonna say that

  • @stephenreaves3205
    @stephenreaves3205 2 года назад +8

    Don't forget that Fedora Server with Cockpit is also an amazing experience! Makes me wonder why people got all mad about the CentOS switch (I mean I know why they got mad, but still)

  • @eugenek1180
    @eugenek1180 2 года назад +10

    It's nice to see a healthy competition and constant progression among Linux distros. I've been off Windows for a number of years now using Linux Mint and I love it!

  • @kevinpitts3548
    @kevinpitts3548 2 года назад +26

    I 100% agree! I was a big fan of Solus when 4.0 came out. It had all the right right software and good enough updates. I like mint, but i grew out of cinnamon. After the major update to gnome happened, I was hesitant to go to fedora. I tried Manjaro again, but it broke within one update... So I went to fedora! Watched a few videos to tweak it...and boom! Not looking back! They have won me over!

    • @josephduchene5849
      @josephduchene5849 2 года назад +3

      Philosophically I also really like Solus (and Budgie). Was most recently using Ubuntu Budgie, which is a really great distro, but had all kinds of issues I don't have with Fedora: LightDM tried to go to login before finding GPU/loading kernel, power-profiles-daemon was broken and some other error messages.
      I went back to Fedora and even installed the Fedora 36 Beta and it's great. No issues. There's a "We've got this" vibe about Fedora I've only gotten from a couple distros.

    • @folksurvival
      @folksurvival 2 года назад +1

      How do you grow out of Cinnamon? You can download any DE on Mint too and they also have XFCE and MATE editions ready to go.

    • @kevinpitts3548
      @kevinpitts3548 2 года назад

      @@folksurvival mainly looking for a better flow and or technology. Yes they are a very good. Yes I will continue to recommend it. I just like fedora at this time.

  • @maxarendorff6521
    @maxarendorff6521 2 года назад +23

    Couldn't agree more. I recently fell in love with Fedora and vanilla Gnome as well. I'm really looking forward to Fedora 36 and Gnome 42!

    • @ent2220
      @ent2220 2 года назад

      I still have to install dash to panel, input output device picker and a few other extensions. Stock gnome is perfectly usable and i feel like casual users would love it, but when it comes to getting stuff done, a taskbar will always be the best option for me. It also gives you the ability to switch workspaces with the mouse wheel hover the taskbar, and the ability to isolate them, which stock gnome doesn't do. What's the point of workspaces if the apps running in each are not separate instances?

    • @maxarendorff6521
      @maxarendorff6521 2 года назад +1

      @@ent2220 Use KDE then I guess? People need to stop turning Gnome into something it was never meant to be IMO.

    • @ent2220
      @ent2220 2 года назад +1

      @@maxarendorff6521 I don't like KDE. KDE feels worse than windows to me. Gnome is so sleek and starts off so barebones. Thats what I want, and then add stuff as I seee fit. 90 percent of apps and prebuilt stuff on KDE distros I don't want. I also don't like many of their apps that start with K

    • @ent2220
      @ent2220 2 года назад

      @@maxarendorff6521 like I really really don't like KDE. The settings app, the way the whole thing is basically. The only two things I like is they let you change default file manager and dolphin s "extract here" "extract to seperate folder" context menu options. Other than that there is nothing that I like about KDE. Xfce is much much better and gnome is the best

  • @TheLazyJAK
    @TheLazyJAK 2 года назад +25

    I really like their implementation of Cinnamon as well, feels every bit as polished as their GNOME release. A lot of disros don't put as much effort in with alternate DEs, but fedora does this well. I've been using it now for about a year and I just struggle to find any disadvantages.

    • @AaronTechnic
      @AaronTechnic 2 года назад +3

      Their Cinnamon implementation is just as good as Linux Mint.

    • @honzacutka6251
      @honzacutka6251 2 года назад +1

      Do the use wayland or x11 as a graphic server? I suppose, since cinnamon is being developed by the Mint team, it runs on x11...

  • @Hobbitstomper
    @Hobbitstomper 2 года назад +14

    Both Fedora 36 and Ubuntu 22.04, which both will be released in April, include GNOME 42, which itself was released on March 23. I'm glad to see Ubuntu devs are starting to prioritize the implementation of the latest GNOME versions. It's probably thanks to distros like Fedora that give Ubuntu a little wakeup call and make them compete harder.

  • @_MrSnrub
    @_MrSnrub 2 года назад +26

    Glad to see Fedora getting the love it deserves. Fedora is amazingly stable for a semi-rolling release style distro, and it has been amazing for gaming.

    • @babyboomertwerkteam5662
      @babyboomertwerkteam5662 2 года назад

      Fedora is not semi rolling.

    • @sebKern91
      @sebKern91 2 года назад +1

      @@babyboomertwerkteam5662 On Fedora, you get regular app updates (not just bugfixes (like on Debian) but real updates to newer versions) even within a version cycle. You even get regular kernel updates within a version cycle. Compared to Debian which sticks with the same LTS versions of their apps for two years.
      So when compared to Debian, Fedora can be seen as semi-rolling.

