3.10 and 3.11 are not too far off, afaik there aren't any incompatibilities. Would be interested to see the net diff on that update, methinks it was mostly just updating the pkg version and putting a new build hash in the manifest.
That's an issue of dependency management though, not the runtime.
Contrary to other distros, Fedora actually has a multitude of Python versions in their core repositories. If you need 3.9 but 3.11 comes preinstalled, simply `dnf install python3.9`
when i worked with RHEL,centos and rpm, I liked it quite a bit. However, ever switching to ubuntu, everything just works better and it seems like more people use ubuntu based distributions.
If fedora software is actually newer, it might be a worthy desktop
I’ve been using Fedora since release ~30 on desktop and laptop, previously a Debian user for like 15 years.
I think it switched cause I wanted Wayland and more recent Gnome at the time. Everything more or less always seems to work without issue, I’ve done upgrades, swapped out hardware over the years and never had any show-stopping bugs.
More recently I became a package maintainer and it’s been an excellent process, from the documentation to the community. I used to be weary of RPM and the “dependency hell” but it’s not really a thing anymore.
I like picking the right tool for the job, and so far Fedora has worked out well in this regard, but Ubuntu, MacOS, Windows, etc all have their place.
Fedora software is typically newer. I enjoy using it over Ubuntu, but my work experience kind of influenced me to be more comfortable with Fedora over Ubuntu or others. It just works well for me, but that could be my years of using it.
Typing this from my Fedora based workstation, been daily driving Fedora since switching from RHEL 8 to Fedora 34 last April. As I don't work in or use Ubuntu-ecosystem-centric tools (this was a PITA when I was working on a RHEL 6 based HPC cluster) I don't really run into any issues. And for applications if there's something not in the primary repos (Fedora + RPM Fusion) there's typically a Flatpak covering my use case.
I switched my personal laptop (Dell XPS 17) from Ubuntu to Fedora about a year ago and have been pleased. The GPU situation is more polished, suspend and resume works with less quirks, and I like the more recent versions of upstream software. I’ve also been feeling pessimistic about Ubuntu’s general direction and Snaps in particular.
I've been using it since Fedora 21 which amounts to almost 8 years. In these 8 years, I've had zero problems with the OS - besides some proprietary Nvidia driver issues which are/were pretty common on Linux; since I've switched to AMD GPUs I haven't had any problems whatsoever. Upgrades go smooth every time, even when upgrading to beta versions.
Fedora is a rock-solid distro and I always recommend it over alternatives.
I've been dual booting fedora alongside windows as a desktop since somewhere around 25 and have been pretty pleased with it. As others mentioned, I had some issues with nvidia drivers initially and have purchased AMD graphics cards since then partially due to that. I've found that fedora strikes a balance between up to date software and reduced requirement for tinkering that suits my uses better than alternatives I've tried as a general desktop.
> it seems like more people use ubuntu based distributions.
I think it depends which sub-populations you measure. The modern web and social media can make it hard to understand how your anecdata are sourced. I think the marketing behind Ubuntu is a large part of its visibility, expanding into a bit of a vacuum left by Red Hat's turn towards enterprise and away from regular users. This has compounded over the years with more network effects among new users. I'd say that cloud hosting and blogging environments have had more novice user influence than prior enterprise and university-based environments that had more senior-driven inertia.
From my POV of academic and scientific computing with a sprinkling of enterprise consultancy, there used to be a strong Red Hat bias in US (maybe North American?) Linux usage with SuSE having a similar role in Europe. When RHEL emerged, this preference was inherited by CentOS and Scientific Linux. I don't know exactly how my own filter bubble developed, but I had little awareness of Debian until the Ubuntu marketing arrived and I read the back story. It was one of those parallel world experiences. Perhaps I knew more about SuSE as "the competitor" due to high-performance computing conferences being dominated by US, western Europe, and East Asia participation back in those days.
