TechRadar Verdict
Redcore Linux does a decent job of offering the convenience of a live-installable distro such as Ubuntu, but with the robustness and malleability of Gentoo.
Ready-to-use
Rolling-release
Binary packages
Infrequent releases
Sparse documentation
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Redcore Linuxis a Live installable rolling-releaseLinux distrothat’s based on Gentoo. While its parent Gentoo Linux often tops the list of distros aimed atpower users, or experienced Linux users, Redcore instead offers the stability and flexibility of Gentoo in a newbie friendly avatar.
The project started as a continuation of Kaigon Linux, which shut shop in 2016. Redcore however retains its predecessor’s raison d’etre, which is to bring the power of Gentoo to the masses.
The latest release, named Orion, continues the project’s tradition of naming each release after a constellation, star, planet, galaxy, nebulae, and such.
Installation and use
The reason why Gentoo is often touted as a distro ill-suited fornovice Linux usersis because of the complex and involved installation process, which can take hours, if not days, depending on your configuration.
Contrast this with distros such as Fedora, openSUSE,Ubuntuand others, and you can see why Gentoo isn’t as popular with newbies, despite its many robust qualities. Redcore Linux strives to bridge the gap, by offering a graphical point-and-click installer that streamlines the process and makes it a whole lot easier.
Although the distro initially offered users the choice of LXQt as well as KDEdesktop environments, the one-man distro now just sticks with KDE due to a manpower crunch.
The barebones KDE desktop features two icons, ‘Install’ and ‘Ask for help’. Click the former to launch the distro-neutral Calamares installer, which quickly runs you through all the essential steps such as selecting the keyboard layout, timezone, user creation as well as partitioning.
Unlike most other desktop distros, Redcore doesn’t feature a first-boot wizard when you boot into your fresh installation. The distro takes up nearly 14 GB of disk space, and offers a blend of useful and surprising applications out of the box.
In addition to the Firefoxweb browser, Redcore offers a handful of otheropen source appsacross all the usual desktop-centric categories such as Multimedia, Internet, Graphics, and more.
Under these you’ll find all the usual suspects including the VLC and MPVmedia players, Libreofficeoffice suite, Okular document reader, Konversation IRC client,Steam gamingclient, and a whole lot more.
Redcore also offers a number of useful utilities such as WoeUSB and balenaEtcher to help you create bootableUSB drivesorSD cards, as well as esoteric tools such as Fontforge, if you want to create your own fonts, and even K3b, should you decide to burn CD/DVD disks.
You can easily tweak the KDE desktop, which is rather vanilla out of the box, by adding useful widgets to the desktop, such as a calendar or a quick share button.
Features
By its own admission, Redcore Linux targets casual desktop users and, to some extent, even power users. While power users have enough skill and experience to tackle problems, new Linux users require a bit more hand holding.
The ‘Ask for help’ icon on the desktop fires up Firefox and takes you to the distros’ Freenode IRC channel. Unfortunately, this is the extent of the official help and support, as the wiki on the website is rather bare, and even out of date in some places.
The biggest regular-user centric feature in Redcore is the use of pre-compiled binary packages, unlike the source-based ones used in upstream Gentoo.
A related notable characteristic of the distro is its rolling-release nature. Most popular desktop distros, such as Ubuntu, follow a fixed release cycle, striving for two releases every year, at six month intervals.
But the rolling release model, where you can keep the installation up-to-date by continually applying the updates as they are released, is starting to attract the attention of the average desktop Linux user as well. The success of a rolling-release distro largely depends on its software management tool.
To that end, Redcore ships with Sysiphus, a graphical frontend for the sisyphus package manager. It allows you to install and purge binary packages, as well as perform system updates, and even manage orphaned packages.
While newbies will appreciate the point-and-click package manager, experienced users can use Gentoo’s famedportagepackage manager as well assysiphus-clito perform the same functions using the command-line interface (CLI).
The competition
Rolling-release distros came to the fore with the rising popularity of Arch Linux and Gentoo. Both these distros, despite their speed and flexibility, are frequently labelled as power user distros because of the complex and involved installation process.
Many distros however have attempted to provide live-installable derivatives that leverage the power of these distros. Manjaro Linux is one of the best known rolling-release distros that’s based onArch Linux, but it isn’t the only one. For users who favour Gentoo, Sabayon Linux offers similar functionality.
BothManjaroand Sabayon have a dedicated team of developers and a legion of devoted users, who can step up in case the main development team decides to go on an unannounced hiatus.
While we appreciate the efforts it takes to create and manage a distro, Redcore will need to announce and stick to a release schedule or at least have a semblance of one.
Final Verdict
Despite its minimalist offerings, the distro should appeal to all KDE users, as well as users looking for a fast and responsive distro that’s easy to tweak.
Although Redcore is a solid distro in its own right, it offers little of value to distinguish itself from more established peers such as Sabayon, except offering a limited number of applications out of the box giving users the option to tailor the distro as per their needs.
The second major issue with Redcore is a lack of original official documentation, which is kind of imperative for distros such as this one that’s trying to help inexperienced campaigners get acclimatized to tools, such as Sisyphus package manager, which help lessen the blow of the raw power of its base.
With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’sTechRadar Pro’sexpert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.
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