    • @babyboomertwerkteam5662
      @babyboomertwerkteam5662 2 года назад

      ​@@sebKern91 The amount of updates you get isn't what makes a distro "rolling" or not. Rolling releases pull from the same repositories forever and never branch into different versions. It doesn't matter if the distro freezes on one app version like Debian or gives you new app versions during a release like Fedora - if the distro has multiple versions, it by definition cannot be considered a rolling release.
      I should also mention that you're not guaranteed to get new app versions on one version of Fedora - this is especially true with desktop environments - each version of Fedora stays on one version of its desktop per release with the only exception being KDE due to its release schedule and buggier nature, and even then typically only one upgrade is allowed per Fedora version, with very rare exceptions (for example, Fedora 35 got two Plasma upgrades, but it was only because Plasma 5.23 couldn't be thoroughly tested in time for its release so Fedora 35 had to ship with Plasma 5.22.5 on release). Fedora's stable update policy for apps specifically disallows updating apps and libraries if they change the user interface or API, with only some exceptions (web browsers for example), and all new app versions are putt through testing before they're released to Fedora's repositories. If an app doesn't pass testing, it gets delayed until it's fixed, or it doesn't get shipped. Kernel versions for example; major versions do not get shipped until there's been about 2 weeks of testing.
      Also, there is a rolling version of Fedora called Rawhide, but it's experimental (to the point where even the kernel is straight off Linus Torvalds' git master branch) and isn't intended for anyone other than developers.

  • @DenzilFerreira
    @DenzilFerreira 2 года назад +9

    Been on Fedora since 27, upgraded all the way until 35 and looking forward to 36. Welcome to Fedora fam!

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  2 года назад

      Thanks :) I'm eagerly awaiting for Fedora 36!

    • @DenzilFerreira
      @DenzilFerreira 2 года назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP if you want to push updates to an after though, enable auto updates on the app store. Also works for Flatpaks!

  • @davidhart1674
    @davidhart1674 2 года назад +5

    I wanted to dip my toes in the 'immutable filesystem' OS waters. After surveying the landscape, chose Fedora Silverblue to try mainly because it defaults to GNOME (bonus that Fedora tracks the GNOME release cadence; note, Fedora Kinoite is the KDE spin of Silverblue).
    So, I installed Fedora Silverblue in a VM and was pleased to find that its defaults are things that I'd normally need to configure myself like btrfs w/compression, zram, /tmp on in-RAM tmpfs, a release-tracking Linux kernel, etc. Finding toolbox was also a pleasant surprise, as it makes using containers for running apps & doing software development super easy. Flatpak wasn't much of a consideration but it'll be nice to have fresh apps with no dependency problems.
    I was tired of maintaining franken-buntu & franken-debian installations, so after a trial run on some older hardware and finding Firefox pre-configured for Wayland (Intel graphics) and buttery smooth, I made the jump to Fedora Silverblue as my main desktop OS. Adding RPM Fusion's libva-intel-driver & ffmpg-libs was an easy fix for hardware video decode for Firefox.
    So yeah, I think Fedora is quickly becoming the new Ubuntu.

  • @killermonkey1392
    @killermonkey1392 2 года назад +11

    Two years ago, i hopped from Ubuntu to Fedora after finally having had enough of outdated Ubuntu repos, and I never looked back. And like you said, despite the cutting-edge mentality, Fedora has been rock-solid for me since day 1.

  • @cantdance3077
    @cantdance3077 2 года назад +1

    Your sense of humor makes the content that much more enjoyable. Well done, sir.

  • @keyboard_g
    @keyboard_g 2 года назад +8

    Fedora and OpenSuse for me are the top 2 distros. I can read about new KDE enhancements and install them just days later.

  • @markcahalan5698
    @markcahalan5698 2 года назад +28

    Linus level sponsor segues, love it
    Everyone: You should put everything on your desktop in a folder
    Me: but the desktop is a folder
    Everyone: ... You aren't wrong, but I hate you

    • @jyvben1520
      @jyvben1520 2 года назад

      but in some distributions the system adds icons dynamically to the desktop (usb...), if all your stuff is in a single subfolder, the system icons will be much easier to find/see ... imo

  • @ruenoak
    @ruenoak 2 года назад +36

    Sometimes I feel allot of Linux users don't realise or understand that Ubuntu is an Enterprise distribution with a vast user base and they need to cater for the masses not the niche.
    Ubuntu doesn't have the luxury of what Fedora is to Redhat where Redhat can pick and choose what they want to put in the next version or RHEL. No the Linux community demand that Ubuntu has to be Bleeding edge and Enterprise at the same time and if they falter, they get their ass handed to them by the community!
    I’ve said this many times but the Linux community needs to step out side the box and understand that the wider world doesn't really care about the OS. It needs to be stable, simple to use and do the job. Ubuntu fits this well and that’s why we see it everywhere in the wild. Stablity is key to the enterprise world and Ubuntu gives you that with the bonus of a modern look and feel.

    • @arnoldwolfstein
      @arnoldwolfstein 2 года назад +1

      exactly

    • @jongeduard
      @jongeduard 2 года назад +1

      "It needs to be stable, simple to use and do the job" The issue is that the impression is that these things are not so much the case anymore. It looks a lot like other distro's are getting so much better whith all these things...
      "gives you that with the bonus of a modern look and feel" Well, they all do that...

    • @willmaud2359
      @willmaud2359 2 года назад +1

      We're talking specifically about what's best AS A DESKTOP. If canonical doesn't prioritize that, they shouldn't present ubuntu as a desktop os.

    • @OkarinHououinKyouma
      @OkarinHououinKyouma 8 месяцев назад

      This is an old comment but I really believe Ubuntu has its own place in the Linux community. Most schools and colleges just keep using Ubuntu and expect their students to be familiar with Ubuntu tools.

  • @jonnyso1
    @jonnyso1 2 года назад +42

    I've been preaching this like a madman for a while now ! All these ubuntu based distros should really consider rebasing themselves on Fedora, if that's even possible. I think a Fedora based PopOS, Mint or Elementary would be great and would reduce the workload of distro mantainers trying compensate for the Ubuntu LTS delay when implementing new teck and updating packages. It would also would help pull more people into working on the teck that's trully driving Linux desktop towards the future.

