I think I get the idea of Fedora Atomic (Silverblue, Kionite, etc.), but I do not get what uBlue is about.

Are those just another “ooh it’s distro X but with preinstalled Y” or are those some soft of overlays on top of Fedora? Can’t they just be some install scripts? Why not just base Fedora Silverblue? Maybe I don’t get the idea, because people seem hyped.

  • @swooosh
    link
    58 months ago

    It’s a good question.

    Fedor does not provide an image for every DE/wm. Anyone can create a custom atomic fedora variant with the desired de.

    Moreover, you can create your own image and deploy it to 100 machines and all of them will have the exact same os and packages. This may not be useful for you as an end user directly but the dev who is developing the image for you (e.g. fedora in the case of silverblue) knows that you have the exact same comouter as him and if it doesn’t work on your pc, it doesn’t work on his, because it is the same. Hence, better support for you.

    • youmaynotknow
      link
      fedilink
      58 months ago

      There are cases when different hardware will have different results, even if the OS is 1:1.

      Just wanted to make that part clear too.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      18 months ago

      image for every DE/wm

      Coming from traditional distro (Arch to be specific) I just install it without DE or uninstall the existing one and install the other. Graphical environments are just programs just like any other.
      So those images are just a convenience thing? Like Fedora has spins that preinstall desktops to have them out-of-the-box?
      How those distro are displayed in (neo)fetch like programs, are they just Fedora or their own thing?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        68 months ago

        Graphical environments are just programs just like any other.

        They are in Fedora, too. It’s just that installing one DE overtop another can cause config file clashes (ie installing Plasma alongside GNOME means GTK apps will have a minimize button when logged into GNOME)