I am mainly a macOS user, but I keep around a Dell workstation for work that needs a lot of memory or cores. After years of primarily running Debian and Ubuntu, I switched the machine to Fedora 25 and upgraded to Fedora 26 during the beta cycle.
I was surprised how good Fedora is these days. The GNOME desktop is buttery smooth with Wayland and the Nouveau drivers on the relatively old Quadro that the machine has. Audio and suspend/resume worked out-of-the-box without any problems. Upgrades are very fast thanks to DNF and delta RPMs. Software also seems to get minor release updates within a release (e.g., I had some vim updates).
The Fedora installer also put / on a separate btrfs subvolume as it should (Ubuntu didn't do that in 16.04, not sure if they fixed that).
Did they fix the copy-paste issues between application with wayland in Fedora 26 (particular between terminal and the rest of the world)? But maybe that is a more of request for the GNOME guys...
I've been a Ubuntu user for years, but I've just read the Fedora 26 announcement and followed the link through to Gnome 3.24 release notes (https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.24/). The 3rd headlighting major feature of this is "New Recipes Application". One word: Sold! I've been dreaming of the day Linux DE/WM got this core feature!
I think we can safely say 2017 will indeed be the year of Linux desktop, we got there, we've made it! (there is also minor footnotes for niche things like file managers, calendar and gfx config, if that's your thing)
I've been using Fedora since 23. I started using it because of work, but it quickly became my main OS.
I've installed it on a MBP, and now an Alienware. Only have had a couple problems, on the MBP webcam didn't work. On the Alienware, I have to run a script to get the 3.5mm jack to work. Other than that, no problems. I enjoy using it, and its also really easy to upgrade. Prior, I was a life long Mac OS user (since the 6th grade lol).
Seconded. I've been on Fedora for the last few months and it's had much less general bullshit and annoyance than recent Ubuntu's. Certainly looking forward to upgrading to Fedora 26.
So interesting... I gave up on Fedora around the "Beefy Miracle" silliness. I remembered seeing comment threads that combined community exasperation alongside genuine technical complaints. It's nice to see the team has rebuilt itself! Maybe I'll give 26 a spin in a VM.
I was a bit cynical when GNOME started writing new 'modern' desktop apps. It seemed like a lot of wasted effort chasing Windows/Mac. Who really needs a native desktop maps app?
But I actually really like the new apps they've put together. They're simple, clean, and lightweight. I'm a bit surprised that they're made with GTK.
Have used it for long time? It is really buggy. After awhile it literally slows down. I keep my workstation open for at 2 days and after 7,8 hours it gets slower and slower m.
And sometimes it crashes badly. That should not happen with desktop environment.
I saw some articles saying fedora 26 might land with fractional scaling for Hdpi screen. Any news regarding this? if it lands somewhere is there any way to know about it?
I'll be very keen to switch back to Linux when my main laptop will have good support for this
Everyone is praising GNOME here. Am I the only one who thinks that it's not polished enough? I'm using it on my laptop and it kind of works most of the time. But there are occasional bugs arising here and there. I even sometimes think that I'm the first user otherwise how come nobody noticed those (sometimes very obvious) bugs. If 26 isn't fixing them, apparently I'll have to move back to the Cinnamon spin.
I think GNOME 3 has come a long way but years later I'm still bothered by their killing type-ahead navigation in the file dialog and replacing it with search -- however useful searching may be (and despite recent improvements), it slows me down greatly, and often leads to mistakes, when I know where something is and simply want to navigate to it.
Plenty of discussion about this [0] [1] but the GNOME devs don't want it back, for various reasions.
Ubuntu has always patched it back in, but it looks like they will drop it in 17.10 if nobody steps up to maintain the patch [2].
Yes, i got some little things here and there, but in general it's a very good experience working in gnome these days and fedora took it to a whole new level of polish.
I switched away from Ubuntu and to Fedora quite a few cycles ago because at the time they supported systemd by default and I wanted specifically to use systemd-nspawn. I found that it was a very solid and stable GNOME 3 distribution and that it had the best implementation of GNOME 3 between it and Ubuntu GNOME.
