Fedora 18 Spherical Cow Gnome Review: Stable and efficient with professional looks but has Gnome 3 agonies!
Fedora has always intrigued me to keep track of the latest happenings in the Linux world and especially what's brewing at the RHEL stable! Also, if I think of a comparable distro to Ubuntu, Fedora is the only legitimate choice! Just like Ubuntu, Fedora also inspires innumerable spins (like Kororaa, Fuduntu, of which I am a big fan now!). So, when the release note of Fedora came on 15th Jan, I was quick to download all the four versions (Gnome, KDE, XFCE and LXDE). This is the first review of the series and I start with the Gnome spin.
My assessment is based on installation in Asus K54C laptop with 2.2 Ghz Core i3 processor and 2 GB RAM and using it for last 5 days. I used the 932 MB 32 bit ISO for this purpose. Fedora 18 has the stock Gnome 3.6 desktop interface and this version has got the poweroff button back! Removing the shut-down button was insane and good that the developers of Gnome realized it! The desktop looks clean and professional I must say. However, Gnome 3 interface is not yet very intuitive to me, for example, changing a simple wallpaper takes quite a bit of steps whereas on any other desktop environment it is just a matter of simple right click! Same with simple minimization of open windows or closing an open window. Life is quite complex at Gnome 3, I suppose. Usual vices of Gnome 3 is there with this release of Fedora as they are with other stock Gnome 3 based distros. I haven't used Gnome 3 much lately, and using Gnome 3 on a daily basis made me even like Unity! People who read my blog regularly know how much I dislike Unity - Gnome 3 is worse.
Anyway, enough cribbing of Gnome 3 and back to Fedora 18. The downloaded ISO has Linux kernel 3.6.10 which upgrades to 3.7.2 upon installation. The default file manager is Gnome Files 3.6.3. Hardware detection is at par with any other top notch Linux OS - resolution is perfect, sound card detected with ease, touchpad works with enabling touchpad option from mouse settings, Wifi and LAN detected immediately. One interesting feature I saw is the live-boot or install options while USB live-boot. Seems like Fedora picked up a feather or two from Ubuntu! It is good option for the users and I am not complaining!
More or less a Fedora has a healthy list of applications. Firefox is the default browser but there is no Adobe flashplugin support out of the box. Html5 works, however, effortlessly. I could watch youtube videos where html5 option is available, right after installation.
However, it just takes couple of minutes to actually download the latest Adobe Flash plugin RPM packages and make them work in Fedora 18, namely:
1. Adding Adobe RPM packages to Yum (as root): rpm -ivh http://linuxdownload.adobe.com/adobe-release/adobe-release-i386-1.0-1.noarch.rpm rpm --import /etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-adobe-linux 2. Update and then download Adobe flash yum check-update yum install flash-plugin nspluginwrapper alsa-plugins-pulseaudio libcurl
Fedora doesn't have the restricted multimedia codecs installed. Fedora or Red Hat doesn't ship those as a policy. A little bit of research and Rpmfusion came to my rescue. I entered the following command at the terminal to add RPM fusion packages:
su -c 'yum localinstall --nogpgcheck http://download1.rpmfusion.org/free/fedora/rpmfusion-free-release-18.noarch.rpm http://download1.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/fedora/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-18.noarch.rpm'
Post submitting this command, a refresh of the Software Install showed me the non-free codecs as well as VLC. Imagine the plight before this, neither movie files (.avi & .mkv primarily) nor mp3s would play on Fedora, even though Totem movie player and Rhythmbox are present!
Another application that caught my attention is the Boxes. It is actually a lightweight Gnome virtualbox, similar to the more famous Oracle Virtualbox. I didn't try it for this review but will try it sometime in future.
Application-wise Fedora 18 is moderately rich and I give it a score of 8.25/10. The score distribution is given below:
Fedora 18 Gnome
Score
App – Office
10.00
App – Internet
8.00
App – Graphics
7.00
App – Multimedia
8.00
Applications
8.25
Given no Adobe flashplugin in either the distro or in the repository, I have given 8/10 in internet section. Otherwise, Fedora satisfy my criteria of a browser, chat client, email client and bit torrent client. In graphics, given there is no photo editor like GIMP, I gave 7/10. In multimedia, as there are no restricted codecs present even in the repo, Fedora 18 got 8/10 though a music player and a video player is present. Installation One of the main attraction of the Fedora 18 is the modified Anaconda installer. At a high level, it seems pretty simple and comparable to the Ubuntu installer. Just answer a few questions about language, location, keyboard, set root password, create user and that's it! No silly questions on grub and where to install grub, etc. just like Ubuntu. However, the design is a bit questionable and the orange notices popping up below every now and then is a bit irritating. At times I am not sure if I am doing the right thing or the wrong thing! The screeshots below have a mix of Gnome & KDE installation, as I forgot to take some snapshots from Gnome installation.
The installer is a bit bland in look and design. It is possibly designed keeping in mind the tablets and touch interfaces. But, it makes life a little tough on conventional laptops and desktops. Life becomes more complicated with the installer once I try to create my own partition scheme and install Fedora. The installer is not very intuitive or as good as gparted. Moving on, straight forward installation takes about 20 minutes of time and it doesn't download the updates or codecs while installation like Ubuntu. I guess that makes life a bit tougher for any new user. Post installation about 260 MB of updates were downloaded. I used terminal for the same with command "sudo yum update && sudo yum upgrade". Repository Yum is the default package manager with gpk-application 3.6.1 as the GUI for browsing and installing packages. As mentioned before, the stock Fedora repo isn't that rich in terms of non-free codecs or applications. I couldn't locate even Adobe flashplugin there! But, once I added RPM Fusion packages to it, things became a lot better. Interface of gpk-application is similar to synaptic and even here the gpk apps tells of the dependencies required to be installed as pre-requisites. If you don't want to go into complexities of the GUI, life is quite simple via the terminal as well, simply type "sudo yum install appname" and your app will get installed in minutes. Some of the apps like Adobe flashplugin or Skype 4.1 are not there even in the RPM Fusion repo and required to be installed downloading from the respective website. For Skype, I tried the Fedora 16 installer available on Skype website and it worked well resolving all dependencies on Fedora 18.
