• OverfedRaccoon 🦝@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      After 3 years on Fedora, the distro that finally made me stop hopping, I moved to openSUSE when I installed a new SSD. I have no idea what the future holds, but I’m good with switching now when convenient rather than later.

        • OverfedRaccoon 🦝@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Coming from Fedora/Cinnamon, I went with Tumbleweed/Plasma. As dumb as it sounds, checking out those “X things to do after installing openSUSE Tumbleweed” articles really helps get the ball rolling with adding the Packman repo, using opi for codecs, installing MS Fonts for compatibility, and other basic quality-of-life things like that. YaST does a lot of heavy lifting and hand holding, which can be good or bad depending on your Linux journey, experience, and/or philosophy - but it is very convenient. Honestly, like with anything Linux, you just kind of adjust til you find things you don’t like - which, to be honest, my main list of things is less with openSUSE itself and more with KDE Plasma.

          I guess that’s a long way to say, I’ve been fine and haven’t missed Fedora.

            • OverfedRaccoon 🦝@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Nothing broken or nonfunctional or anything. I’ve just been more of a fan of Cinnamon (and Xfce before that). I hadn’t tried Plasma in any real capacity in years, so figured I’d see where it’s at now; it’s fine. So they’re more complaints than issues - “old man yells at cloud”-type stuff because I have to figure out everything again, which is frustrating when you have a workflow.

        • pgetsos@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Having done the same trip (years of Fedora, then OpenSUSE) I’m super happy with my experience

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Sadly, this move by Red Hat is not unexpected. Personally, I do not recommend any Red Hat related distros, including clones. This breaks my heart since my first Linux experience was Red Hat Halloween, but the company is just taking ugly turn after ugly turn.

      • BaconIsAVeg@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Settle down Nancy. There’s hundreds of linux distributions currently, some targeted towards desktop/gaming, and some targeted to the server and enterprise spaces. RedHat has always been the latter.

        Let’s not get all Shakespearean dramatic about it, ok?

        • Auli@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I mean RH is a big contributor to open source in general. I do not look forward to how they are behaving lately.

          • BaconIsAVeg@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Exactly, and they have been for years. How fucking entitled do people need to be to advocate for “free and open source” software and then turn around and removed and moan when a corporate entity decides to shift focus to something that doesn’t benefit them directly?

    • alounoz@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      I’m also not sure about it, as I’ve always liked Fedora.

      However, these news impact the whole Linux desktop, and GNOME in particular :(

      • garam@lemmy.my.id
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        1 year ago

        They are focusing on consolidating flatpak, and move toward immutable desktop. If you read the some press release in red hat blogs, they move their teams to make Wayland more stable now, and they aim to bring full flegede gaming desktop also 3D tools as most Hollywood company use RHEL on desktop for processing, it’s what some of the engineer said on reddit, and libreoffice, rythmbox, totem, bluetooth, are offered with flatpak, so… User can move to that.

        Sadly their way of communicating always bad when they move to new project these days… Really bad…

        And some other are making FUD on those news with community left confused and make assumptions…

    • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      Fedora exists separately from RHEL. RedHats decisions can only affect it so far as what they task their developers with.

      However the community votes in which tech is included in Fedora. I wouldn’t worry about the distro.

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      The problem is these companies are the bulk of the contributors to these projects.

      • Auli@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Yep. People think it’s people in their spare time. I mean people have to eat and these companies are the ones who pay for most of the development.

    • barusu@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I loved fedora and it is not easy to choose another distro that fits me that well, but I more and more loose trust in fedora and its future. I think I’ll switch from fedora to a real community distro w/o corporation influence, step by step box by box, slowly but steady to get back my peace of mind.

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Fedora should be dropped try a community distro not a corporate one.

        • Fuck Yankies@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          This is the contentious part and also why I left Fedora.

          Don’t get me wrong, you’ll be hard pressed to find a better community, better support or even a more innovative bunch. Besides RedHat’s involvement, Fedora has been in the vanguard for desktop technologies like PipeWire, Flatpaks, Wayland, heck they were one of the first to push systemd.

          But my problem is that since RedHat holds sway over the Fedora leadership we cannot guarantee that the community will have the users best interests at heart.

          So when people say “use a community distro”, they mean a non-captured one.

          And again; Fedora is awesome, the community is awesome, been using it for years, but switched to NixOS like a month ago because I don’t trust the direction RedHat/IBM is taking Fedora.

          Most likely they’ll push some of these projects to Fedora, make them maintain the projects, then some years down the line sell those projects as apart of their service.

          There is a conflict of interest here and a clear opportunistic angle. RedHat wants to use the Fedora community as a free of charge testing grounds, in effect creating a userbase of free QA testers for future software.

          This is predatory, it is an insult to the community, but the community is captured, and therefore will play ball with RedHat. This is the problem. If the community would give some assurances and protections, that would be nice, but so far it seems the Fedora community is more than willing to play ball with IBM/RedHat.

          • jumper775@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            While yes red hat may try something like that, they also maintain lots of packages and develop technologies that fedora uses, so fedora is still benefiting from said arrangement. It is a trade off here, but I would argue it’s more than worth it as it’s better to be free qa and get decent software than not be anybody’s qa but either not have or have poor quality software.

          • jumper775@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Red hat owns the trademarks as fedora isn’t a real legal entity. Red hat employees also hold most spots in the council, and financially support the project. The council spots are voted upon so they don’t have to be red hatters that’s just who we chose.

      • digdilem@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        “independent” - Is it though?

        Redhat are the major sponsors of Fedora, much as they sponsored Centos before taking it over and killing it in classic “Embrace, Extend, Extinguish”.

        I have doubts about the future of the entire EL ecosphere - I know not many enterprise level organisations are investing deeply into it right now, whether that’s with RHEL or a rebuild. Too much doubt about Redhat’s intentions with RHEL and the future of it.

        • DangerMouse@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Fedora users are just “beta testers” for Red Hat’s main distro, RHEL, and it really did feel like it. I started on Fedora and moved on swiftly after finding better distros.

      • Auli@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Independent then why did the RH lawyers make them remove the codecs from the distro earlier this year.

    • ryannathans@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Recommend pop os instead, solid, no canonical bs, widely compatible, and will soon replace GNOME with cosmic