Off topic, but what's with the overprotective DO NOT COPY WITHOUT PERMISSION statement on the article image? It's a screenshot of KDE, not the author's own work...
It's based on Ubuntu LTS, so it's not for me. Doesn't make sense that you'd want a bleeding-edge DE on an old kernel and system stack. I mean, I can understand if you're a KDE dev and you want a stable base to dev and test on, but if you're just a power user who wants to play with the latest and greatest, then using Ububtu makes no sense at all.
I've used KDE Neon on my desktop pretty much since KDE Neon came to be. I don't care too much about having the latest kernel and libraries on that machine (the hardware is a decade old - support's not really getting better), and between the latest KDE and getting most of my other apps through snaps I've got the latest and greatest of what I care about there.
The whole point of neon is to showcase the DE, they say as much on the website. Unless you’re super passionate about KDE Development, it’s probably not going to be for you
I also would like to know. I use KDE Neon right now, but a more up-to-date ubuntu base would be great. I just don't see a distro that does that and uses KDE. And I don't want to use a Canonical distro with all the stupid snaps and stuff
I prefer Debian derived distros (RH derivatives are fine as a technology, but I've been using Debian derivatives for so long that RedHat feels like coming home and finding someone has rearranged your cutlery drawer and all your plates - I don't care if your system makes more sense, in sure I'd get used to it but right now I can't find anything!)
I do most of my work in Docker or using tools I install from upstream
I don't really play games so don't care about marginal performance gains from newer drivers
Pretty much I just want a laptop that just works when I need it to, while still having a nice, friendly, modern interface and Neon does that.
Would you say that RH makes more sense than Debian? If so, in which ways? I"ve been using Debian for the last 10 years, so it feels like home to me too, but recently I've been curious about other distros.
Debian makes more sense to me because I've been using Debian and Ubuntu since people were getting excited about Debian Wheezy coming out soon.
What little I have used of RHEL and CentOS they seem to be pretty logically designed, just different. I hadn't come across any real WTFs trying to use them. RHEL makes Debian look bleeding edge and reckless with their updates by comparison
Not sure about Fedora, but it's already in extra-testing in Arch and has already been merged into master in NixOS apparently, so it should be hitting the general channels pretty soon hopefully.
Edit: apparently the Fedora 40 beta has Plasma 6 but I didn't check that myself, I just saw someone mention it.
For those upgrading, you might run into some bugs but there's a lot of documentation of them on their bugtracker now thankfully.
In my experience, my main panel disappeared and I had to re add a bunch of the dbus services that disappeared too but I think they've been sorted with hotfixes since yesterday.
The have 3 editions: User (stable, released packages), Testing (using stable version branches with updates, but not released/tested yet), Unstable (using development branches with new features, untested and not released yet)
I neither like, neither use KDE, so it is not easy to see all changes they made, but after initial quick look it looks same just like KDE looks, maybe less unpolished, but still same
And there is floating taskbar. I never seem floating taskbar before, I am not sure why it floats, it even looks good, but why it does it lol?