


We implemented OEM install mode in Calamares so the other way to get neon is to buy a KDE Slimbook III and it’ll use that. Alas trying the installable ISOs today we found some bugs in the Git Calamares installer so they’re not published yet but the upgrader will still popup on existing installs.

Testing and Unstable edition, these are built from the soon-to-be-released Git branches and the untested Git branches.

The installable ISOs are also updated and this time they all use the Calamares installer. It’ll ask you to make sure your system is up to date then it’ll upgrade the base to 20.04 which takes a while to download and then another while to install.Īfterwards it should look just the same because it’s the same wonderful Plasma desktop. You should see a popup on your install in the next day or so. It’s based on Ubuntu who had a new Long Term Support Release recently so we’ve rebased it on Ubuntu 20.04 now. KDE neon is our installable Linux with continuous integration and deployment. With the most recent KDE Plasma desktop environment, KDE neon is an installable Linux distribution based on Ubuntu. We have a write-up that goes over the various reasons why your Windows 10 machine may not be compatible.The KDE neon ISO image has been updated. WhyNotWin11 is a simple way to find out if your machine is ready for Windows 11. The interface provides clear results and is also color-coded. There are now eleven categories included (well played, eleven for Windows 11) Boot Type, CPU Architecture/Generation/Core Count/Frequency, DirectX Support, Disk Partitioning, RAM, Secure Boot, Storage, and whether or not TPM minimum is activated. WhyNotWin11 runs through the currently known system requirements for Windows 11 and then provides you with the results. WhyNotWin11 lets you know if your machine is Windows 11 compatible by running a small script.