    • @erned8445
      @erned8445 2 года назад +8

      well, Mint is not going to use Fedora, as their backup option is pure Debian (check LMDE)
      still, Pop!_OS on Fedora would be great considering the fact it's a quite good gaming distro

    • @emjaycee
      @emjaycee 2 года назад +1

      @@erned8445 If Mint used Fedora as their base they wouldn't 'need' to have LMDE as a back up. I prefer LMDE to Mint Cinnamon these days anyway, lighter, faster and more stable.

    • @justalawngnome7404
      @justalawngnome7404 2 года назад

      Basically Ubuntu needs to drop all of its Snaps and one-off customizations and become an APT-based version of Fedora-a constant, vanilla, cutting-edge release without an LTS every 2 years to slow it down. Then produce a completely separate, biannual distro called Ubuntu LTS that incorporates the features from the mainline distro that have proven to be stable.
      Ubuntu needs to do this, because right now the “perfect distro” for beginners really doesn’t exist. Fedora is DARN close, but they still fall short with auto-signing kernel modules for secure boot. DNF is also really great-better than APT frankly-but 90% of online forums and RUclips tutorials assume APT is being used.

    • @erned8445
      @erned8445 2 года назад

      @@emjaycee I don't think Fedora base would be something that's in line with Mint's vision - to be nothing but stability and ease to use. especially minding that Fedora utilises Anaconda installer, which might be confusing to the beginner, comparing to Ubiquity.

    • @emjaycee
      @emjaycee 2 года назад +1

      @@erned8445 Mint could use any installer they want. I know the Ubiquity and/or Calamares installer is simpler, but I actually like the new LMDE5 installer of all of them. As far as stability goes, I think Fedora is significantly more stable than what Ubuntu offers these days. The Debian base is very stable, but Debian also has its limitations. I do agree with you though that the Fedora base probably isn't in Mint's vision... doesn't mean it shouldn't be though :) If Mint used Fedora's standard package base and then added what is included in RPM Fusion (like Ultramarine does), they would have everything they need. Some of Mint's special GUI apps would 'probably' translate across pretty well. I'm sure it would be a lot of work to make the transition, but if they are looking to the future, it probably should be under consideration. And just add in the latest LTS kernel every 6 months and you'd be set :)

  • @jeffsadowski
    @jeffsadowski 2 года назад +32

    You should switch from virtualbox to virt-manager then you could play with pci-passthrough (note: chose windows as the machine install type even installing linux for pci passthrough) And You can do this with one video card if you have another machine you can use to connect to it using x2go.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  2 года назад +8

      Yeah, I should probably do that

    • @kevinbreen4510
      @kevinbreen4510 2 года назад

      Apparently I'm too stupid to figure out virt-manager. Maybe Nick could do a video for my pea sized brain?

    • @LampJustin
      @LampJustin 2 года назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP yeah especially since VirtualBox needs uses dkms and has to build the kernel modules on every kernel update... And dkms modules tend to break, sooner or later. I tried VB for some time for vagrant but VB is just terrible software imho and just completely switched libvirt for vagrant as well. Gnome boxes and virt-manager ftw. To see your boxes VMs you only need to add the libvirt user session in virt-manager. And virt-manager really isn't hard to use!

    • @jeffsadowski
      @jeffsadowski 2 года назад +1

      @@kevinbreen4510 Chris Titus had a few good videos on it but I wouldn't mind another video or two.

    • @jeffsadowski
      @jeffsadowski 2 года назад +1

      If I get brave enough maybe I'll give a video a shot.

  • @paulg3336
    @paulg3336 2 года назад +8

    Btw "typing the name of the app I want" is usually just typing 2 or 3 letters of the name .The shell learns your commonly used apps and will highlight those selections.
    Also you don't even need to know the name: "ph..." will bring up a selection of photo related apps such as shotwell and GIMP

  • @thewillsfamilyaccount6486
    @thewillsfamilyaccount6486 2 года назад +1

    Great video.. glad I subscribed.. I'm looking forward to trying out this Linux version.. I'm just doing my homework first in what's best for me . Thanks a lot.. great advice!

  • @Beryesa.
    @Beryesa. 2 года назад +15

    Anaconda and dnf was the weak parts of my last Fedora experience, I heard they're working on a new installer and importance of dnf decreases year by year. Exciting stuff!

    • @rishirajsaikia1323
      @rishirajsaikia1323 2 года назад +1

      dnf will replace yum

    • @Beryesa.
      @Beryesa. 2 года назад

      @@rishirajsaikia1323 I mean you (fortunately) don't have to use dnf that much anymore. Especially when there are flatpak and toolbx/distrobox etc. I find it really sluggish whatever I do to workaround.

    • @ximplex1
      @ximplex1 2 года назад

      @@Beryesa. There are some tweaks that need to be made in the dnf.conf, such as setting it to use the fastest mirrors and increasing the parallel downloads... For some reason the Fedora team won't make those changes a default.

    • @Beryesa.
      @Beryesa. 2 года назад +1

      @@ximplex1 No worries, did my wiki tour properly as an Arch tradition and ik that, but thanks :D

    • @Mkungaa
      @Mkungaa 2 года назад +3

      Fastest mirror might be fastest ping-wise, but download speed itself might be awful, hence developers do not make it default option. So basically YMMV.

  • @cetx
    @cetx 2 года назад +2

    Set my friend up with a Lenovo, installed Fedora, she was up and running in an hour. Couldn't have been easier, and Flatpaks are amazing.

