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Last updated May 13, 2022 By Ankush Das 7 Comments
Fedora 36 is an exciting upgrade with numerous features and visual treats.
Can’t wait already? If you already installed (or upgraded) Fedora 36, we recommend following a few important things that can help enhance your desktop experience with Fedora 36.
If you still haven’t installed it, you may want to check out the feature list of Fedora 36 to explore more about it.
Some of the most essential things to do include:
No matter whether you have the latest and greatest out-of-the-box, it is always a good thing to perform a system update, refreshing the list of repositories and upgrading any packages pushed last minute.
You can do that from the GNOME Software Center (from the Updates section) or just use the terminal.
For the terminal, just use the following command:
A restart may be required to complete the system update.
Fedora installer provides a method to enable additional third-party repositories for convenience.
You should also get a prompt to do it in the Software Center.
However, only the RPM repository for NVIDIA driver, Google Chrome, and Steam are added and software such as VLC and MPV, usually available from RPM Fusion, will not be available.
So, if you need extra tools that aren’t usually available in the default repositories and the filtered RPM fusion repo, adding the RPM Fusion repo is a good idea.
To enable RPM Fusion (both free and non-free), Open a terminal and enter the following commands:
Fedora has Flatpak enabled by default. However, it adds a filtered repo (Fedora Flatpaks) to give you the ability to install selected Flatpak applications.
So, to get access to the wide range of Flatpak apps available, you can add the Flathub repository using the following command in the terminal:
The speed of downloading packages in Fedora can be enhanced by several methods. By selecting the fastest mirrors, package download speed can be increased. Furthermore, if you have a sufficiently faster internet connection, then, the number of parallel downloads can be changed to get faster downloads.
To do both the things, just edit the DNF configuration files located at /etc/dnf/dnf.conf.
For this, open a terminal and type:
Append the following lines to the file, save and exit:
While you can install and use the shiny new desktop experience with Fedora 36, you cannot play videos/media on it — yet.
Of course, you can choose to install VLC, MPV with codecs packed in. Or, just manually install the multimedia codecs?
To achieve any of those, you will have to eventually enable the RPM Fusion repository.
For instance, if you want to install the VLC player after enabling the RPM fusion repo, just type the following command in the terminal:
If you want to install the media codecs, use the following command:
If you are using the Wayland desktop session (which should be the default), you may encounter an error even after installing the necessary codecs. If you notice this error:
All you have to do is simply log in again with a Xorg desktop session and get it working.
After installation, the default hostname is set up as fedora.
So, if you want to personalize your system hostname after installation, you can use the following command to set a new hostname:
You can install essential Linux applications from the terminal using the dnf package manager or through the GNOME Software Center.
You can use the following command to install anything that you need:
To tweak the gnome look and feel, you need to install both GNOME Tweaks and the extensions manager app. It can be done either through the software center or through the terminal using the following command:
In my case, chrome-gnome-shell was automatically installed, which is required to make the browser extension work. You can refer to our resource on installing GNOME tweaks on Fedora if you still face issues with it.
It can be helpful to use some of the best GNOME extensions to enhance your desktop workflow.
This isn’t for you if you are already comfortable without a minimize button in the window.
But, if you want a dedicated minimize button, you can enable it using GNOME Tweaks by heading to the Window Titlebars option, and enabling the minimize button.
While you can already double-click on a window to maximize, you can still add the maximize button as well.
It is worth double-checking if you have the problem reporting enabled/disabled.
You can head to the Privacy settings, and then check if “Automatic Problem Reporting” is enabled/disabled.
If you are using a laptop, the default power saving options turn the screen blank and suspend it after a period of inactivity.
But, if you do not want that to happen, head to the power settings and disable the “Screen Blank” and “Automatic Suspend” options.
Additionally, you can also choose to display the battery percentage from the same settings.
Every distribution comes packed with the night light feature to help you reduce eye strain.
For Fedora, you can access it in the display settings and enable it or set a schedule for it to automatically enable/disable the night light as required.
This is rather a simple thing, but may annoy a first-time user if you want to view the folders listed first.
In that case, go to preferences in Files and toggle the Sort Folders Before Files option as shown in the image below.
We tend to delete things, but then forget to delete them from the trash.
In such cases, the size of the trash/bin grows, and we may end up with low storage space.
To avoid this, Go to Settings → Privacy and toggle the Automatic Delete Trash Content option as required.
The automatic deletion period can be set in the same window if you want to tweak that. The default value is set to 30 days.
Power profiles are accessible both from the Settings page and through the top panel (or the system tray).
Use the appropriate mode, like balanced (which should be the default for best performance) and power saver for better battery savings, and a minor hit to the performance.
If you notice any stutters with the system performance such as launching apps or the navigation in general, try disabling the animation from accessibility settings as shown in the image below.
With Flathub and third-party repositories enabled, if the need arises, you can head to the Software Center, and access the software repositories from the menu.
In this case, I have the nightly build, so it shows multiple repositories, but you will be limited to the stable repos.
As per your use case, you can do countless more things with your Fedora 36 system.
After all, you get some of the latest and greatest packages (and kernel). So, feel free to explore more.
What do you normally do after installing/upgrading to a new version of Fedora? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below.
Like what you read? Please share it with others.
A passionate technophile who also happens to be a Computer Science graduate. You will usually see cats dancing to the beautiful tunes sung by him.
Lack of video / multimedia support is a tragic hit in this distro. Killed my development for time being.
It’s not lacking. It just doesn’t come by default but can be installed easily.
Thanks loads, some bits I hadn’t seen previously
Thanks for the list ! Small typo on step 4, in the copy-paste lines, you wrote “max_parellel_downloads=10” instead of “max_parallel_downloads=10”. And wouldn’t that step be more interesting to perform before the system update ?
Thanks for noticing it. I have updated the article now.
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