If you’ve ever needed to install Fedora Linux on a headless server, a Raspberry Pi, or any machine without a monitor attached, you’ve probably reached for VNC or RDP. They work – but as the installer moves to a web-based interface, there’s a new opportunity to do something more native to that model. We’re building it, and we want your input before we go too far down a path that’s hard to reverse.
Why This Is Happening
The Anaconda installer’s Web UI first landed in Fedora Linux 42 Workstation and was extended to all Live spins in Fedora Linux 43. It’s a full graphical installer built on Cockpit tooling and using PatternFly widgets. The GUI is rendered in a fullscreen browser window – but until now, that browser had to be running on the same machine you’re installing onto.
Here’s the thing: VNC and RDP were built around the GTK interface. While RDP could technically work with the Web UI too (it operates at the display level), a remote browser is a much better fit – orders of magnitude less data and much lower UI latency. As the Web UI becomes the primary installer interface across Fedora Linux editions, it needs its own native remote access story.
On top of that, there are two more forces pushing in the same direction.










