Fedora installs the GNOME Desktop Environment by default.
Fedora is a desktop-oriented Linux distribution, and ususally features Red Hat's more experimental software.
System->Preferences->Desktop EffectsClick on the button labelled 'Enable Desktop Effects'Log out, then log back in.
There is no "default" in the sense that Fedora provides only one out of the box, or even one at all. The main "Desktop Edition" disc uses GNOME, but the project also provides discs for KDE, LXDE, and XFCE, as well as a CLI-only installation.
System Menu
RT Linux is a specific distribution of Linux, as is Fedora. You can install RT Linux over Fedora, but RT Linux isn't a program you install in a Fedora installation, but an entirely different installation altogether (and meant for different things; RT Linux is meant for specialty devices where the machine needs to manage devices and calculations in Real-time whereas Fedora is more a desktop/server distribution.)
to restore the color you can undo, or you can try to invert the colors back into the picture at one of the top settings on the program. to restore the color you can undo, or you can try to invert the colors back into the picture at one of the top settings on the program.
Go to Settings, general, accessibility and then select invert colors.
Go to Settings, General, Accessibility (At the bottom), Invert Colors On
Go into Settings > General > Accessibility > and turn off Invert Colors.
Most desktop Linux distributions (Ubuntu, Fedora, PCLinuxOS, OpenSUSE) are equally suitable for laptops.
Invert Level and Invert Elevation are one in the same. Invert Level = Invert Elevation (IE).