Now that Ubuntu is going to switch to GNOME I might eventually switch back but idk yet.
The one gripe I have with fedora is that dnf is much slower than apt.
I have mixed feelings on it. GNOME Nightlight only exists because a number of people complained that the lack of screen-temperature API made Redshift on Wayland impossible.
On the one-hand, the feature is incredibly useful, and great to have it included in all GNOME installs.
On the other hand, this is exactly what Google and Apple did when they kicked apps like f.lux out of the appstore, and then rolled out their own built-in blue-light blockers.
If your end goal is making the feature available to as many people as possible, then great. But from the perspective of a small developer, however, "OS vendor forbade my software on their platform, then ripped it off and baked their own version into the OS" leaves something of a bad taste in my mouth.
I really want to know about how this is solved in Wayland. I've still seen nothing that beats X11 forwarding with compression (nomachine nx), but not only are nomachine not supporting it anymore, nobody seems interested in taking up the torch.
Everyone is praising the GNOME (default) edition. Does anyone use the KDE spin? Also, how are Fedora version upgrades nowadays? I'm trying to decide between KDE neon and Fedora.
I haven't had a single issue with Firefox (54) out of the box. I know that some add-ons can break the multi-process windows feature, but out of the box has been fine, both with clean VirtualBox installs and bare-metal desktop installs.
As far as I can see, that's a configuration- or user-specific problem. I haven't seen any reports. Firefox (or, more technically, "the default browser") must work in order to meet our release criteria.
Been hearing a lot of positive feedback from Fedora lately. Wondering how good the KDE integration is before trying it out though ( no machine to spare). Anybody have some experience with KDE and Fedora, in particular!at Wayland and multi monitor support?
Ever since Ubuntu went all NIH with Mir and Unity, I looked for other desktops to recommend to people who want something that "just works". The wishlist includes non-breaking upgrades and not changing interface unnecessarily.
There are a few modern distributions like Mint and Elementary, but none pay much attention to upgrades. Fedora Workstation it is. The tools have matured a bit since esr's wife famously wanted to use her printer with it.
The past four or five years with it have been pretty uneventful, just as was hoped.
I've been running Fedora 24/25 on my Macbook Air for the better part of the past year. It has been fantastic, and I don't see myself going back to OSX anytime soon. I intend to upgrade to F26.
I've been using Debian Stretch (which was previously Debian Testing) for the last 2 years. I didn't ever have a single problem. But as the months passed I kept getting miffed about old packages. Yes, there are backports etc, but it just didn't feel current enough. I loved the stability though.
When the difference in Firefox versions got to 50 vs 54, and I had written myself a custom bash script to keep Firefox updated, I went looking...
I've been running F26 since the early alpha days, and I have to say that I haven't had a single problem in that whole time. I've been running it on my brand new i7 desktop machine as well as a 7 year old HP laptop. Both have been superb. Performance of Gnome 3.24 is great. Stability of the platform as a whole is rock solid.
In fact, the only issue I have come across is with MakeMKV (which I have written about elsewhere). Other than that, all of my use cases have been rock solid. For reference, they include:
* MakeMKV (for creating MKV files for my LibreElec HTPC)
* Shotwell (for my 15,000 file photo library)
* Quodlibet (for my 140GB music library - including a growing FLAC library)
* vim (for all my writing)
* git (for my writing and my code)
* Krita (with a Wacom tablet for illustrations for some book ideas I have)
* gimp (for image editing. e.g. I mocked up a photo of my house with how it might look with a grape vine covered pergola)
* Libreoffice (including my wife using it for her study, opening and editing MS Word, Excel, and Powerpoint files from the Uni)
* Ardour & Calf Plugins for music recording. I also experimented with BitWig, which was fantastic, but I prefer to support OSS.
* Golang (1.8, for my own personal development projects)
* Postgres (for same)
* qemu and virt-manager (for virtual machines)
I was a Microsoft .NET developer for almost 20 years. I've been a Linux user in my own time for a bit over 5 years. I'm now happy to say that I use Linux 100% for every single computer related task I have, and I couldn't be happier.