  • @---GOD---
    @---GOD--- 2 года назад +7

    My absolute favourite Distro for over a decade. I cannot begin to describe all the things I love about Fedora.

  • @oz33
    @oz33 2 года назад +1

    Title: Fedora vs Ubuntu
    Content: Fedora does . Meanwhile Manjaro, Elementary do :)
    Ubuntu does what it has always been doing. It's still the Linux for human beings. Even more so maybe Linux Mint. Easy to install, easy to use, stuff works, easily find what you need, point and click.
    The video presents non-arguments, except for the fact that Red Had is indeed pushing for the future, although I don't see how Ubuntu isn't...
    I tried Fedora 35 this weekend and at first glance it does look gorgeous even on the live USB, *but*.
    First install failed. I had to search through the error logs and then the web to understand that Fedora doesn't like my existing swap partition for some reason (I already had Ubuntu and Mint partitions that could use it).
    Solution: Install GParted in the live session and reformat the swap partition to linux-swap (or to ext4 to disable it). Fedora will now work, but Ubuntu won't, so a few more steps are needed. Joy!
    After installing, I tried to get Clementine and Krusader. Well, QT apps don't have shadows and their menus don't work. Turns out it's a Wayland thing which is the default.
    Fedora Media Writer, installed by default, also has no shadows.
    So you have 2 options:
    1. Use the xorg session.
    2. Get the flatpak version of the apps, if available. Those work under Wayland for some reason. Krusader is a must for me, but no flatpak.
    On a Skylake Optimus laptop, installing Nvidia drivers requires multiple incantations at the command line and reading manuals on the web. And patience.
    And they only work in the xorg session. If you do get them to work.
    In Linux Mint it's click, click, install, reboot, done.
    Codecs are missing but you won't know until some media file or random news site isn't working properly. Fedora docs have an entry on what to install from RPM Fusion.
    DNF is pretty slow. Although the Software Manager seems fast.
    Booting up Fedora presents me with that scrolling wall of text which I hadn't seen in quite a while.
    As a note, the nice touchpad gestures only work on Wayland.
    All this in the first day. I didn't try any games or cloud sync, Docker, dev stuff etc.
    Fedora is a nice distro, but I don't see Ubuntu loosing the title of "Ubuntu" anytime soon :)

  • @stumpypost
    @stumpypost Год назад +13

    In my experience of using Fedora, the installation was more awkward than others, but the main issue for me is that performance was noticeably slower compared with Debian/Ubuntu based distros, such as Kubuntu, Mint, MX Linux, Neon, Feren etc.

  • @RunScared
    @RunScared 2 года назад

    Nice video Nick! I made the move about a year ago and have really found the community to be awesome.

  • @IanusIch
    @IanusIch 2 года назад +3

    I changed from Ubuntu to Fedora last saturday and man, i really, really like fedora it's smooth af! The only pain in the ass is the need to sign the nvidia kernel if i have secure boot but i can deal with it. Really happy with the change so far. :D

    • @SirRandallDoesStuff
      @SirRandallDoesStuff 2 года назад

      That is why I went with an AMD Video card. No headaches at all.

  • @rmcellig
    @rmcellig 2 года назад +1

    Excellent video. I'll try Fedora again. Right now I'm using Debian Gnome.

  • @aegisxiii2384
    @aegisxiii2384 2 года назад +9

    My thought exactly. I've been thinking about switching to Fedora for a while now. It seems they are the cutting edge/stability friendly to newcomers. The installation process feels fresh and easy and the onboarding is perfect.
    Ubuntu is always stuck in the past, thanks to their lts not being sync with Gnome Releases. It's always the same. You get a new Ubuntu release with packages that are 6months old already and you are stuck with them for 2 years.

  • @debasishraychawdhuri
    @debasishraychawdhuri 2 года назад +1

    I like the rolling updates that I barely notice. Well, I notice the system being updated, but I don't notice any changes. That way it keeps me updated while also giving me stability.

  • @panospolychronis8043
    @panospolychronis8043 2 года назад +6

    As i mentioned a few days ago in one of your previous videos (about ubuntu) Fedora is the most stable and functional distro while i really don't like the anaconda installer. Also Fedora used to focus on Gnome which is great. I like Gnome, but i prefer much more the KDE Plasma Desktop and i would like to see more attention from the Fedora Dev Team on it. I would like also to mention (as addition) about the BTRFS Filesystem. Btrfs is used by default in Fedora since version 33, even though OpenSUSE use it earlier(maybe other distros too), Fedora's adoption made more people to play with it. Somehow the same thing as you told about Wayland. You know i'm very happy to see such video about Fedora on this channel and i really thank you because i believe this video will attrack more people to Fedora.

    • @stephenrochester6309
      @stephenrochester6309 2 года назад

      Does Plasma put as much emphasis on accessibility? The only desktops that will win in the long run are ones that have comprehensive accessibility settings, because without that many people will continue to use desktops that do or continue to use Windows and MacOS for these features instead.

  • @marko19914
    @marko19914 2 года назад

    I have your outro as my ringtone. You can have never too much of The Linux Experiment.

  • @renealbrechtsen9743
    @renealbrechtsen9743 2 года назад +6

    I could definitely use fedora as my main distro, but I just prefer arch linux because of the aur.

  • @michaelgautier
    @michaelgautier 2 года назад +1

    Solid comparison between a Ubuntu and Fedora. I discussed Fedora in my July 2019 video where I examined the larger picture and show the switch from Microsoft Windows. Great to see Fedora’s potential realized in today’s discussion.

