Fedora Is Replacing Ubuntu Linux As The Default
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Fedora Is Replacing Ubuntu Linux As The Default

Brodie Robertson 04.05.2026 63 878 просмотров 3 368 лайков

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For a long time Ubuntu Linux was basically the default Linux distro recommendation when you had nothing else to suggest but over the years it seems like Fedora or more accurately the Fedora family of distros has begun to fill that role. @PizzaLovingNerd Also did a great video on this topic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RkvoysTSnD4 ==========Support The Channel========== ► Patreon: https://brodierobertson.xyz/patreon ► Paypal: https://brodierobertson.xyz/paypal ► Liberapay: https://brodierobertson.xyz/liberapay ► Amazon USA: https://brodierobertson.xyz/amazonusa ==========Resources========== Ubuntu Linux: https://ubuntu.com/ Fedora Linux: https://fedoraproject.org/ Canonical ShipIt: https://canonical.com/blog/shipit-comes-to-an-end Bazzite Linux: https://bazzite.gg/ Nobara Linux: https://nobaraproject.org/ =========Video Platforms========== 🎥 React: https://www.youtube.com/@BrodieRobertsonReacts 🎥 Podcast: https://techovertea.xyz/youtube 🎮 Gaming: https://brodierobertson.xyz/gaming ==========Social Media========== 🎤 Discord: https://brodierobertson.xyz/discord 🐦 Twitter: https://brodierobertson.xyz/twitter 🌐 Mastodon: https://brodierobertson.xyz/mastodon 🖥️ GitHub: https://brodierobertson.xyz/github ==========Credits========== 🎨 Channel Art: Profile Picture: https://www.instagram.com/supercozman_draws/ #Fedora #Ubuntu #Linux #FOSS #OpenSource 🎵 Ending music Track: Debris & Jonth - Game Time [NCS Release] Music provided by NoCopyrightSounds. Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDTvvOTie0w Free Download / Stream: http://ncs.io/GameTime DISCLOSURE: Wherever possible I use referral links, which means if you click one of the links in this video or description and make a purchase I may receive a small commission or other compensation.

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Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00)

The landscape of Linux DRO recommendations has always been a mess. Now, I've said many times before that I don't think the DRO is that important of a choice. A lot of people get stuck on it, but if you don't like it, you can always just change it. Just pick one of them and then go from there. But to a new user, that clearly hasn't been very convincing cuz people still love their DRO recommendations. But what I've noticed over the last few years is that Fedora, or more accurately, the Fedora family of dros have now become far more frequent recommendations. Of course, there are still people that recommend things like Mint and Zoran, which are Debian and Abuntu based. More recently, there are projects like Cashios, and this is archbased. I think Cashi is a great project. Would I put someone on something archbased as their first DRO? — [sighs] — probably not, but if you know what you're getting into, I did it. You can make it work. But Auntu, Abuntu is also still a popularish recommendation, but it's kind of fallen out of that spot as the default. I don't know what you're actually doing on your system. Here is just a general basic recommendation. In many ways, Fedora has started to fill that gap and people forget the absolute powerhouse that Abuntu used to be. Abuntu basically changed the landscape for what it meant to be a regular Linux dro and a regular Linux user and we started seeing some of the earliest devices being sold actually shipping Linux. I know this is something people talk about nowadays. That was happening like 20 years ago, just not that much. There's actually a news story of someone who bought an Abuntu laptop, went to college, couldn't connect to their college's network. — She quickly learned Ubuntu might look a lot like Windows, but it sure doesn't act like it. — I tried to um get on the internet on it, and that did not work. And I found out that Microsoft Word is not compatible. That's because her Verizon internet CD won't load on Ubuntu and Ubuntu comes with Open Office and not Word. And this became some like big drama for one day where someone had nothing else to talk about at the time. And Canonicle absolutely flooded the market with Auntu install CDs at a time where for a lot of people downloading an ISO was still a pretty difficult thing to do. And this wasn't just done in magazines. Obviously, there were magazines as well, but there was the ship it service. You could just go to the service, request a CD, they would just send it to you. They didn't care. And a lot of people ordered these. In fact, a few too many people ordered them. And that's a big part of the reason why it shut down because uh some people started to abuse the service. And at a time, Abuntu was the go-to recommendation. So much so that people who weren't Linux users when they were told about Linux there were usually two things that came to mind. Arch because of haha Arch by the way Arch is hard to install. It was a very big cultural meme and Auntu. And a big part of that was also the fact that when you saw any media representation of Linux it was Gnome but it wasn't vanilla Gnome. It was Abuntu Gno and that's still something that happens today. That's how much of a track record, cultural mainstay Abuntu had been. Whilst Fedora Linux did start a little bit before Auntu as Fedora core, it spawned out of something known as Red Hat Linux. Not Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat Linux. This is actually before Re came along. When Re did come along, basically Fedora was spun out as the community edition of Re. And in many ways, it really was just Re but minus all of the Red Hat Enterprise stuff, often being called basically the Rea. But over the years, things have drastically changed and this has led to a big shift in community sentiment. Fedora Linux now has its own identity. Yes, it is built off of Red Hat infrastructure. It is represented by Red Hat legal. It, you know, is built off the same initial package sources. It is very much run by Red Hat people. A lot of Red Hat employees work on Fedora. But even though that is the case, it now doesn't just feel like re. It is its own separate thing that does things that

Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00)

never would happen in rail. And this has ultimately been a good thing for Fedora as a DR that wants to have a very long life into the future. And Abuntu has also had quite a bit of community sentiment shift as well. But not all of it is because of Auntu. Following the launch of Gnome 3. Whilst people look back now at GTK 3 and the Gnome 3 days as a great time for Gnome, going from Gnome 2 to Gnome 3, that was a big shift and a lot of people initially did not like it. Of the many reasons, this led to Canonicle making Unity. There's plenty of other reasons like Canonicle wanting to build one interface that works across every single device they want to sell. They wanted to make phones and TVs and various other things and initially Unity was hated and then eventually they shifted back to Gnome 3. But then something crazy happened. There were people that started using Iuntu during that Unity era and now going to Gnome 3, there were a lot of people that loved Unity and hated going back to Gnome. But then you go into the GTA 4 era with Gnome 40 and now Gnome 50 and people look back on that Gnome 3 time as what a great time that was. My point here is Gnome was going through a very turbulent time and frankly still going through a quite turbulent time and being attached to Gnome had also led to quite a bit of drama being attached to Abuntu as well. Now some of the drama was their own fault. During that Unity era, they deployed something known as the Amazon search lens, which basically added a search function into the like file browser built into Unity. This led to Canonical being accused of being spyware because if you're searching Amazon, then you have to obviously send the key presses to Amazon. They were basically just sending them to Amazon. They're anonymized. It wasn't actually that big of a deal. But notably, Richard Storman did accuse Abuntu of being spywear and back then a lot more people cared about what Storm was saying. However, Fedora Linux also ships Gnome, a much more vanilla Gnome, but Gnome nonetheless, but as of Fedora 42, Fedora KDE is now marketed directly alongside Fedora Workstation. So you go to the Fedora website, you see workstation, you see Fedora KDA right next to each other. This is a massive change because if you don't know what you want to download, you see something called workstation. You see something that is the desktop offering. These are both right there. Which one's better? Well, as a new user, maybe you don't know, but you know it's there. And I know this might sound dumb because Fedora KD has existed for a long time, but if you're a new user, how do you evaluate all of the different spins there if you have no idea what Gnome, KDE, Sway, XFCE, Budgie, Cinnamon, all of these different things are? How do you even go through those options when there's something where you click the download button and it's right there? Having it just be right in front of your face as a clear official offering is massive. But for a lot of you, you know about Gnome. You know about KDE. You actively make a choice on what desktop you want to use. Now, I know that Gnome has its fans. It still very much does. But like it or not, times are changing on Linux. Gnome is no longer what you remember as Gnome 2 and then the later Gnome 3 days. Even though again initially people didn't like Gnome 3, they do now. Community sentiment has been slowly shifting around that project and a lot of people have been moving away. The numbers show that. Look at donations. Look at package downloads. It's very clear this is happening. What helped Gnome very early on was it was the GPL counterpart to KDE. At the time, cute didn't have an open-source license. So when Gnome came along, this was a massive, massive deal. Back then, the FOS part of the Linux space was considerably stronger. If something was proprietary, if something didn't have not even just an open- source license, but a free software license, that was a much bigger deal than it is today. Whether you like that or not, this is the way it is now. There's a lot more people on Linux who are more pragmatic