Performance Post updating to Linux kernel 3.7.2, Fedora 18 Gnome desktop consumed about 310-320 MB RAM and 1-10% CPU to load with system monitor running. I guess, it is pretty decent if I compare it to the latest Gnome 3 spins released in 2012-13. Fedora 18 resource consumption is almost equivalent to Fedora 17 and Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS. If I compare it to Ubuntu 12.10, Fedora 18 comes way better.
Linux OS
Desktop
CPU
RAM
Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS
Unity with Gnome 3.4
1-10%
280 MB
Fedora 17 Gnome
Gnome 3.4.1
1-10%
296 MB
Zorin 6 Core
Gnome 3.4.1
1-10%
300 MB
OpenSUSE 12.2 Gnome
Gnome 3.4.2
1-10%
310 MB
Fedora 18 Gnome
Gnome 3.6.2
1-10%
310 MB
Pinguy OS 12.04
Gnome 3.4.1
1-10%
325 MB
Ubuntu 12.10
Unity with Gnome 3.6
1-10%
412 MB
Overall I like Fedora 18 Gnome for it's clean, uncluttered interface. But, Gnome 3 is too much to digest for me to use. Actually Ubuntu Unity works much better, even though I hate it being inefficient. Now actually I understand why Ubuntu is pursuing Unity and Linux Mint is going aggressive on Cinnamon. However, I don't have much complain on the Fedora spin - they tried to be true to Gnome 3 desktop and it worked really well on my Core i3 laptop. It is fast, slick and I found it quite stable. I have mixed feelings about the upgraded Anaconda installer - it's good in patches but I felt, it is primarily designed for tablets. I guess the big distros like Ubuntu & Fedora will go aggressive to tap the tablet PC market pretty soon. Desktop users will have to be contended with Fedora/Ubuntu spins like Linux Mint, Fuduntu, Kororaa, etc. Do I recommend Fedora 18 Gnome? I'll recommend it for advanced users who can take the pain for installing a new distro every year. For casual users, looking for a stable distro but love Fedora, try other flavors of Fedora like KDE. And if you can't live without Gnome, try Fuduntu instead. It work much better and has a rolling release with Gnome 2.32 desktop. Life is much easier and intuitive in Fuduntu. Fedora 18 Gnome gets a rating of 8.35/10 from my side for being a solid stable distro with slick professional looks and good performance, but with Gnome 3 agonies. The score distribution is given below:
Fedora 18 Gnome
Score
Weights
Installation time
10.00
5%
Installation Complexity
8.00
5%
Hardware detection
10.00
10%
Applications
8.25
20%
Aesthetics & Usability
7.00
30%
Performance & Stability
9.00
30%
Overall
8.35
100%
You can download the 32 and 64 bit editions from here.
You've mentioned several times that flashplugin is not installed by default, you've also even given the internet a rating of 8 for Fedora because of the flashplugin.
If Fedora forgot to include flashplugin or never got around to it then I would be in agreement with you but Fedora has good strong reasons not to include it, and they never will or provide anyway to easily install it yourself, because of this the low rating and complaints are mistaken or based upon false misunderstandings.
Fedora will only include flashplugin if Adobe makes it open source, which will never happen. Therefore Fedora will never include it, especially being on the edge of linux development, and I suppose you will always and forever give it a poor rating.
Please don't take this as an offensive comment, I'm not sure if you understand that there's a reason for not only Fedora not including flashplugin but also not making it easy to be installed. Some other distros at least make it a little easier but Fedora has good intentions to not even do that.
I agree with you on not providing flashplugin or restricted multimedia codecs as one the principles that Fedora adheres to. I respect it. Even I have mentioned the same in my article as well. Even I have mentioned in my article how I installed the restricted codecs and Adobe flash to make my Fedora installation work as I desire.
But, when I benchmark, I have to take both pros and cons into account as well as what other competing distros are bringing on the table. I hope you understand.
You've mentioned several times that flashplugin is not installed by default, you've also even given the internet a rating of 8 for Fedora because of the flashplugin.
ReplyDeleteIf Fedora forgot to include flashplugin or never got around to it then I would be in agreement with you but Fedora has good strong reasons not to include it, and they never will or provide anyway to easily install it yourself, because of this the low rating and complaints are mistaken or based upon false misunderstandings.
Fedora will only include flashplugin if Adobe makes it open source, which will never happen. Therefore Fedora will never include it, especially being on the edge of linux development, and I suppose you will always and forever give it a poor rating.
Please don't take this as an offensive comment, I'm not sure if you understand that there's a reason for not only Fedora not including flashplugin but also not making it easy to be installed. Some other distros at least make it a little easier but Fedora has good intentions to not even do that.
I agree with you on not providing flashplugin or restricted multimedia codecs as one the principles that Fedora adheres to. I respect it. Even I have mentioned the same in my article as well. Even I have mentioned in my article how I installed the restricted codecs and Adobe flash to make my Fedora installation work as I desire.
DeleteBut, when I benchmark, I have to take both pros and cons into account as well as what other competing distros are bringing on the table. I hope you understand.
Thanks,
Arindam