Fedora Core 4 Test 3 Available
rexx mainframe writes "The Fedora Project would like to announce the release of Fedora Core 4 test 3; currently scheduled to be the final test release before
Fedora Core 4.
Included in this release are many various bugfixes, updated translations, and package updates.
Please report problems at:
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla
Fedora Core 4 Test 3 is available from:
http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux /core/test/3.92/
and at the mirrors."
root# emerge fedorea/core4
Calculating dependencies
emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy "fedorea/core4".
Damn...
i dont know whats scarrier,
MS Office Specialist
Amigan
or sending the post into the future from 2004
Because this is one of the biggest and most popular Linux distros around. You'll see this for Ubuntu, Mandrake, Debian... etc.
Stop being a whiner and put up with the one post every few weeks about a new release of a MAJOR LINUX DISTRO.
Frickin' babies.
I have an AMD64 system, but I'm on the 32-bit Debian because the AMD64 Debian is a pure 64-bit system. I need 32-bit binaries sometimes and I don't fancy setting up a chroot with 32-bit libraries just so I can use them.
Does the AMD64 Fedora handle 32-bit and 64-bit libraries in parallel? Does yum?
I rarely criticize things I don't care about.
Does Fedora Core 4 still use yum or will it move to apt4rpm? I don't mean to flame the yummers, but in my experience, apt4rpm is far better. And, in terms of GUIs, Synaptic works far better than gyum or yumex. Also, does it have NTFS support out of the box? That seemed to be the biggest complaint about FC3, that anyone dual-booting had to download the kernel module, realise you had downloaded the wrong module, check kernel version, download the right module, and finally modprobe it.
My search didn't turn that up. Thank you. :)
I rarely criticize things I don't care about.
Is there any comparison between this and Suse 9.3 (which seems to be the current best ditro for laptops)? I need something for my new Toshiba M40 and am thinking of picking up Suse 9.3 when I'm down in San Francisco seeing as Fedora takes so long between releases...
apt for i386-only systems. Only yum is "officially" supported/blessed, but apt is/will-be available in Fedora Extras , but not x86_64 because apt doesn't handle mixed i386/x86_64 systems (yet).
anyone got an apt-repository on this, so I can point my existing FC setup to it?
"Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
"Compared to the best known opensores webserver "Red Hat", Microsoft IIS:
* Has 276% better peak performance for static transactions.
* Has 63% better peak performance for dynamic content."
IIRC RHEL and Fedora don't use offical Linux releases. And if you think the whole OS is called "Linux", you're wrong.
"that bedroom coder Thorwaldes who publicly admits that he is in fact A HACKER???"
Apparently, you don't know what a hacker is. What you think is a hacker is really a cracker. Linus is a hacker, or one good at programming/using a computer.
The people who modded this as troll/flamebait have no sense of humor. So sad.
Runs OK for me.
But I seem to have lost some desktop icons.
Check his history, he has posted this same thing (funny or not) 15+ times already.
At the very least it deserves a (Redundant: -1).
I'd seriously consider using Fedora Core if it wasn't built for i386. Why in the world would I pay for a nice modern processor and not take advantage of it? Otherwise, it's a well-supported distro that looks and works great with some minor tweaking. This is why I use Gentoo.