GNU/Linux Fedora 39 Installing Kodi 19 – QuickStart Guide
Hi! The Tutorial shows you Step-by-Step How to Install Kodi 19.x Matrix in Fedora 39 GNU/Linux Desktop.
And Kodi for Fedora 39 (formerly known as XBMC) is Award-Winning Free and Open Source (GPL) Software Media Center for Executing Videos, Music, Pictures, Games, and more.
Especially relevant: Kodi Nightly Builds are as Stable (if not more so) as Beta Builds, since only Bug Fixes are going in right now.
Again about the Kodi Features:
- Music: Kodi can play all your music including AAC, MP3, FLAC, OGG, WAV and WMA formats.
- Movies: Kodi can Execute All the Main Video Formats, including streamable online media, ISOs, 3D, H.264, HEVC, WEBM.
- TV Shows: The TV shows library supports episode and season views with posters or banners, watched tags, show descriptions and actors.
- Photos: Import Pictures into a library and browse the different views, start a slideshow, sort or filter them all using your remote control.
- PVR and Live TV: Kodi allows you to Watch and Record Live TV all from the GUI interface. It works with a number of popular backends including MediaPortal, MythTV, NextPVR, Tvheadend, VDR, Windows Media Center, and more.
- Add-ons: Take Kodi to a whole new level with the vast selection of community created add-ons that are available though our repositories.
- Skin: Kodi allows you to completely Change the whole GUI.
- UPnP: With UPnP compatibility you can stream to and from any other Kodi instances and play to other UPnP compatible devices in your home with ease
- Web Interfaces: Interact with Kodi using its JSON-RPC based remote interface.
- Remote Controls: With support for hundreds of remote controls, CEC-compatible TVs, or one of the new Smartphone and Tablet Apps, Kodi allows you to control your media your way.
Finally, we provide here to Setup Kodi Flatpak App, because that on the Rpm Fusion currently isn’t working.
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1. Launching Shell Emulator
Open a Terminal window
(Press “Enter” to Execute Commands)
2. Setting Up Flatpak
How to Install Flatpak on Fedora 39
First, check if it’s already there:which flatpak
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