  • @carlosa.peraltafranco4003
    @carlosa.peraltafranco4003 2 года назад +9

    Been trying the Ubuntu 22.04 development version for a couple of days and have been very pleased with the aesthetics, performance and stability. The user interface and desktop interface are top notch, really beautiful and customizable. Well done for the Ubuntu team. Great LTS release! Congratulations

  • @howardwolowitz3712
    @howardwolowitz3712 2 года назад +1

    After doing a long weeks researching about Fedora for my daily driver as a software developer, this video finally convince me. And its has been far away from disappointing. I have zero problem installing it, and aside from wifi problem, everything are just great. I can see myself using Fedora for a long time now.

  • @BBQJOE22
    @BBQJOE22 2 года назад +4

    after trying fedora, distro hopping became more about reminding me of how Fedora doesn't need replacing than anything else

  • @jesse7631
    @jesse7631 2 года назад

    I distro hop all over, trying different Linux distributions, but I kept coming back to Fedora. It felt the most comfortable to me. I love it! Great review bro.

  • @keyboard_g
    @keyboard_g 2 года назад +3

    A rolling release done right is OpenSuse Tumbleweed. Builds go through their OpenBuild and OpenQA services to ensure stability and they usually match or beat Fedora on introducing new tech.

    • @ChaiBronz
      @ChaiBronz 2 года назад

      + BTRFS w/ Snapper setup out of the box
      I'm on tumbleweed now and was on Fedora 32/33 before.. I like them both and would be happy with either.

    • @keyboard_g
      @keyboard_g 2 года назад

      @@ChaiBronz Same. I’ve have Tumbleweed on a laptop for 2 years now and have never had an update break something. Either updating several times a week, or letting them build up for months.

    • @sebKern91
      @sebKern91 2 года назад

      I was once interested in Krypton, which is based on openSUSE Tumbleweed. But then Suse disabled support for F2FS, so I have to avoid Suse now, until they re-enable it.

  • @enricojanssen1709
    @enricojanssen1709 2 года назад

    Very Nice! Switching to Fedora was an idea i had a few days ago and now I cant wait of doing this move!❤

  • @webflyer035
    @webflyer035 Год назад +5

    And Redhat is the new Canonical 😂

  • @bubblineyuri
    @bubblineyuri 2 года назад

    Stayed for the reviews, not disappointed

  • @masterofyeet4438
    @masterofyeet4438 2 года назад +22

    I can't wait for the day when fedora gets a proper installer and even a speedy package manager. I hope in the future, I can tell interested friends that I recommend fedora instead of ubuntu. Fedora imo >>> ubuntu

    • @xrafter
      @xrafter 2 года назад

      Fedora is open source ?
      Is fedora using dnf or yum?
      Is fedora a red hat distro?
      Is fedora bleeding edge distro?
      Does it have the option to choose the C stdlib?
      Does firefox run out of the box?

    • @Parallax9999
      @Parallax9999 2 года назад +7

      @@xrafter Fedora is open source.
      It uses dnf.
      Fedora is upstream to RHEL, so features in fedora will eventually make its way into rhel.
      Fedora isint necessarily bleeding edge, but it does implement new features once they are stable. a good example is picom, a good package for ricing. Fedora is the only point release distro that has picom 9.1.
      About your C stdlib question, I don’t know much about that.
      Firefox is preinstalled and runs out of the box.

    • @stephenwilson0386
      @stephenwilson0386 2 года назад +4

      You can tweak DNF to do parallel downloads similar to pacman on Arch, as well as defaulting to the fastest mirror. These two things speed it up quite a bit.

    • @resolveseed6913
      @resolveseed6913 2 года назад +1

      Never had any problem with it's installer, actually the Fedora Media Installer makes it even easier to create the bootable media.
      The package manager thing sounds also as a no problem. Just configure it to do parallel downloads and don't refresh cache so often.

    • @xrafter
      @xrafter 2 года назад

      @@Parallax9999
      Thanks.

  • @Electrowave
    @Electrowave 2 года назад

    It's been many, many years since I used Fedora. Going to have a play with it after seeing your video :-)

  • @paul300
    @paul300 2 года назад +3

    With Windows 11 you also get this feeling of don‘t having to care about your system. Great video, Fedora is just a great mix of Manjaro and Ubuntu😂

  • @mhatretush
    @mhatretush 2 года назад

    I don’t think you’ll remember this but
    a few months back you dropped a fedora video and just a day before that I distributed hopped to pop os or something.
    But watching your video craved me to install fedora and it’s been in my laptop ever since!
    Before that I used to distort hop literally every week but not anymore!
    Thanks to fedora I’ve stopped hopping distros because as you said,”it’s THAT good!”.
    As always great video Nick.
    ❤️

  • @pugnace9169
    @pugnace9169 2 года назад +4

    I was on arch with KDE it was cool then I switched to Fedora Gnome feeling like going from the chad distro to nooby distro
    But after a week I realized that it s just a great distro. Everything works fine, I don't have to take care of anything.
    Now it s my favorite distro I ve installed sway on it s great
    The only problem is the installer
    They should take ideas from opensuse installer and Yast.
    And also I m not a big fan of flatpak they should have borrowed more idea from NixOS when creating silverblue but well it cam still evolved and right now it s one of the greatest distro
    And nice business model too so it will last

  • @tohur
    @tohur 2 года назад +1

    I been using Fedora for past few weeks.. last 6 months had been distro hopping rolling releases Manjaro, Endeavor, Arch , OpenSUSE tumbleweed and all of them except Tumbleweed broke at some point... Tumbleweed never gave me issues except some missing packages that I was just too lazy to maintain myself thus I moved to Fedora.. love it so far super stable up to date with the lastest Stable software and is great for gaming and productivity.. moving all six of the PCs in my house to Fedora and do not regret it.. it is like you said the new "Ubuntu". Rolling releases have taught me you do not need the bleeding edge to be moving forward and to be frank they are more trouble then they are worth it.. let the people that use them worry about things breaking and maintaining it while we just use our PCs with Fedora haha

