- Plymouth is demonstrated brilliantly, seamless video mode transitions from kernel load until shut down.
- Installer is very fast, by means of image copying. Configuration is delayed where possible to the first boot in the new installation, where the environment is far more responsive.
- Automatically detected heterogeneous dual monitor configuration.
- RPM Fusion is easy to set up.
- KDE4 configuration is the best I've seen in a binary distro to date, and the GNOME setup is very clean and snappy.
- New partitions can only be positioned at the beginning of free regions.
- BIOS RAID metadata is not ignored, and can crash the installer.
- The updater is slow, and doesn't provide much information on what's going on.
- There's no way to configure package sources in a GUI.
- No proprietary packages, and no immediate documentation is provided on how to obtain these (MP3 codecs, nVidia drivers), but RPM Fusion can alleviate this a little.
- It can be difficult to identify exactly which package to install, with the enormous description text being more visible than the package name itself.
- Default IM is Empathy (which isn't a feature parity replacement for Pidgin yet).
- I experienced some bugs in Rhythmbox which could be related to choices or misconfiguration in GTK+ or some other component.
Not yet as usable as Ubuntu, even considering the policy surrounding proprietary software and RPM Fusion. However this is the best Fedora release since Fedora 7.
Score:
5/10.
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