Korora 23, a Fedora Based Linux Desktop Contender
-
The Korora project looks to do for Fedora Linux what Linux Mint did for Ubuntu: take a solid base product and turn it into a stunning and easy to use desktop experience. Like Mint, Korora uses the Cinnamon desktop environment to work much of its magic. Check out DarkDuck's review of the latest Korora release.
-
Downloading now and am going to boot a VM up of this.
-
@mlnews Usually only put my Red Hat on for CentOS with servers and hypervisors. Now you've got me considering wiping my Ubuntu notebook this weekend. Flaking on social obligations in 5 ... 4 ... 3 ...
-
-
I might have a new desktop... lol
This OS is super fast, I've given the VM 2 Gb ram and a dual core, and it's blazing.
-
-
-
@chrisnbrooks said in Korora 23, a Fedora Based Linux Desktop Contender:
@mlnews Usually only put my Red Hat on for CentOS with servers and hypervisors. Now you've got me considering wiping my Ubuntu notebook this weekend. Flaking on social obligations in 5 ... 4 ... 3 ...
I love running all the latest Linux desktops Wish that I had more machines on which to do it. If I still had my own home, I might make a rock solid NFS /home server and make my machines multi-boot into lots of different Linux desktops and keep all of my files as if they were local but change the OS around.
-
@DustinB3403 looks nice
-
-
-
-
Can it run Steam?
-
-
@coliver said in Korora 23, a Fedora Based Linux Desktop Contender:
Can it run Steam?
Looks to be able too
-
-
-
-
@DustinB3403 said in Korora 23, a Fedora Based Linux Desktop Contender:
And I have a Steam login option.
Seriously? Now that is cool.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Korora 23, a Fedora Based Linux Desktop Contender:
@chrisnbrooks said in Korora 23, a Fedora Based Linux Desktop Contender:
@mlnews Usually only put my Red Hat on for CentOS with servers and hypervisors. Now you've got me considering wiping my Ubuntu notebook this weekend. Flaking on social obligations in 5 ... 4 ... 3 ...
I love running all the latest Linux desktops Wish that I had more machines on which to do it. If I still had my own home, I might make a rock solid NFS /home server and make my machines multi-boot into lots of different Linux desktops and keep all of my files as if they were local but change the OS around.
That's one thing I love being able to do at work. Change the OS, but the user environment is still the same. IT is tricktsty it is.