  • @sovo1212
    @sovo1212 2 года назад +4

    I've been using Linux Mint for years, but I decided to give Fedora a try a few months ago. The experience has been a mixed bag. It is "stable" in the sense it will not hang your PC, but it's riddled with minor annoyances you can't solve. Some applications will not run on Wayland, and while there's a compatibility layer named "XWayland" that should allow me to run Xorg apps, it's either not included with Fedora, or not working for every app. The inclusion of Flatpak support is more than welcomed. You're probably right about "the default experience", since it's enough for most users. But I'm having difficulties to see the benefits, while the defects are right in front of my face . Bottom line, the title is correct, it's definitely "the new Ubuntu" in the sense of being too edgy, with all the pros and cons.

  • @aakashhemadri
    @aakashhemadri 2 года назад

    This is amazing!!!!!! I started out using Linux with Fedora a decade ago. I'm gonna try it out again

  • @LevisRaju
    @LevisRaju 2 года назад +4

    They're using it vanilla-like instead of trying to tweak a DE look like something else. Plus, we've got Flatpaks.

  • @RonnieNissan
    @RonnieNissan 2 года назад

    Used Ubuntu and Ubuntu gnome from 2013 - 2017, Arch and others for a few years.
    Now I have been using Fedora for about a year and I really love it, it is my home now, can't distrohop anymore. I agree with the excitement aspect too.
    Great video BTW.

  • @Wrzlprnft
    @Wrzlprnft 2 года назад +12

    I went with Fedora Silverblue to try the while immutable Filesystem and sandboxing thing. And it's been pretty awesome so far.
    I really like about Fedora that we get the new technologies without being bleeding edge with all the packages and libraries.

    • @ent2220
      @ent2220 2 года назад +1

      I was thinking of going with it. I already install every possible app from flatpak (even replace built in apps with the flatpak version), but what about apps that don't have a flatpak? System apps, some less popular apps like XDM which only have an installation (SH) script. Can silverblue even handle those?

    • @Wrzlprnft
      @Wrzlprnft 2 года назад +1

      @@ent2220 you have a bunch of tools to address those. For those apps from the repos you need closely integrated into the system, you can use rpm-ostree to layer them on the base image.
      For the others, there is always toolbox-containers to run them in, since you have proper dnf and stuff in that to set up all the dependencies

    • @kevinbreen4510
      @kevinbreen4510 2 года назад

      I'm considering trying this as immutable appears to be gaining popularity. Anything that would cause you to switch to mainstream fedora or is everything simple to work with?

    • @Wrzlprnft
      @Wrzlprnft 2 года назад +2

      @@kevinbreen4510 for me? No. I love it. Everything is neatly compartmentalized or layered, i don't have to worry about the system itself. It just took a bit to get used to, so, the more you are a Poweruser who installs arch from the bare ones base for breakfast, the harder it's probably gonna be.

    • @ent2220
      @ent2220 2 года назад

      @@Wrzlprnft the main reason I like flatpak is because it reminds me more of windows. They get installed in var/lib/flatpak and user files go to the .var folder in your home directory. This way every app goes in its own folder. I really don't like the way Linux typically installs things otherwise. Where it puts files in who knows how many folders all over the root directory. Flatpak really is the future

  • @davidwayne9982
    @davidwayne9982 2 года назад +1

    THANK YOU for mentioning that Manjaro has ISSUES-- so many pitched a FIT when I said that once... and ebuzz Central-- they had a HUGE fit over that.. but he was RIGHT- it does!!!! I like Manjaro and MABOX- (have the newest and it ooks smoother).. but I'm kinda stuck on MX 21 now--- have a hard time letting it go- and always come right back to it-- because I can use MY CUSTOM ISO and have it running in 5 minutes..

  • @sto3359
    @sto3359 2 года назад +3

    Ubuntu just works... This is what I need as a software engineer.

    • @mrmoinn
      @mrmoinn 2 года назад +4

      The reason why Ubuntu gets hate is because it has problems that don't pertain to stability in particular, that other Ubuntu-based distros don't have. For example, Pop!_OS, Linux Mint, and Zorin OS are also stable and easy to use. Some people just don't like Canonical, and, by extension, don't like Ubuntu. Some people also really hate snaps, which are shoved down your throat when you use Ubuntu. I personally don't like the way snap packages function and others just hate it because the backend is proprietary which really doesn't help snap's case.
      So yea, if you like Ubuntu and you like the stability, keep on using it. When people complain about Ubuntu, they're usually nitpicking things that don't matter to you, but Ubuntu is still completely functional.

    • @pif5023
      @pif5023 Год назад

      Wait till they understand that they have to update Fedora every 6 months.

  • @rudironsonijr
    @rudironsonijr 2 года назад

    I've installed fedora to give it a try because of this video. So far, so good. Thanks!

  • @seraaron
    @seraaron 2 года назад +7

    You know what? I've been having a lot of trouble with Manjaro recently, especially with updates almost every time I turn my PC on. KDE has also been pretty buggy, it seems, and basic functionally like remembering my desktop layout has just completely broken. The last time I tried Fedora, I accidentally briked it while trying to install Nvidia dirvers, but you've convinced me to give Fedora another go! Cheers

    • @PiiskaJesusFreak
      @PiiskaJesusFreak 2 года назад +2

      As a Manjaro developer, Fedora is my second choice after Manjaro, and I often follow Fedora development for new ideas for Manjaro gnome.

