The document does start by calling back to its predecessor:
Fedora Silverblue provides a useful workstation build on an immutable operating system. In “What is Silverblue?“, you learned about the benefits that an immutable OS provides. But what pieces go into making it? This article examines some of the technology that powers Silverblue.
…which steers the reader towards reading that previous article if they haven’t already. That article is relatively more introductory, though still not really targeted at a beginner.
In practice there’s always going to be a “ladder” of sources with progressively increasing complexity. I also enjoy reading scientific articles outside my formal training, but they still have some implicit prerequisites. For example, an article about virology that’s accessible to the interested layperson is nevertheless not going to define what a virus is from first principles. Likewise, “beginner” is relative and contextual. Do we target articles at someone who has literally never used a computer before? (I don’t mean that entirely facetiously - it’s indeed what home computer manual authors in the 1980s had to do.) I think practically we don’t - we orient to a userbase where virtually everyone has at least some level of everyday computing experience.
I certainly think there’s plenty of room for improvement in Fedora documentation, and that’s a current focus area for me and others. “Is this article appropriately pitched for its audience?” is a question I’m asking whenever I review a document at the moment.
The Fedora Magazine team is also very open to new writers and editors.
I very much agree with these ideals.