Been using Nobara as my primary OS for about 3 weeks now. It's fantastic. No issues at all. If I can get Diablo 4 running when it releases I'll delete my Windows partition completely.
I love Fedora and I have been working with it for long time, Fedora is easy, One year ago I changed Fedora for ultramarine and it is beautiful and easier to work with, I really recomend it !! Great video !!
OpenSuse micro os been around for a long time; even longer than fedora silverblue. I use both, but I prefer OpenSuse micro os for both servers and desktops (laptops)
The Budgie panel is broken… it won’t favorite certain apps so I move it to the top and bring in plank dock and for the launcher I drag panther launcher to plank. Budgie then looks a lot like GNOME with the Dash to Panel extension installed.
About to try my first Linux distro. Have settled on Nobara as I'm primarily a gamer. I'm also an overclocker and was considered a power user in Windoze. Are there any benchmarking programs that will work in Nobara? What about temp monitoring? I used to use HWInfo, but I know it doesn't offer a Linux version. Thanks for your continued coverage of Nobara. Have been enjoying your content for a few months now.
You could use MangoHUD, which can display temperatures, clocks, frame rates and other information as an overlay on games, in a very simillar way as RivaTuner on Windows. To use it after installing it all you have to do is run the game with an environment variable, which on Steam just means adding things to the launch options of the game
Everything is bleeding edge on Fedora. You’ll get the latest packages with every update and every six months they’ll also bring in a new desktop version.
@@jasonc3589 I use both silverblue and kiniote and they operate like different distributions; they just share the same basic rpm-ostree but everything else is very different. Silverblue is the only gnome distribution I use; rest are all kde based. Personally, I like OpenSuse micro os much better.
i think i have browsed and tried so many Linux i cant find even the right one for me i tried so many throughout the week i have no clue what im looking for I have ideas of what i want but i don't know
if you don't know what you're looking for, then you ain't never gonna settle for one. i use opensuse, because it's the best for me, and I know what I want, and it has everything i want: rolling release, no breackage, spyder IDE, up to date software (most of the time), easy way to install codecs, lastest gnome release lands on it first, automatic snapshots, and cute logo.
Just pick your favorite so far without any deal breakers and roll with it for a while. You'll never find anything perfect out of the box, but you can probably find something good or great, and you can tweak it as desired to get it closer to an ideal setup (which you'll never truly have, especially if you can't articulate what you even want). I went with Linux Mint about 2 weeks ago from Windows 10 and it's been fine so far. I've changed some things and identified concerns I wouldn't have considered during a brief test drive, but I'm in a happy spot now. I'll probably stick with what I have now until I run into a serious problem, and if that happens I'll be better informed for picking an alternative distribution.
@@ordinaryhuman5645 This is true I been trying out so many and been running into a huge problem in each one.Every time after i install one or they do an auto update my WiFi adapter no longer woks and i try all the fixes can find online and none of them work.
@@Atticus118 Yeah, with Mint I had one minor issue after installing related to audio jacks. It really wanted to use the front jack that had headphones plugged in (which I never use) but not the rear jack that had speakers plugged in (which I always use). It took ~5-10 minutes of troubleshooting and downloading PulseAudio Volume Control to get the speakers working. But then I had what I wanted... and now I don't really feel a desire to fiddle with anything anymore. I don't have any protips on the WiFi adapter... I've always used an ethernet cable for my desktops, and that worked fine out of the box.
It is what their web page says. Not the reviewer. I think it's pretty clever. After all sometimes an application actually uses some "undocumented" behavior from the os, just by accident. Plus it indicates they did not try to fix fedora.
Nobara is The Fedora that Fedora must be
Been using Nobara as my primary OS for about 3 weeks now. It's fantastic. No issues at all. If I can get Diablo 4 running when it releases I'll delete my Windows partition completely.
No matter the distro, if the DE is Cinnamon, MATE or XFCE, you know it's gonna be awesome.
I love Fedora and I have been working with it for long time, Fedora is easy, One year ago I changed Fedora for ultramarine and it is beautiful and easier to work with, I really recomend it !! Great video !!
#TeamNobara here.
