- What: KDE Linux, an immutable Linux distribution by the KDE project, has enabled delta updates, reducing update sizes significantly.
- Impact: Users of KDE Linux will experience smaller and faster system updates.
KDEās Nate Graham has published a status update about KDE Linux , the KDE projectās new immutable Linux distribution, intended to be the āKDE OSā showcasing the best of the KDE community. While the project is approaching the beta stage, itās currently still in alpha, but from what I gather from friends who are using it, the alpha label might actually be like how Haiku is supposedly still alpha: intended more to scare people away for now than ana ctual descriptor of the state of the software. Recently, KDE Linux enabled delta updates, possibly dramatically reducing the size of updates. Before delta updates were enabled, a system update would come in at 7GB, while with delta updates enabled, itās gone down to 1-2GB. In addition, plasma-setup and plasma-login-manager have been added to KDE Linux, which are, respectively, a first-run setup assistant and KDEās new login manager. This new login manager was forked from SDDM, and specifically targets Wayland, and comes with much deeper Plasma integration than SDDM. Note that SDDM will remain available for platforms that donāt use Wayland. KDE Linux has also massively improved its hardware support, and the list is long; from scanners to fancy multi-button mice, from Android devices to professional audio devices, and much more. Performance has been improved as well, the boot manager menu will no longer be shown at every boot but only when needed, the wireless regulatory domain is now properly set and managed, and much, much more. Iām keeping an eye on KDE Linux as a possible replacement for my Fedora KDE installations if Fedora ever loses the plot, even if itās an immutable distribution relying on Flatpak. Iām a KDE user, and I want the latest and greatest the KDE community has to offer without going through an distributor.