So far, the move to F26 has been fantastic, and it gets my highest recommendation to anyone else that might be considering it.
P.S. I also happily use F26 for the occasional 0AD game :)
Fedora is a fine Linux distro (as are many others).
I was hoping to see an update on the RISC-V port.
Fabrice has made it easy to try to the early F25
in the browser (see, https://vfsync.org/vm_list.html)
and I'd really love to see RISC-V becoming an officially
supported architecture now that the privileged spec is frozen (that is, will evolve in a backwards compatible way).
[+] [-] microtonal|8 years ago|reply
I was surprised how good Fedora is these days. The GNOME desktop is buttery smooth with Wayland and the Nouveau drivers on the relatively old Quadro that the machine has. Audio and suspend/resume worked out-of-the-box without any problems. Upgrades are very fast thanks to DNF and delta RPMs. Software also seems to get minor release updates within a release (e.g., I had some vim updates).
The Fedora installer also put / on a separate btrfs subvolume as it should (Ubuntu didn't do that in 16.04, not sure if they fixed that).
Great work Fedora folks!
[+] [-] chronid|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] api|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sitepodmatt|8 years ago|reply
I think we can safely say 2017 will indeed be the year of Linux desktop, we got there, we've made it! (there is also minor footnotes for niche things like file managers, calendar and gfx config, if that's your thing)
[+] [-] nul_byte|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] microtonal|8 years ago|reply
http://flatpak.org/apps.html
[+] [-] Frondo|8 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeywell_316#Kitchen_Computer
[+] [-] lima|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] champagnepapi|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] s_kilk|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] meddlepal|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|8 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] schnevets|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] amiga-workbench|8 years ago|reply
Gnome needs a few extensions to be usable, but its working great overall.
[+] [-] crudbug|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mastax|8 years ago|reply
But I actually really like the new apps they've put together. They're simple, clean, and lightweight. I'm a bit surprised that they're made with GTK.
Still hate "hot corners," though.
[+] [-] 0xFFC|8 years ago|reply
Have used it for long time? It is really buggy. After awhile it literally slows down. I keep my workstation open for at 2 days and after 7,8 hours it gets slower and slower m.
And sometimes it crashes badly. That should not happen with desktop environment.
[+] [-] reitanqild|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mickael-kerjean|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] RandomKid|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rhblake|8 years ago|reply
Plenty of discussion about this [0] [1] but the GNOME devs don't want it back, for various reasions.
Ubuntu has always patched it back in, but it looks like they will drop it in 17.10 if nobody steps up to maintain the patch [2].
[0] https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nautilus/+bug/1164...
[1] https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721968
[2] https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nautilus/+bug/1666...
[+] [-] sdsk8|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] reitanqild|8 years ago|reply
Or at least I spotted a number of usability issues last time I tried gnome (last week, latest Ubuntu).
[+] [-] 43224gg252|8 years ago|reply
Now that Ubuntu is going to switch to GNOME I might eventually switch back but idk yet.
The one gripe I have with fedora is that dnf is much slower than apt.
[+] [-] MaxLeiter|8 years ago|reply
http://dnf.baseurl.org/2016/02/24/dnf-into-c-initiative-star...
[+] [-] sandGorgon|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] AdmiralAsshat|8 years ago|reply
On the one-hand, the feature is incredibly useful, and great to have it included in all GNOME installs.
On the other hand, this is exactly what Google and Apple did when they kicked apps like f.lux out of the appstore, and then rolled out their own built-in blue-light blockers.
If your end goal is making the feature available to as many people as possible, then great. But from the perspective of a small developer, however, "OS vendor forbade my software on their platform, then ripped it off and baked their own version into the OS" leaves something of a bad taste in my mouth.
[+] [-] NikolaeVarius|8 years ago|reply
I find XFCE to be perfect for my workflow but would love this utility.
