Compared to the rise of LLMs, containers are positively old hat now
You know, this statement makes the author sound like they think LLMs should replace containers, or that development of better containers is passé because of New and Shiny Things.
Please take care not to sound like a project manager when doing tech journalism.
Plasma is not replacing Gnome in Fedora Workstation.
And it doesn't need to anyway, the plasma spin works great and there's no real sign of it being treated as a second class citizen in terms of development/support from the Fedora team.
I think the argument is that since it not the default and not visible in the fedora landing page, the kde spin gets less coverage and hence people are more likely to come across and use the fedora workstation in favour of the kde spin.
Tbh I am fully behind KDE as flagship desktop. Dealing with GNOME users problems all day in the forum, KDE is just better for usability?
GNOME is reduced over the amount that makes sense. KDE could use a bit of reduction, but not as much as GNOMEs. People need the Terminal or random extensions for basic things, this is not a good experience.
On the other hand, GNOME and KDE both have really nice features, GNOME with their Microsoft integrations being particularly powerful (their account system works at all, unlike KDEs which I think nobody uses. But when using Thunderbird, which has standalone Exchange support, you dont use that account system anyways so it doesnt matter again).
Also GNOME has like all their apps on Flathub. GNOME Boxes is particularly crazy, having sandboxed virtualization. This means you can mix match GNOME Flatpaks on a KDE desktop without any problems, KDE even handles the theming for you. On GNOME on the other hand... it actively breaks Qt apps, its insane.
So I think GNOME has some great apps (snapshot, decoder, simplescan, carburetor, celluloid ...) but you can install them anywhere.
Dealing with GNOME users problems all day in the forum, KDE is just better for usability?
It seems not unimaginable that whichever is more popular (/the default) will have more people reporting problems in the forum, regardless of how good it is?
GNOME looks better out of the box and configuring KDE can be very tricky. There are also a lot of outdated "addons" for KDE and you need some in order to get what you want. extensions are better integrsted in KDE but it's not like KDE has everything out of the box.
I'd love to see more KDE support.
True. KDEs virtual desktops are also basically unusable for me, idk I just dont see them so they are not used.
There are pros and cons. Its simply a tie, I stay with KDE because the lack of some things (like close buttons with the hitbox in the very edge) would annoy me.
The Fedora Project has recycled primary sponsor Red Hat's old Atomic brand (which the company sunset after acquiring CoreOS), and will use it to group its growing collection of immutable desktop distributions: Silverblue (with GNOME), Kinoite (with KDE Plasma), Sericea (with Sway), and Onyx (with Budgie).
Fedora aims to be the best distro for software developers, and Red Hat's announcement of the beta highlighted some of the tools for machine learning and large language model development that it will include, including the Python-based PyTorch and version 6 of AMD's ROCm framework complete with support for AMD's latest MI300 accelerators.
Version 5 of the DNF package manager, which was held back from Fedora 38 early last year, still didn't make it in two releases later, but it's being evaluated in some subsidiary roles.
This is an OS for modern hardware, and while it should perform well, it will want plenty of fast storage and a recent model of GPU, supported by the latest drivers, to do it.
This aging vulture has to perform a web search to check which name denotes which desktop in each Fedora immutable edition, every single time.
If anyone has a hypothesis to explain why distro vendors are so fond of giving their immutable distributions whimsical names, please send in your ideas on a postcard comment below.
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I started using Plasma for a server I set up last weekend and it's going great. Widgets are nice (although enterinh/exiting edit mode feels a little janky-- is the mode tracked separately for the desktop and for containers like the top bar?), I even added one to display my external IP in the top bar of my server. The one for displaying the internal IP is broken, though :(
I don't see why it matters to you, but assuming you're just curious, it's much more convenient for me. Using a GUI allows you to multitask and especially track ambient information much better than you can with the commend line. I'm using my server to run several minecraft servers, which I'm recovering from previous drives and attempts from my various computers, so some examples of ways I've used the GUI are:
Using online tools such as an NBT viewer by dragging + dropping files from the Dolphin tree view, then ctrl+tab to quickly compare their data structures to find duplicate or backup worlds
Tracking cpu, memory, and disk with desktop widgets to make sure I don't hit any thresholds even while doing complex or time-sensitive tasks. I can also tell when all the servers have finished starting because the CPU drops significantly
Opening multiple Dolphin windows to move files between more than one location to sort and organize them in bulk (select multiple, drag to move)
And I've only had this setup since last weekend.
TL;DR: If you're multitasking, it's so much faster to open multiple purpose-built programs than to open multiple shells. Also I use online tools which the command line doesn't have.