Wednesday, November 26th 2008

Fedora 10 Ready for Download

The Fedora Project, a Red Hat sponsored and community-supported open source collaboration project, today announced the availability of Fedora 10, the latest version of its free open source operating system distribution. Fedora 10 features numerous leading-edge technologies and continues to lay the groundwork for derivative open source distributions throughout the enterprise.
"Fedora volunteer contributors and Red Hat engineers worked together to develop the cutting-edge features found in Fedora 10. Their widespread appeal, combined with Fedora's policy of collaborating with upstream free software communities, means that many of these features will be found in other Linux distributions in the future," said Paul Frields, Fedora project leader at Red Hat.

Approximately every six months, contributors from Fedora's membership of over 17,000 people collaborate to produce a complete, general-purpose, no-cost software platform. Since its inception, Fedora has adopted a leadership role in the development of open source software and continuously demonstrates its potential across the enterprise. This community of users and developers have blazed the trail in key feature development and actively forms the roadmap for open source technologies found in many platforms, including Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

Fedora 10, the tenth release in five years, features substantial virtualization improvements for remote installation and management of storage provisioning. These features will make system administration of virtual machine hosts and guests easier and more capable of automation, especially as they are integrated into Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Additionally, Fedora 10 includes NetworkManager connection sharing, allowing laptop users with an Ethernet or mobile broadband connection to provide Internet routing to others through the laptop wireless interface, for instant collaboration anywhere, anytime.

"With the release of Fedora 10, the Fedora Project continues its tradition of innovation and community. Fedora sets the standards for technical features that are relevant to everyone from desktop users to the business enterprise, and advance free software worldwide," said Frields.

This release includes the premiere of a new graphical boot system called Plymouth, designed to speed up the boot process by taking advantage of a new kernel mode setting feature. Plymouth was designed by Fedora contributors and targeted primarily at ATI cards, but will be expanded in the future to support a broader range of media cards. Fedora 10 also features increased hardware support for a vast array of webcams, and better handling of printers via both direct physical connections and networks. Further, PackageKit, a software management tool that originally debuted in Fedora 9, has been extended in this release to provide on-demand codec software installation.

Fedora 10 also enhances its commitment to security with a new security auditing and detection toolkit called SecTool, and a brand-new set of Python bindings that allow programmers to use the FIPS-140 validated NSS library for rapid development of secure applications. The distribution also extends the Live USB persistence feature that was pioneered in Fedora 9, adding support for a separate user data area with optional encryption for the ultimate experience in secure, portable computing. Among the many new and enhanced features, Fedora 10 includes the all-new OpenOffice.org 3.0 and GNOME 2.24.1, for maximum desktop productivity and ease of use; a rewritten audio system for faster response and lower power usage; a full set of appliance building tools; and support for more hardware than any other operating system.

The Fedora Project will host a Fedora Users and Developers Conference (FUDCon) from January 9-11, 2009, in Boston, Mass. A free event open to all attendees, FUDCon provides an opportunity for community members and key contributors to come together and dedicate time working on challenges of common interest, polishing code and developing new features for the next groundbreaking release of Fedora.

For more information on FUDCon, please visit fedoraproject.org/wiki/FUDCon/FUDConF11.

For more information on Fedora 10, to download the distribution or to join this community effort, please visit fedoraproject.org/.

Read the Fedora 10 Release Notes, here: docs.fedoraproject.org/release-notes/f10/
Source: Fedora
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9 Comments on Fedora 10 Ready for Download

#1
caleb
Nice to see linux slowly developing into a normal OS.
Still SuSe feels the most 'normal' out of them all but still needs a lot of work with its Yast.
Posted on Reply
#2
Unregistered
calebNice to see linux slowly developing into a normal OS.
Still SuSe feels the most 'normal' out of them all but still needs a lot of work with its Yast.
What defines normal in this instance? Is it the non-evolving clunky Windows by any chance?
#3
AddSub
Fedora is probably the most cutting edge distro out there. Also, from my own experience it offers the greatest hardware support. For instance, it supports both my hardware and software RAID based configurations out of the box, neither Ubuntu or SuSE do that. Same goes for lot of my hardware as well. Including perfect support for my SLI configuration, which is a bit flaky under Ubuntu/SuSE.

Also, for the first time in over a decade since I've been tinkering around with Linux (my first distro was Red Hat back in 1997) a latest Linux distro supports more hardware than latest Windows offering. I'm speaking of Vista of course.

Two of my printers, one of my mice, a professional A/V capture card, 56K based external modem (this modem should work on any OS since it is hw/firmware based), and my X-Fi sound card/chipset all refuse to work.... on Vista. All this hardware works just fine on the latest Fedora offering. Linux vs WinOS, things have changed in the last decade. In a big way. Also, Fedora's file manager makes Windows Explorer like a broken-down Ford Pinto in comparison. Both in usability and raw speed.
Posted on Reply
#4
zithe
Woot. Once I get a SATA drive, I'm migrating back to Fedora. :)
Posted on Reply
#5
Wile E
Power User
These 6 month release cycles are killing me. I just got 9 completely tweaked to where I want it. :(

Is the Livna repo up for 10 yet?
Posted on Reply
#6
ch13f121
Too bad Fedora 10 doesn't detect my ICH9R RAID 0, the one thing it did well the last time I used Fedora. Works fine with 9, but if I upgrade to 10 it doesn't detect it.

Oh well, back to Ubuntu 8.10 until they fix it.
Posted on Reply
#7
caleb
v-zeroWhat defines normal in this instance? Is it the non-evolving clunky Windows by any chance?
Dont get me wrong I work with linux everyday. I enjoy its performance as a http/database server and I wouldnt trade Kate editor for anything as it is simply the best and fastest editor for programming and theres no such tool for windows. But as a desktop station linux is still very tiny compared to the hated Windows. I used kde3 and 4 and you cannot do anything by intuition. Im not the last noob in computers but I cant change(find) screensaver settings in suse11 KDE4. Fact is that Windows is about 20 years ahead with GUI and IMHO all linux distros try to be Windows no matter what too much.

Its a nice tool for work but not for regular multitask home computer.
Posted on Reply
#8
yosyp
without mp3 and dvd playback support, no way that I will spend my time with this "OS".
Posted on Reply
#9
Wile E
Power User
yosypwithout mp3 and dvd playback support, no way that I will spend my time with this "OS".
One word: Livna
Posted on Reply
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