[+] [-] fenaer|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rayiner|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] patrick_vbn|8 years ago|reply
There is a SPICE backend: https://github.com/ein-shved/compositor-spice
There is the Samsung effort Wayland Over Wire (WOW): https://blogs.s-osg.org/wow-wayland-over-wire/
Apparantly, the Pipewire effort to make a high performance, low latency audio/video server will address remote display somehow too: https://blogs.gnome.org/uraeus/2017/06/20/fedora-workstation...
[+] [-] boondaburrah|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] alinspired|8 years ago|reply
dnf install @"Cinnamon Desktop" cinnamon-session xrdp xorgxrdp
The only downside in Fedora 25 - software rendering in your X-RDP session
[+] [-] unknown|8 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] softwarelimits|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] flannelhead|8 years ago|reply
Everyone is praising the GNOME (default) edition. Does anyone use the KDE spin? Also, how are Fedora version upgrades nowadays? I'm trying to decide between KDE neon and Fedora.
[+] [-] zeep|8 years ago|reply
https://www.reddit.com/r/linux/comments/6mjb7j/fedora_26_tor...
[+] [-] brendaningram|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mattdm|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] atemerev|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] atemerev|8 years ago|reply
(And, frankly, Wayland guys are wrong and Nvidia is right.)
[+] [-] nickserv|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] xorcist|8 years ago|reply
There are a few modern distributions like Mint and Elementary, but none pay much attention to upgrades. Fedora Workstation it is. The tools have matured a bit since esr's wife famously wanted to use her printer with it.
The past four or five years with it have been pretty uneventful, just as was hoped.
[+] [-] noahdesu|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] brendaningram|8 years ago|reply
When the difference in Firefox versions got to 50 vs 54, and I had written myself a custom bash script to keep Firefox updated, I went looking...
I've been running F26 since the early alpha days, and I have to say that I haven't had a single problem in that whole time. I've been running it on my brand new i7 desktop machine as well as a 7 year old HP laptop. Both have been superb. Performance of Gnome 3.24 is great. Stability of the platform as a whole is rock solid.
In fact, the only issue I have come across is with MakeMKV (which I have written about elsewhere). Other than that, all of my use cases have been rock solid. For reference, they include:
* Firefox (with Lastpass, uBlock origin, HTTPS everywhere, privacy badger add-ons)
* Evolution (for email, contacts, and calendar)
* taskwarrior
* ledger (with some hledger experimentation)
* Gnucash
* MakeMKV (for creating MKV files for my LibreElec HTPC)
* Shotwell (for my 15,000 file photo library)
* Quodlibet (for my 140GB music library - including a growing FLAC library)
* vim (for all my writing)
* git (for my writing and my code)
* Krita (with a Wacom tablet for illustrations for some book ideas I have)
* gimp (for image editing. e.g. I mocked up a photo of my house with how it might look with a grape vine covered pergola)
* Libreoffice (including my wife using it for her study, opening and editing MS Word, Excel, and Powerpoint files from the Uni)
* Ardour & Calf Plugins for music recording. I also experimented with BitWig, which was fantastic, but I prefer to support OSS.
* Golang (1.8, for my own personal development projects)
* Postgres (for same)
* qemu and virt-manager (for virtual machines)
I was a Microsoft .NET developer for almost 20 years. I've been a Linux user in my own time for a bit over 5 years. I'm now happy to say that I use Linux 100% for every single computer related task I have, and I couldn't be happier.
So far, the move to F26 has been fantastic, and it gets my highest recommendation to anyone else that might be considering it.
P.S. I also happily use F26 for the occasional 0AD game :)
[+] [-] Yuioup|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] patrick_vbn|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] atemerev|8 years ago|reply
[+] [-] FullyFunctional|8 years ago|reply
I was hoping to see an update on the RISC-V port. Fabrice has made it easy to try to the early F25 in the browser (see, https://vfsync.org/vm_list.html) and I'd really love to see RISC-V becoming an officially supported architecture now that the privileged spec is frozen (that is, will evolve in a backwards compatible way).