

Thx.
Sounds like the setup can be quite complicated. ;)
I might need to dive into that topic.


Thx.
Sounds like the setup can be quite complicated. ;)
I might need to dive into that topic.


Sure, it always does.
I’m fine choosing the best fitting distro from all these points mentioned in the post you linked.
Unfortunately the post does not cover the only question I have: Is there a distro with specially good multi Keyboard layout support.
For most people - including myself - this is never an issue, because they use only one layout. But especially people from countries with non latin alphabets really need this.


He may have a limited ability to understand what she needs from her os as a dual language user, and as a non technical user she may not either in a way that’s helpful to him in trying to understand the options and setup process in front of him. A less technical user may not be able to communicate how or why something isn’t working the way they need, and he has no context or experience from which to infer.
Yes, that’s exactly it. I can technically set it it up somehow. But I have no feeling for how the layout switch should work well.
My wife on the other hand had problems to pinpoint what exactly make it feel unnatural when switching the layout. But as I figured out thx to another comment, many Korean keeboards have a dedicated key to switch the layout.
My wife is a typer on the keyboard. And it might happen that she needs to switch the layout multiple times within a minute. Therefore this is something that should work without issues.


No, thx.


You’re right! I just checked and it was a dedicated key to switch the layout. That makes it easier!
I think one thing that bothered my wife when she used my notebook was the keyboard shortcut to switch the language.


Thanks! I’ll check out the videos.


True! Most stable system I ever used.
I think, because of Fedoras atomic desktops. I didn’t use any of them yet, but it seems like Flatpaks should be used there, since one should (or can?) not install tradional packages there. Therefore Fedora provides the flatpaks anyway and they can be used on the non atomic desktops as well.
Another reason is, that you might not be able to install the latest version of an application as rpm package if a required dependency in the repo is outdated. A Flatpak usually does not have the issue since a newer version would include the fitting runtime. This said, I do think its not this big of an issue for fedora which is usually quite up to date. But if you run a distribution with LTS releases or something like Debian you will much more likely have older dependencies in your repositiry.
lol.