
"I really like Fedora. I find Fedora to be a very fast and reliable OS, which is quite the opposite of what it once was. But here's the thing about Fedora: Although it's an outstanding Linux distribution, it's not quite user-friendly enough for those new to Linux. Why? Out of the box, new users might find themselves having to install codecs for multimedia and several third-party and even proprietary applications."
"It's based on Fedora 42 and contains several modifications in the source code to make it more of a gaming distribution. It improves frames per second by 5% over vanilla Fedora. The RPM Fusion and COPR repositories are enabled. Several device-specific patches are added (such as those for Steam Deck, Microsoft Surface, Asus ROG, and more). Several modifications are made to individual packages (such as the Calamares installer, DNF, Flatpack, gnome-shell, and many more)."
Nobara Linux is a Fedora 42–based distribution tailored for gamers and newcomers. The distribution enables RPM Fusion and COPR repositories and applies device-specific patches for Steam Deck, Microsoft Surface, Asus ROG, and others. Performance optimizations aim to improve frames per second by about 5% over stock Fedora. Package-level modifications include changes to the Calamares installer, DNF, Flatpack, gnome-shell, and more. Nobara includes codecs and third-party and proprietary applications out of the box to reduce manual setup. Nobara remains a separate project rather than an official Fedora spin and is free to download, install, and use.
Read at ZDNET
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