I'm planing on switching to Nobara[0] after it's updated to 37 as well. I had a rough time in the same distro with my Asus Rog Zephyrus G15 2022, like keyboard backlight not switching off and freezes after inactivity or moving the mouse slightly slower.
I actually used ubuntu for desktop for many, many years, and really didn't have many issues with it. At some point i moved to Linux Mint (can't recall why, or maybe just to distro hop)....and stayed from about version 17.1 (Rebecca?) til about 19.2 (Tess or Tina?)...and at some point got annoyed with Mint...so hopped to Fedora ~early 2020, and have enjoyed it ever since. While both ubuntu and fedora work nicely, i *feel* like Fedora has newer things in it. Certainly with Snaps, Flatpaks, and AppImages, technically one can keep living in a world with newer things....but i favor fedora's near-cutting edge approach. I have not tried Arch yet or any of the rolling distros....that seems a tad too cutting edge for me. Of course everyone's mileage may vary. But nowadays Fedora runs really nicely on desktops, and i have no desire to hop to any other distro (for desktop).
Not that you asked, but for servers, it has been ubuntu all the way for me...but that's simply for familiarity, and work has only required a basic ubuntu server to do a job, and cary on with other matters. I have no experience with non-ubuntu stuff on the server side. While i know tons of people who run CentOS on servers, i don't know anyone who personally runs fedora on the server. (I'm excluding mention of good ol' Solaris, BSD, and other unix systems from back in the ol' days of course. ;-)
I have F37 KDE working with nvidia on wayland without hassle. Fresh install on desktop with snapshot images using this guide: https://sysguides.com/install-fedora-37-with-snapper-and-gru...
Also, I successfully upgraded my laptop with encrypted F36 with snapshots to F37 using DNF System Upgrade.
Thank you Fedora community!
I only just started playing with Fedora in the last week while improving Wine support on the PortableApps.com Platform and I'm impressed with it so far. Loading up Fedora 37 now. For folks who need Wine on Fedora 37, follow the usual instructions[1] but update the repo link from 36 to 37[2].
Last time I heard Fedora 37 will remove hardware acceleration for decoding video via VA-API. Not sure if there is a workaround yet, but I image it will be a deal breaker for many people.
I have the same concern and it's a major one for me. I don't like to switch to distros that destroy such basic QoL functionality as HW decode and turn your laptop into loud battery draining stovetop when watching a Youtube tutorial, without also providing a quick and easy workaround. And I have not found any quick and easy fix on how to revert this (all search results for me yield just threads of people being annoyed with this decision rather than solutions) which is why I'll be staying away from vanilla Fedora for now despite being a favorite distro of mine. Worse, my other favorite distro, OpenSUSE, will follow suit on this, despite being a EU company not affected by the US SW patents issue.
The super ironic thing is that, after the Linux community preaching for so many years that "AMD works best with Linux, always buy AMD, f*ck Nvidia", only AMD users are affected by the axing of VA-API, as Nvidia and Intel have alternative/proprietary APIs for hardware decoding to fall back to which can be easily enabled out of the box, versus the "just works™" AMD users which are currently screwed by this.
I hope G.E. from the Nobara Project[0] will fix this and give us a great Fedora 37 spin with batteries included.
Not a typical use-case, but I used Fedora Server for my personal media server (Jellyfin, Nextcloud, Syncthing just to name a few) and it's been great (Though I do have to fix things occasionally since I live on the edge and auto-update every night). Since most of my service runs in Podman container, I'm contemplating switching to rpm-ostree based one like Fedora IOT, but haven't got the time to get around it yet. Used to use Silverblue for my personal laptop, but I switched to Mac M1 that I got from my job. I miss how simple and configurable Linux is compared to Mac, and if my next gig won't require a Mac I'll probably go back to Silverblue.
I've been running Fedora Silverblue for about 3 or 4 years on my main laptop. Just got a notification that Fedora 37 is available. Clicked download in Gnome Software. Took about 5 minutes to download. Rebooted and now I'm on Fedora Silverblue 37. I don't know any other desktop OS that has this easy and fast upgrade flow. I'm loving it.
