Fedora 38: Overview of Its Features and Enhancements
Fedora (backed/financed by RedHat) has recently become popular for many Linux users. Usually, Ubuntu and Fedora are the two main "go-to" distributions for any workload. Due to several Ubuntu policies in the recent past and "over-friendliness" with Microsoft, a good number of long-term Linux users started adopting Fedora workstations for their desktops.
In addition, Fedora is backed by Red Hat, a leading open-source company, and it always pioneers adopting new technologies before any mainstream Linux distributions. Last year, Fedora was the first distro to offer the modern Wayland, Pipewire as default in its workstation flavour and a few performance-related improvements such as out-of-memory handling (OOM). All of these are eventually adopted by others later on.
The upcoming release - Fedora 38, also plans for some interesting new features and improvements, which make it an attractive option for developers, Linux users and system administrators.