Linux distro review: Fedora Workstation 32

We took our first impressions of Fedora on a bare metal install on the HP Dragonfly Elite G1, seen here on a Moft Z folding laptop stand.

Enlarge / We took our first impressions of Fedora on a bare metal install on the HP Dragonfly Elite G1, seen here on a Moft Z folding laptop stand. (credit: Jim Salter)

Today's Linux distro review is one I've been wanting to do for quite some time—Fedora Workstation. Fedora is one of the heavyweight desktop distros of the Linux world, with a vibrant community and a strong presence at every open source convention I've ever attended. (Remember physically attending events? Ars remembers.)

I never felt particularly drawn to Fedora myself, because it's a bleeding-edge distro—one targeted to the very newest software, possibly at the expense of stability. That's not what I personally want in an operating system—I fix broken things professionally; I'd prefer not to fix them personally any more than I have to.

But as one of the few distros using the next-generation Wayland display server by default, Fedora made me very curious indeed. Although the screenshots taken throughout this review are of virtual machines, my first installation of Fedora Workstation (ever!) was bare metal, on the HP Dragonfly Elite G1.

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