Happy to see dnfdragora back! I don’t think it’s installed by default in Fedora. Nice job 👍
Nice video as always! Can I request OpenSUSE 2023 edition? Perhaps OpenSUSE's new MicroOS? :))
OpenSuse micro os been around for a long time; even longer than fedora silverblue. I use both, but I prefer OpenSuse micro os for both servers and desktops (laptops)
Thank you, buddy
Thank you my friend.
The Budgie panel is broken… it won’t favorite certain apps so I move it to the top and bring in plank dock and for the launcher I drag panther launcher to plank. Budgie then looks a lot like GNOME with the Dash to Panel extension installed.
Ayy just installed Fedora today
About to try my first Linux distro. Have settled on Nobara as I'm primarily a gamer. I'm also an overclocker and was considered a power user in Windoze. Are there any benchmarking programs that will work in Nobara? What about temp monitoring? I used to use HWInfo, but I know it doesn't offer a Linux version. Thanks for your continued coverage of Nobara. Have been enjoying your content for a few months now.
You could use MangoHUD, which can display temperatures, clocks, frame rates and other information as an overlay on games, in a very simillar way as RivaTuner on Windows. To use it after installing it all you have to do is run the game with an environment variable, which on Steam just means adding things to the launch options of the game
Well if you are using Nobara official or the gnome version you can get an extension called vitals for temp monitoring
@@Seodanrot I appreciate that, thank you. Am planning on using the official version.
can you run the 6.2 kernel? support for intel arc drivers?
Everything is bleeding edge on Fedora. You’ll get the latest packages with every update and every six months they’ll also bring in a new desktop version.
Sorry but SilverBlue is the most underrated and not discussed enough Fedora spin. From a production standpoint OSTree is a godsend.
No, fedora kiniote is the most underrated one
@@oscs4556 Kinoite is SilverBlue ? Unless you're trying to compare KDE to Gnome which remains purely subjective but you do you cheers 🥂
@@jasonc3589 I use both silverblue and kiniote and they operate like different distributions; they just share the same basic rpm-ostree but everything else is very different. Silverblue is the only gnome distribution I use; rest are all kde based. Personally, I like OpenSuse micro os much better.
i think i have browsed and tried so many Linux i cant find even the right one for me i tried so many throughout the week i have no clue what im looking for I have ideas of what i want but i don't know
if you don't know what you're looking for, then you ain't never gonna settle for one. i use opensuse, because it's the best for me, and I know what I want, and it has everything i want: rolling release, no breackage, spyder IDE, up to date software (most of the time), easy way to install codecs, lastest gnome release lands on it first, automatic snapshots, and cute logo.
Just pick your favorite so far without any deal breakers and roll with it for a while. You'll never find anything perfect out of the box, but you can probably find something good or great, and you can tweak it as desired to get it closer to an ideal setup (which you'll never truly have, especially if you can't articulate what you even want).
I went with Linux Mint about 2 weeks ago from Windows 10 and it's been fine so far. I've changed some things and identified concerns I wouldn't have considered during a brief test drive, but I'm in a happy spot now. I'll probably stick with what I have now until I run into a serious problem, and if that happens I'll be better informed for picking an alternative distribution.
@@ordinaryhuman5645 This is true I been trying out so many and been running into a huge problem in each one.Every time after i install one or they do an auto update my WiFi adapter no longer woks and i try all the fixes can find online and none of them work.
@@Atticus118 Yeah, with Mint I had one minor issue after installing related to audio jacks. It really wanted to use the front jack that had headphones plugged in (which I never use) but not the rear jack that had speakers plugged in (which I always use). It took ~5-10 minutes of troubleshooting and downloading PulseAudio Volume Control to get the speakers working.
But then I had what I wanted... and now I don't really feel a desire to fiddle with anything anymore.
I don't have any protips on the WiFi adapter... I've always used an ethernet cable for my desktops, and that worked fine out of the box.
... 💙💙💙
Nobara was very buggy for me.
What a negative view - bug by bug compatible... how about feature by feature compatible? LOL
it is an oft-used expression. he didn't come up with it.
@@kuwandak I know - doesn't make it any less of a negative view... :)
@@kuwandak I also do realize the intended humor...
It is what their web page says. Not the reviewer. I think it's pretty clever. After all sometimes an application actually uses some "undocumented" behavior from the os, just by accident. Plus it indicates they did not try to fix fedora.
@@rebeuhsin6410 I know - I understand. Notice the LOL at the end - I just found the comment funny... struck a funny bone as it were.