Fedora is a brilliant Linux distribution

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#fedora #linux #kde #gnome
A new version of Fedora Linux was released at the end of October. So, Fedora 41 has seen the light of day. Since then, we took our time to test it in two flavors—the default Gnome and KDE. In this video, we'll show you what our conclusion is about Fedora 41.
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Fedora, where have you been all my life? Just discovered it and really like...love?.... it.

ZappninLLP
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Been using it since it came out. Rock solid so far and fast.

dragonballjiujitsu
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Running both Gnome and KDE versions and both are smooth and solid, good looking too.

derekr
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Started using it at 40. Came from PopOS so missed the window tiling. But it's very professional and allows firmware updates for my dell without issues. Looking forward to trying cosmic DT.

ReefGeoscience
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I like Fedora however the regular Fedora 41 Workstation with Gnome Wayland just keeps randomly crashing on all kinds of random things, although using the X11 session works well and is very stable. But so for now I've gone back to Pop!_OS which has some extra goodies I loved, like the window tiling feature, the recovery partition and I've never had it crash on me. Also I've tried Fedora with KDE (Wayland) and that was very stable (And I can really recommend it if you like KDE), so I guess it's a wayland+Gnome thing for now, idk, I'm no expert.

computercatgaming
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This looks very good to me! I am nothing but a Windows user for 20 years and finally want to get rid of Microsoft, switching to Linux soon. My plans so far are to go with Mint, and as you can imagine, my knowledge on different distros is very limited so far. Somebody got some good experience with Fedora and Mint to deliver some bulletpoints, what each version makes better or worse?
I am a power user, working professionally in multimedia. My main concern is stability and reliability, which frankly is given by Windows - I wanna get rid of Microsoft because of privacy concerns and because they seem to refuse to make Windows better, it seemingly only gets worse. But system stability and things like compatibility with the amount of in-built drivers is great, didn't need to install a printer driver for a decade or so. So I am wondering, how those aspects might change with Linux.

Although those might not be a killer argument. I will stick to Windows - but to W10 in full offline mode, once support ends. Because I am not much of a PC gamer but media creator, who can easily stick with the same program for a long time, I will keep using 2 Windows 10 desktops for an indefinate amount of time for my work, no newer OSs or programs needed. When you can do everything you need by now, there is no need to always swim with the flow and get new shit, when that comes with undesired costs or changes.

But anyway, one of the main reasons I will stick with Windows 10 for a while is Photoshop, which isn't available for Linux. But I will try out alternatives like Gimp, and once I might have gathered all the knowledge necessary in other programs to fully replace Photoshop, I might also put Linux onto all my computers and fully erase all Microsoft from my workflow. Let's see, I don't know yet. Depends on how well I am getting stuff done with Linux, which again depends on making good choices on distros. Needing to collect valuable data before burning too much time trying out a million options. =)

Marc_Fuchs_
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thank you. How to install the toolchain for software development?

haotai
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3:13 2gb ram is kind of a lot for Linux

MichaelTavares
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