You may want to ask yourself why Red Hat despite having a lot more money and investing some of it in desktop Linux still has a fraction of the market share of Ubuntu. They are in a great position to dominate that market.
Instead we get a very rapid iteration with a 6 month release cycle that continually pulls in new tech prior to it actually being ready while it still has massive issues with end user experience including but certainly not limited to gnome 3, pulseaudio, gnome 3, wayland by default in 2016 which is now 6 years later supposedly almost fully ready for prime time.
My experience running Fedora for 7 years is that each release was a chance to play with new tech and fix new broken things. In place upgrades were also extremely dicey making a fresh install of the new version necessary every 6-9 months.
This is great for a toy less great great for something you intend to use. I'm sure current proponents say its great now but they literally have been saying the same thing forever.
Instead we get a very rapid iteration with a 6 month release cycle that continually pulls in new tech prior to it actually being ready while it still has massive issues with end user experience including but certainly not limited to gnome 3, pulseaudio, gnome 3, wayland by default in 2016 which is now 6 years later supposedly almost fully ready for prime time.
My experience running Fedora for 7 years is that each release was a chance to play with new tech and fix new broken things. In place upgrades were also extremely dicey making a fresh install of the new version necessary every 6-9 months.
This is great for a toy less great great for something you intend to use. I'm sure current proponents say its great now but they literally have been saying the same thing forever.