THE LATEST VERSON of Fedora Linux is out.
Red Hat's Fedora Project claims the sequel to Fedora 11, imaginatively titled Fedora 12, goes like the clappers compared to previous versions.
All software packages on the 32-bit (x86_32) architecture have been compiled for i686 systems, with optimisations for the Intel Atom processors used in many netbooks. However they remain compatible with the overwhelming majority of CPUs.
There are improvements to the way that updates are added thanks to some code called yum-presto that reduces update size by transmitting only the changes in the updated packages. Also, packages now use XZ rather than gzip for compression, providing smaller package sizes and more efficient handling. This allows more software to be stuffed into each Fedora image and uses less space on distribution mirrors.
There are some NetworkManager broadband enhancements. NetworkManager is the de facto network configuration tool used in many Linux distributions. The improvements make setting up network and mobile broadband connections easier. There is now Bluetooth support using a click-through process to access the Internet through your mobile phone. IPv6 networking support has also been improved.
PolicyKit integration has been added so configuration and security management can be done via a central policy where needed.
Fedora 12 has also adopted the next-generation Ogg Theora video 1.1, which has a better quality than earlier versions.
In addition it introduces experimental 3D support for AMD Radeon HD 2400 and later graphics cards. Systems with NVIDIA graphics chips also gain initial support for suspend and resume functionality.
There are also upgrades to the Gnome and KDE desktops as well as some virtualisation improvements.
A lot more detailed information about Fedora 12 and download links can be found at the announcement. µ
is dead
This sequel is actually imaginatively named Constantine...
Fedora's policy of forcing end users to recompile the kernel just to get to a root desktop killed off any interest I ever had for it years ago. Don't need no hand-holding security garbage keeping me from my god complex.
Finally a distro with all apps pre-compiled to 64-bit? Sweet. Why didn't they do this before? 64-bit has been the redheaded stepchild too long.
@mogwai, I get to a root desktop all the time, and I've never had to recompile the kernel. GDM may prevent it by default, but (a) I *think* there's a config file that controls that behavior now, and (b) I boot to a command prompt and start X manually - no need to boot to GDM
i download fedora 11 and when i setup it
the cd open in potable but when i prees 1st or 2d option and statrt to download
the tow light in my keybord flash ,
and stop setup
and write these word
unable to read super block
.
.
.
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""no files sys could mount root ,
tried "ext 3 ext4 ext4dev iso 9660 kernel panic - not syncing vfs : unable to mount root fs on unkown block 921
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
help me plz