Fedora Core 3: What's in store?
Chris writes "To give you a feel for what to expect in Core 3, we've done 120 screenshots of a full installation of Fedora Core 3 Test 3. Our screenshots include Gnome, KDE, and XPce interfaces. This is the last planned test release before the final release, scheduled for November 1."
and the only good one is the one with the kernel panicking.... go and look out for it
"Nae Kin! Nae Quin! Nae laird! Nae master! We willna be fooled again!"
what reason do we have for upgrading now? these rapid release schedules are TOO rapid. i have stopped even looking for binary rpms anymore.
Make that XFce, not XPce.
Please, stop using Windows XP-like interfaces and 20pt fonts.
Thanks
What did they do, go a screen grab every time the screen changed?
I much prefer using Ubuntu(desktop) or Slackware(server) because I know what I installed and I know that it has sensible defaults which won't bug the hell out of me down the road. Fedora wants me to have a Windows desktop it seems. I just hate that.
They know that people will go to the most popular linux when they decide to make the switch and unfortunatly people stay with whatever crap they decide upon in the first place. I wished more people would use something else. I keep on telling everyone in my office "Anything but fedora!". The ones that switch to Gentoo, Ubuntu or Slackware (with dropline gnome) are really happy they did the switch. Others want to change but think it is too much hassle.
Personally, as a heavy Gnome user, I think the changes in Gnome 2.8 alone are worth the new version of Fedora. I've been waiting for "File Types" to be fully functional for awhile. When you want bleeding edge, you have to have a rapid release cycle.
OK, this will get me modded to troll, but isn't there something so... Linux-like... about someone very enthusiastically trumpeting an information page that consists of (drum roll) 120 unlabeled links...
the presence of nice GUI controls for ACL's?
Our screenshots include Gnome, KDE, and XPce interfaces.
And people wonder "Why Linux isn't on the desktop?"
The Linux kernel is _almost_ ready for the desktop, but someone needs to put a stop to this "Desktop" insanity of 2 main "desktop environments" with some unknown number of other widgets and toolkits.
If RH, or some other company would just say we are only going to support Gnome or KDE or preferably something else besides a windows knockoff, then we will have progress. And then only progress.
Someone needs to figure out how to install software on a Linux system, some logical and good separation between "root" and "normal guy", and so on.
A good start would be to look at what Apple has done with UNIX as well as their GUI enhancements, but please don't ship a knockoff that either.