Fedora Linux Elevates KDE to Edition Status
Quoting: Fedora Linux Elevates KDE to Edition Status —
There’s news, but then there’s the kind of news that can really shake things up—and this is definitely the latter.
When Joshua Strobl, the creator and maintainer of Fedora Budgie Spin and Fedora Budgie Atomic, officially proposed on this year’s April Fool’s Day that the Plasma Spin should replace the current GNOME release as Fedora’s main edition, I have to admit I initially thought it was a not-so-original April Fool’s joke. Let me tell you why.
Fedora is widely recognized as a project that enjoys substantial backing from Red Hat—financially, with infrastructure, and through a talented team of developers. This strong support is fantastic because it ensures Fedora maintains the high quality we’re all familiar with.
It's FOSS News:
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The Fedora KDE Spin Confirmed as an Alternative Official Edition for Workstation Users
Fedora is a well-known Linux distribution that is recognized for its robustness and reliability, providing its users with a cutting-edge experience, but in a stable form and with effortless upgrades.
It is available in many flagship Editions, such as Workstation, Server, CoreOS, etc., with many Spins offering different desktop environments (DE) options like Xfce, LxQt, Cinnamon, etc., and a line of Atomic Desktops.
Since 2007, with the release of Fedora 7, GNOME has been the default desktop environment for Workstation. But, as things stand, the status quo is set to change with a new Edition joining Fedora Workstation.