40 comments
[ 3.8 ms ] story [ 84.3 ms ] threadFor us in particular, celery is already on the chopping block for another package, so we haven't bothered fixing it yet.
pretty neat!
when i worked with RHEL,centos and rpm, I liked it quite a bit. However, ever switching to ubuntu, everything just works better and it seems like more people use ubuntu based distributions.
If fedora software is actually newer, it might be a worthy desktop
I think it switched cause I wanted Wayland and more recent Gnome at the time. Everything more or less always seems to work without issue, I’ve done upgrades, swapped out hardware over the years and never had any show-stopping bugs.
More recently I became a package maintainer and it’s been an excellent process, from the documentation to the community. I used to be weary of RPM and the “dependency hell” but it’s not really a thing anymore.
I like picking the right tool for the job, and so far Fedora has worked out well in this regard, but Ubuntu, MacOS, Windows, etc all have their place.
It also typically "just works" and has much newer packages in it's repos.
I am much preferring the experience vs. [k]ubuntu.
It's great.
Although I did accidentally screw up the Windows install while doing an upgrade.
I've been using it since Fedora 21 which amounts to almost 8 years. In these 8 years, I've had zero problems with the OS - besides some proprietary Nvidia driver issues which are/were pretty common on Linux; since I've switched to AMD GPUs I haven't had any problems whatsoever. Upgrades go smooth every time, even when upgrading to beta versions.
Fedora is a rock-solid distro and I always recommend it over alternatives.
I think it depends which sub-populations you measure. The modern web and social media can make it hard to understand how your anecdata are sourced. I think the marketing behind Ubuntu is a large part of its visibility, expanding into a bit of a vacuum left by Red Hat's turn towards enterprise and away from regular users. This has compounded over the years with more network effects among new users. I'd say that cloud hosting and blogging environments have had more novice user influence than prior enterprise and university-based environments that had more senior-driven inertia.
From my POV of academic and scientific computing with a sprinkling of enterprise consultancy, there used to be a strong Red Hat bias in US (maybe North American?) Linux usage with SuSE having a similar role in Europe. When RHEL emerged, this preference was inherited by CentOS and Scientific Linux. I don't know exactly how my own filter bubble developed, but I had little awareness of Debian until the Ubuntu marketing arrived and I read the back story. It was one of those parallel world experiences. Perhaps I knew more about SuSE as "the competitor" due to high-performance computing conferences being dominated by US, western Europe, and East Asia participation back in those days.
[0]: https://nobaraproject.org/
Not that you asked, but for servers, it has been ubuntu all the way for me...but that's simply for familiarity, and work has only required a basic ubuntu server to do a job, and cary on with other matters. I have no experience with non-ubuntu stuff on the server side. While i know tons of people who run CentOS on servers, i don't know anyone who personally runs fedora on the server. (I'm excluding mention of good ol' Solaris, BSD, and other unix systems from back in the ol' days of course. ;-)
1. https://wiki.winehq.org/Fedora
2. https://dl.winehq.org/wine-builds/fedora/36/winehq.repo
The super ironic thing is that, after the Linux community preaching for so many years that "AMD works best with Linux, always buy AMD, f*ck Nvidia", only AMD users are affected by the axing of VA-API, as Nvidia and Intel have alternative/proprietary APIs for hardware decoding to fall back to which can be easily enabled out of the box, versus the "just works™" AMD users which are currently screwed by this.
I hope G.E. from the Nobara Project[0] will fix this and give us a great Fedora 37 spin with batteries included.
[0]: https://nobaraproject.org/
- mesa-va-drivers-freeworld
- mesa-vdpau-drivers-freeworld
https://pkgs.rpmfusion.org/cgit/free/mesa-freeworld.git/
??? They only removed hardware acceleration for patent-encumbered codecs...
And FYI the most popular streaming sites (Netflix, YouTube, PrimeVideo, etc...) all use royalty-free codecs (AV1, VP9) so won't be affected...
I miss fedora.