For me the pop shop always froze. At least that thought me how to use the terminal. But even regular GNOME software was miles ahead of their shop…
For me the pop shop always froze. At least that thought me how to use the terminal. But even regular GNOME software was miles ahead of their shop…
Fedora 41, on a Dell xps 15 with a 3050ti, Driver Version: 560.35.03. I got the solution from an Arch board, so I wasn’t the only one. I’ll have a look at the gitlab.
Tried it out and had an issue where GTK apps would not load. Eventually solved it by changing a setting in /etc/environment, but this is the first time a fedora beta lets me down.
Seems pretty incremental to me, but this one is an important one: Notes are now available as a collapsible pane under the slide in Normal view.
When I used Pop!_OS I disabled their extensions because it felt way more clunky than stock GNOME. The applications menu looks out of place and the bottom bar wastes so much vertical space by default. In the end I just switched to Fedora when I got more comfortable with Linux. I’m a little sad that this looks exactly like GNOME with the extensions baked in and not something novel entirely. It is, however, exciting to see a new player enter the field and learn from their approach.
This extension is also great https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/5489/search-light/. It provides the overview search bar without moving everything around like the regular overview.
FHIR instead of all legacy standards. Also ISO IDMP to make referencing medicines way easier.
Looking at Steam Deck verified titles is also an option either on Steam or a third party website.
Just installed it and nothing broke down. Gotta find something else to get my tinkering fix!
selinux probably
I mostly write bug reports as my code is not up to par with most projects and my native language is always already translated…
I just realized that 2010 was 14 years ago…
Yeah, Fedora runs with wayland by default, which is really nice for touchscreens.
I hope someone sent him those papers
Beware of the pipeline
I already ran Linux when the API blew up but now I’m a girl…
They also mention it in the article but https://flathub.org/apps/io.missioncenter.MissionCenter and https://flathub.org/apps/net.nokyan.Resources are also very pretty and functional. Great to see the default one follow this trend.
This seems a little exaggerated. For example, over 10k games are Steam Deck playable/verified. About 75% of the games that were tested were compatible with the Steam Deck, so probably many more will follow. Also, all emulators work on Linux too and sometimes even better than on Windows. The number of games that are available to you on Linux is simply massive.
My guess would be because they also ship to Mac/Windows.
Minimizing applications feels like a Windows workflow because it doesn’t have decent workspaces like most Linux DEs. I never feel the need to minimize a window on Linux because I can arrange everything nicely in workspaces.