Segment 3 (10:00 - 15:00)

about the software they use, where they're okay using things which are just open source, that are proprietary, but would prefer that most of their system be FOS. What also hurt KDE early on is it had this reputation of being buggy and inconsistent. And frankly, it was buggy and inconsistent. They kind of did that to themselves. But combined with the amazing work that Valve has done with Steam OS funding KDE developers, the amazing work the KD developers have done by themselves, this has led to more funding, more development. They have done a lot of reputation building since the absolute disaster that was the launch of KDE4. They have continuously made well received changes to the project. Maybe you don't like every single change, but the thing about the changes is a lot of them have a toggle so you can just not use them if you don't want to use them. They've ironed out a lot of the buggess. It is a really good environment. Now, during the Plasma 6 days, they have completely changed what people think about KDE. This has led to a whole new generation of Linux users who their first look at Linux isn't Gnome anymore. Now, it's KDE. They've seen people using Steam OS. They might have a Steam Deck themselves. They've seen people using KDE with Basite. They've seen KDE with Cashios. They see KDE as the desktop they use. This is the desktop that Valve endorses. you should be using. And yes, Kabuntu absolutely does exist. But right now, Kabuntu is in the same state that Fedora KDE was where yes, it is offered, but if you go to download Auntu, you don't see Kubuntu. You see Auntu. That is all. And then you got to go over to the flavors and search through the list of flavors and what are all these flavors? Which one's better than the other one? I don't know how to evaluate these. But if you tried out Fedora and you're like, "Okay, I like Fedora, but I'm not necessarily vibing with this environment. " Well, there are the spins. You can go and look at the spins and try out something else. And this is what Fedora really has going for it. You don't have to leave the Fedora ecosystem to try out a bunch of different environments. Yes, there are these Auntu flavors, but have you ever looked at how many spins there are? Most of the things you would want to try are on that list. Yes, there are notable missing projects like Hyperland, like newer things such as Mango WC. There are obviously random little desk environments missing. It's not going to have everything. If you want everything, go look at something like Arch. But you have all of these choices to jump around without even leaving the Fedora ecosystem. But let's say you do like Gnome. In the earlier days of Linux, Abuntu had a really strong visual identity. Not just the layout of the panels and the extensions they installed, but it looked unique, right? You knew you were looking at Auntu. It was themed in a very unique way. Nowadays, yes, you still see the additional extensions, layout, but liid way and the stop theming my apps campaign. This basically put a stop to all of that. And the interesting visuals you saw out of Gnome basically don't exist anymore, traded instead for visual consistency. So if you look at Gnome on all of these different distros, it pretty much just looks the same. Yes, there is still some level of user theming which does exist, but it's not typically done at the distribution level. This I also think kind of hurt Auntu because Auntu had that visual identity. If you liked the way Auntu looked, yes, you could replicate it on a vanilla Gnome setup, install the extensions, install the themes, but that required a bunch of additional work. It acted as sort of a very minor, but a lock into the Auntu environment. One problem that's often raised with Fedora is what I'll call the Americanisms, the software patent problems, the lack of outofthe-box proprietary drivers making setting up Nvidia just quite a bit more tedious than a lot of other dros. External repos for things like Steam. This is a major reason that some people suggest against recommending Fedora and I completely understand this. But this is why I said Fedora and the Fedora family of projects because this

Segment 4 (15:00 - 20:00)

