I want to dedicate this message to a few Fedora based distros that really intrigued me: **Nobara**:
I want to dedicate this message to a few Fedora based distros that really intrigued me:
Nobara: Nobara claims to be Fedora but point-and-click friendly. I've heard a lot of things about Nobara being great for gaming, but as a non-gamer I don't know much about that. The thing that scares me a bit is that it says it's a 'hobby' distro, so from what I can tell if the creator abandons the project everyone is pretty much screwed. Which isn't likely, given who the creator is, but even then.
Ultramarine Linux: Ultramarine is also another 'Fedora but friendlier' distro, but their primary goal is to make a distro that is set-it-and-forget-it, and although they are working on beginner-friendly apps and stuff, and they've said that friends and family are part of the target audience, being beginner-friendly is not the main goal. The team behind Ultramarine also has another distro called TauOS, but from what I could learn it's still in the planning stage.
Nobara: Nobara claims to be Fedora but point-and-click friendly. I've heard a lot of things about Nobara being great for gaming, but as a non-gamer I don't know much about that. The thing that scares me a bit is that it says it's a 'hobby' distro, so from what I can tell if the creator abandons the project everyone is pretty much screwed. Which isn't likely, given who the creator is, but even then.
Ultramarine Linux: Ultramarine is also another 'Fedora but friendlier' distro, but their primary goal is to make a distro that is set-it-and-forget-it, and although they are working on beginner-friendly apps and stuff, and they've said that friends and family are part of the target audience, being beginner-friendly is not the main goal. The team behind Ultramarine also has another distro called TauOS, but from what I could learn it's still in the planning stage.