Fedora 21 Beta Released
An anonymous reader writes: The Fedora Project has been critical to the development Red Hat Enterprise Linux — RHEL version 7 was largely based off Fedora version 19. Fedora is continuing to evolve with the announcement of Fedora 21 Beta, now available from the Fedora Project website. To make the release ready for Beta testing required addressing 50 beta blocker bugs. If the Fedora Project developers are able to keep up with the final release blocker bugs, then Fedora 21 is expected to be released on December 9th. As a result, support for Fedora 19 is expected to end around the beginning of 2015. Released back in July 2013, Fedora 19 will have been supported for over 540 days by 2015. Previously, the longest a Fedora release was supported was Fedora Core 5 at 469 days. Users of Fedora 19 will be encouraged to upgrade to Fedora 20 or 21 to continue to get critical updates.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...
Next week: systemd announces integration of drugs.
Call me when I can install an OS as a server, and not have to worry about GUI crap, hotplug nonsense, the *Kits, and 100 other dependencies.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
Fedora has trial balloons and brain farts that might not every make it into RHEL. Screw Red Hat for making a separate distro.
Netcraft confirms it, Linux is dying.
Sh*t that Lennart broke!
At least they acknowlege the concept of "blocker bugs". Those doesn't seem to bother Ubuntu. See "Bug #1274672: Fresh install of 12.04.3 fails to upgrade to 14.04" You can't upgrade Ubuntu because of a packaging problem related to Xorg. Ubuntu developers tried to deny the problem, which has a few thousand hits on Google. Finally somebody installed the old version in an empty virtual machine and demonstrated that, even after a completely clean install, the upgrade wouldn't work.
(There's a workaround. Completely install Xorg and the GUI, and, from the command line, do the upgrade. Then re-install the GUI. Really. Wonder why Linux can't make it on the desktop? It's stuff like this.)
system failure big time
all is lost
save our souls
Compared to RHEL's support cycle of ten years, I mean jesus christ your counting support life in DAYS.
Having to bootstrap new Fedora 20 installs because they can't handle the network cards of the newer Haswell chipsets with their old 3.11 kernel has been an annoyance lately.
A Fedora community member releases periodic respins of Fedora stable releases; they're not official releases and they don't go through QA but FWIW I'd trust the guy if I needed a respun image in a pinch. http://jbwillia.wordpress.com/ is his site, you can find the spins at https://alt.fedoraproject.org/... .
I ditched Fedora 10 years ago because their releases were beta quality.
I have happily moved on to other distros.
Rubbish, there is XWin32 and many others. If some rare edge cases of gnome3 don't work on it then that's more likely a sign of not fully tested new parts of gnome3 than a lack of support for a "modern X desktop".
Yeah, I'm gonna be modded down just for the subject but I'd been using Fedora since 2004-ish and at this point I cannot believe I stuck with them so long. They're just as bad as Ubuntu in that the people in charge don't listen to the actual users, and really love making decisions without consulting or telling anyone first, or at all sometimes. The best example I give of that is when RedHat decided that they should pull the Elliptical Curve Cryptography routines out of openssl and didn't say a word about it. This wouldn't have mattered if there weren't also the problem that Bitcoin and related crypto-coin clients rely on the ECC routines and they're fundamentally broken without them. If you dig deep you'll find that someone finally figured it all out and started fixing openssl last year but by that time it'd already been a problem for at least 2 years. It seriously took 2 years for someone to finally track down the problem because RedShat decided to keep it quiet, and then it took another few months to fix it because their build system makes it next to impossible to "remove"(actually NOT remove) the code cleanly.
I'm simplifying a lot of this because it's been almost a year since I had to deal with that bullshit. I migrated to another distro that was not controlled by Canonical or RedShat and makes very few decisions without the users' knowledge(they've got issues but not nearly as bad).
Goodbye forever Fedora. I would appreciate it if you never call or text me again. Failure to comply will result in an emergency protective order.
Bonus: Captcha = unrest
http://www.linuxscreenshots.or...