is where things like Bazite come in which are effectively Fedora based Steam OS. Or you have more traditional systems like Nabara Linux which was started by Glorious Egg Roll the creator of Proton GE. This again is a very gaming focused environment, but you can use a DRO for anything even though it is a gaming distro, but it makes a lot of those additional changes that you were going to make anyway just for you without having to deal with the just annoyingness of having to set up vanilla regular fedora. Setting up those things isn't difficult. It's well documented. It's relatively easy to do. But if you're not fully comfortable doing so with Fedora, you have a very easy out, but are still using the Fedora infrastructure, the Fedora tooling, you're still effectively on Fedora because they are very much tied to what Fedora is doing. They're not drastically changing things, right? They are still building off of that same package source. And really, this is what the Red Hat and Fedora line just didn't really have for a long time. There are Red Hatbased dros. Absolutely. But a lot of those aren't Red Hat based distros. They're Red Hat clones. Things like Alma Linux and Rocky. These are just slightly differently branded Rees, but that's their core function. But also, you as a regular user probably are not going to be running those. You haven't really had this strong ecosystem of things like Zoran, of things like Mint until, I would say, relatively recently. Something else that has changed recently is a lot more interest in upto-date software. And I think a big part of that is access to information. You can see people that are running Arch that are using the latest version of software and you want those features. you want to use those and iuntu operates on a sensible slow model but it's really slow right and for the people who want that the most popular version of iuntu is the iuntu lts but I think a lot of people are realizing that as a regular Linux user as a desktop user not operating a server you can kind of sacrifice some of that stability to get newer software to get updates faster, to get features that you want without having to wait 6 months for the next point release to happen. And who knows if the update is even going to be in that point release. And I think having access to things like flat packs and snaps and app has also really encouraged people to want more upto-ate software because they can have parts of their system up to date like that. But why have just parts when you can have even more of it? But most people are not really happy to deal with the problems that come with a full rolling system like an Arch for example that I'm using. Arch is great, but you get things quickly and things aren't always fully tested. And if problems occur on Linux, Arch users, Gen 2 users, a lot of people like that are usually the people to start reporting them because they end up seeing them before anybody else has the package being shipped. Not always, but for the most part, that's the way it goes. But then there's Fedora. Fedora, you might even call it semi- rolling to some extent. Not exactly. It's it's a that's a weird term that's not really well defined, but it's certainly a lot closer to that model. You're going to get those software updates, but it's still going to be done in a well- tested environment that you know that you can rely on that has all of this infrastructure behind it to make things good, but you don't have that massive delay until you get the software. Especially so when it comes to the desktop. When a new version of Fedora comes out, it's going to have the latest version of KDE. Gnome. When we look at Auntu, yes, it does get the latest version of Gnome. But on Kubuntu, there have been times where you've been stuck like three or four versions behind for seemingly no reason. Then there's the matter of snaps versus flat packs. And a lot of this argument has already been hashed out over and over again. And you know what? A lot of people don't know or don't care why they don't like snaps anymore. They just don't like snaps, right? Like there's just this idea in their head, snap bad

Segment 5 (20:00 - 24:00)

but no connections to ideas on why that might be the case. But the general sentiment is snap bad and Auntu forces snaps. Therefore, Auntu bad whereas Fedora, they're quite a bit more involved in the flatp pack side of things. And yes, there have been issues with again the Americanisms and FlatHub, but Fedora's mostly gotten over those problems and isn't being really stupid with how they offer flat packs anymore. Historically, one of Abuntu's greatest strengths was really the community resources. The fact that there was this giant group of people that were making PPAs, and PPAs aren't exactly the preferred third party packaging solution at this point, but that was a big deal at one point in time. Oftent times when you saw a random package, it would be packaged on Auntu as a PPA, maybe a deb that's catered towards Auntu and then Arch. That's pretty much it. So many projects I saw in the early days of looking at software, that is the combination that I saw for Dora. Now though, I think it's at a point where this distinction is getting smaller. Obviously, there's been a lot of shift away from these third party repos to things like flatpack, app image, to some extent, snap, but not as much. But also, Fedora has copper and more people know about copper. More people are treating it kind of like the AUR and it's getting more and more software in it. But also, you know, there's other solutions like Nyx for example, and if you're going to do Nyx, you can just run anything. But Fedora has this incredibly active community around it with the forums. And if you're ever wondering how to do something on Fedora, you can likely find someone who has already done that. And as there's a lot of interest in Fedora, there's also a lot of coverage of Fedora as well. And this sort of feeds back into the interest loop. And it's created this system where there's just a lot of people either talking about Fedora or things based on Fedora. notably obviously Bazite. Now, here's the key thing. Just because Fedora is a popular recommendation, that doesn't mean it's actually a replacement for Auntu. It does a lot of things different. The Americanisms are a big one. Fedora, whilst they do adopt software features very quickly, they also adopt changes very quickly. you know, in the past, like Whan, for example, bringing it in before it was even usable outside of developers. This doesn't happen anywhere near as much now, frankly, because there hasn't been a major change like that in quite a while to adopt, but it is something that is still part of the ethos of Fedora. If something comes along like that, it's probably going to happen again. So, with all that being the case, let me know your thoughts. Do you think Fedora is a good recommendation? What about the family of Fedora dros? What do you personally recommend to someone as just a basic general recommendation? I'd love to know. So, let me know your thoughts down below. If you like the video, go like the video. Go subscribe as well. And if you really like the video and you want to become one of these amazing people over here, check out the Patreon subscribe Deli Barrape linked in the description down below. That's going to be it for me and my lady at your best. If it don't involve money, then I don't accept. accept something.

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