There’s been a proposal for Fedora Linux to become a new Fedora immutable variant and now it’s been approved by the Fedora Engineering and Steering Committee (FESCo) to happen for the Fedora 39 cycle.

  • eatmoregreenfood@kbin.social
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    Hm, what is a benefit of that? Non power users just not fucking shit up?

    Also, I have a monster windows PC I built for work (4k and 6k video editing), but I’m probably going to buy a laptop here in a week or so. Just for writing and streaming video in my bedroom. Any suggestions on a simple distro for that? Just need stability, a notepad-like app, and the ability to use a browser, a VPN, and solid video rendering.

    • Flaky@kbin.social
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      For what it’s worth, SteamOS - the OS used on the Steam Deck - is also immutable (based on Arch Linux). It seems like that’s the main benefit, yeah. You can unlock root access in it for development purposes, but it’ll be reset after Valve pushes out an update to SteamOS. Don’t know whether that’s supported on Fedora’s immutable variants.

      • telemachuszero@kbin.social
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        Fedora’s immutable variants are more flexible than SteamOS 3 currently is.

        Fedora supports package layering (and the layered packages are reapplied on system image updates), you can pin multiple deployments and switch between them, and the ostree managed /etc is more advanced than the overlayfs setup that SteamOS uses.

        SteamOS’s simpler approach is perfectly fine for its intended purpose though.

        • Flaky@kbin.social
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          Thanks for letting me know! I’ve got a lot of experience with SteamOS but not so much the immutable Fedoras. Should give them a try in the future.