    • @kim-hendrikmerk4163
      @kim-hendrikmerk4163 2 года назад +1

      Check out void its rolling release like manjaro but stable enough for daily use and no systemd

  • @scottschotsborg
    @scottschotsborg 2 года назад

    Love your video's and most importantie your voice. Always clear always Soothing

  • @thingsiplay
    @thingsiplay 2 года назад +6

    Having Flatpak as an option for certain applications is good to have, but I prefer "native" packages maintained by my distribution maintainer. The future is not Flatpak, the future is a mix of different technologies including Flatpak.
    I recently needed an application, but could not use it in Linux because they only offered a Snap and I do not have Snap enabled on my system and do not plan to. Ah I remember what it was, it was the App from Github to verify my system or something similar. Currently I can't do that, because I do not use official Google store either on my smartphone with an old LineageOS.

  • @scooter4196
    @scooter4196 2 года назад +1

    Been using Fedora for 4 years now. Love it. It’s basically upstream for RHEL and I use RHEL a lot at work so it’s nice to play with the cool new stuff before it’s put in the new builds for RHEL.

  • @muqtxdir
    @muqtxdir 2 года назад +6

    not many people mention how hard it is to partition a drive is on fedora and how glitchy nvidia optimus/bumblebee drivers are out of the box.
    these are the only major blockers for me for using fedora.

    • @pw1187
      @pw1187 2 года назад +2

      Yep, that's been my experience, as well

    • @scooter4196
      @scooter4196 2 года назад

      If you have a 1000 series GeForce or newer, laptop switching works by default in the newer Nvidia drivers.

    • @muqtxdir
      @muqtxdir 2 года назад

      @@scooter4196 I have an mx350 it's relatively new and I tried F35 and it wasn't successful for me. it always had "failed to load in kernel module" on boot screen

  • @mytech6779
    @mytech6779 2 года назад +1

    I tried fedora for a while back around 18-20, It was a good experience. I switched to CentOS 7 for some very specific reasons (I was training for a Linux admin cert and CentOS is much closer to RedHat enterprise.). Later going to Debian stable for the larger package selection and well supported Xfce. I haven't switched in several years because I don't currently have a second workstation and can't afford an interruption to my workflow. (also why I use Deb stable)
    Manjaro was on my old laptop. I liked it, very nice driver and kernel handling utilities, but it had the rare broken updates, mostly due to the old age of my install and the need to shift away from certain legacy dependencies; not unfixable for a knowledgeable admin but certainly would cause problems for a new user.

  • @AlucardNoir
    @AlucardNoir 2 года назад +4

    I remember back in 05 when I first tried linux and Fedora and Suse were considered the beginner friendly distros, with Ubuntu being the literally brand new kid on the block, at it's second iteration I think. Nice to see the more things change the more they stay the same ;-P
    EDIT. I was with you until you said Ubuntu or ZorinOS don't get the latest Gnome. That's a plus for them and a minus for Fedora. True, Gnome is a minus for all, but it's a smaller minus in the cases of Ubuntu and ZorinOS.

    • @walking_on_earth
      @walking_on_earth 2 года назад

      What don’t you like about the latest Gnome? Just the fact that it uses more system resources or something about the interface?

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 2 года назад +1

      @@walking_on_earth There are 4 types of linux users:
      1. People who live in the TTY - we call these people sys admins.
      2. People who post images on r/linuxporn - we call these people WM users.
      3. People who think that KDE isn't polished enough and who might use something other than KDE because they don't want to spend their day setting KDE up just like they want - we call these people Desktop Linux users.
      4. People who think Gnome has too many features and could do with a few being removed - preferably while increasing the memory footprint of Gnome as a whole - we call these people Gnome developers.
      Now, to answer your question with another question: why are you a Gnome apologist?

    • @walking_on_earth
      @walking_on_earth 2 года назад

      @@AlucardNoir pfffft

  • @mohnkhan
    @mohnkhan 2 года назад +1

    I moved away from fedora after facing crazy compiler toolchain issues years ago. I would prefer the option of stability vs edge

  • @stephenwilson0386
    @stephenwilson0386 2 года назад +7

    How do you feel Fedora compares with openSUSE? I've been using Linux for a little over 2 years and tried just about everything, but these two RPM distros have felt by far the most polished, stable, and mature (maybe because of their roots as professional/workstation distributions?)

  • @jasonblankenship4418
    @jasonblankenship4418 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video. The title looks inspired by the comments from last week’s Ubuntu video.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  2 года назад

      It was planned before that, but that comment definitely reinforced my opinion:)

  • @bobbybyrne1899
    @bobbybyrne1899 2 года назад +3

    I flip flop from Fedora and Pop!_OS. I wish Pop would rebase on top of Fedora. Probably won't happen, especially with Pop focusing on their own desktop environment, but one can dream.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  2 года назад +4

      I'm sure Cosmic will be available on Fedora once it's a standalone DE

    • @bobbybyrne1899
      @bobbybyrne1899 2 года назад

      @@TheLinuxEXP Yeah that's a good point.

  • @PlanetLinuxChannel
    @PlanetLinuxChannel 2 года назад +1

    Just started trying dev builds of Fedora 36 with GNOME 42. Other than the occasional bug that is expected from pre-release software, it’s been absolutely amazing! Fedora 36 polishes up a few things and of course includes all the new features of GNOME 42, which is chocked full of awesome stuff! (I particularly love the new text editor, dynamic light/dark wallpapers, and redesigned overlays for volume / brightness / switching workspaces, but there are so many more new features in it that all feel fresh yet polished.)

  • @adrianstephens56
    @adrianstephens56 2 года назад +3

    I'd love to use it. Last time I tried a Fedora 35 install, I discovered that there's no support for zfs in that version, which is a show-stopper for me.

    • @scooter4196
      @scooter4196 2 года назад

      You use ZFS on your pc as the root file system?

    • @whythosenames
      @whythosenames 2 года назад +1

      just add the fedora repos from zfs yourself. Fedora does not support it because upstream (linus towarlds/the kernel) does not want to support it for licensing reasons. I must say, I have not tried it because of that, but it should be possible

    • @adrianstephens56
      @adrianstephens56 2 года назад

      @@scooter4196 Yes. Works fine with ubuntu/neon/manjaro. The ability to wind back time using zfs snapshots has proved to be invaluable.

  • @psicoquimera768
    @psicoquimera768 2 года назад

    I don't like the standard Gnome experience, but it needs few modifications to be usable. I do like this:
    1 - I install the "just perfction" extension, and "hot edge".
    2 - Using Just perfection I move the panel down, the clock to the right and configure the panel to appear only in the overview, and hide some other things I don't like.
    And that's it, a clean environment that you can use with the mouse without depending on the super key.

  • @setoman1
    @setoman1 Год назад +1

    Fedora is more stable and more powerful than Ubuntu ever was or could even dream of. New features, no idea. I’m running Fedora 34 with an updated kernel. Everything works and I see no reason to update.

  • @muammar007
    @muammar007 2 года назад +1

    Daily driving Fedora Silverblue for a month. It's what I was looking for from the day I started to use Linux.

  • @aethyr3368
    @aethyr3368 2 года назад +1

    I have been using fedora for a while now on my laptop and stock gnome really is amazing on laptops.
    The mousepad gestures are something I’d never like to miss

  • @jackcullen69
    @jackcullen69 2 года назад

    I'm using this now as a daily driver for a ThinkPad X220. It feels smoother than Windows 10. Your video helped me decide on Fedora. Thank you!

  • @MrViper1974
    @MrViper1974 2 года назад

    Very good video. I used to hop between Debian, Ubuntu and Mint, but on my new laptop, decided to add Fedora to the mix, and within a few days, I decided to make Fedora my daily use distro. I am extremely happy with it. Fedora 35, and then 36. It was a breeze to upgrade also.

  • @tzication
    @tzication 2 года назад

    Thank you Nick for the excellent video! Perhaps a nice idea for a next video would be a Gnome workflow guide or Gnome tutorial for efficiency and its philosophy...

  • @simonfraser5788
    @simonfraser5788 2 года назад

    I've been using Fedora for months too on my main PC.... Mainly for command (and package) inter compatibility with my Rocky servers.
    I've sidelined Gnome & installed the Cinnamon desktop environment... been very happy with it so far.

  • @rhrast
    @rhrast 2 года назад

    Excellent review. I'm going to (as we say here in Brasil) jump into the pool... rsrsrs. Thanks a lot...

  • @repinsvizios
    @repinsvizios 2 года назад +1

    I used Fedora for almost a decade, but shifted to Debian back in 2017. I am now running Manjaro, but I am really glad to hear that Fedora is still awesome.

  • @justthebeginning1448
    @justthebeginning1448 2 года назад

    Yes, i love Fedora too. Feel in love with it last year😃

  • @oleksiimozghovyi4789
    @oleksiimozghovyi4789 2 года назад

    Interesting video. I was using Fedora a couple of yers ago, now switched to Mac + Kali (Security-related job). So maybe it's time to check Fedora out in a VM. Thanks for the video!

  • @soccerbeast5529
    @soccerbeast5529 2 года назад +2

    I love hearing about your experience with dnf because I'm a Linux Admin, but our servers run CenOS and Fedora, so to me,
    dnf is just simple. Meanwhile I run Linux Mint on my iMac for work and PopOS on my Laptop and apt is still something I'm working to learn better.
    I just started dabbling in Manjaro and really like it, so going to start now learning pacman now as well 😂

  •  2 года назад +2

    I've been a fan of Solus for the past few years, especially its curated rolling release model which never really bit me like Nick describes rolling releases usually do (definitely experienced that in my Arch days though). But the video has really got me curious to try out Fedora! Which is part yay (I'd thought I'd settled, but this brings the excitement of checking out a new distro back), but also part oh-no, since I have kids now and way less time :)) So thanks a lot / curse you!

  • @pujaastika
    @pujaastika 2 года назад +1

    Fedora and Ubuntu, my two most favourite distros...I love ubuntu due to its simplicity and hardware support since several years ago. But Fedora has a special place in me. I know deeper about text mode for the first time when I bought a book contains Fedora tutorials. Not only text mode but also LVM, source codes, etc. It's very important for me to do many things in Linux properly, as all Linux enthusiasts think. I even still save some written notes in text mode to install ATI driver, just for memories not to be typed because hardware support nowadays is far more sophisticated than when ATI graphics were in their gold era back then...

  • @JosephHarry
    @JosephHarry 2 года назад +1

    Good to see Fedora finally getting the love. Been a Fedora users since core 8. All hail beefy miracle (Fedora 17's name)

  • @lettuce7378
    @lettuce7378 2 года назад +1

    Fedora user here, i love it!

  • @MRDaved
    @MRDaved 2 года назад +1

    I've been thinking about switching to Linux again since the steam deck has released, and all my games except one (Lost Ark) seems to work. You've convinced me to give Fedora a shot, most likely switching out Gnome with KDE.