Alan Cox: Fedora 18 "The Worst Red Hat Distro," Switches To Ubuntu 380
An anonymous reader writes "Linux kernel developer veteran Alan Cox has lashed out at Red Hat's recent release of Fedora 18. Cox posted comments to his Google+ page saying 'Fedora 18 seems to be the worst Red Hat distro I've ever seen.' He encountered numerous problems with Fedora 18 and then decided to switch to Ubuntu."
forgot RH7 (Score:5, Interesting)
THAT POS came with the bastardized !GCC 2.96, totally butchered by RH.
Ugly, ugly incompatibilities abounded. Even "build from source" didn't work very well, since the compiler was not really "C", or any other language.
Re: forgot RH7 (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe you are wrong: http://www.redhat.com/advice/speaks_gcc.html [redhat.com]
Re: forgot RH7 (Score:5, Funny)
The flamewar is strong with these ones.
Re: forgot RH7 (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe you are wrong: http://www.redhat.com/advice/speaks_gcc.html [redhat.com]
He's right about ugly incompatibilities. Old code which complied fine and compiled on other platforms didn't work on RH7. That the underlying reason was non-standards compliant programming and a much stricter compiler didn't change the problem. It also didn't help that the compiler was enforcing c++ standards against c code.
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This is the Linux community. I'm surprised that a more standard-compliant compiler is a "bad thing" now.
I'm no expert, but the site http://www.redhat.com/advice/speaks_gcc.html [redhat.com] is listening the bugs in the broken gcc and is listening them after the language: C, C++ and Assembler.
You would think that the open source and Linux community would rather have a much stricter compiler then to rely solely on a specific branch of gcc.
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:5, Insightful)
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Fedora Core 4 also had a fucked up compiler. You couldn't compile a kernel with it.
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:4, Interesting)
THAT POS came with the bastardized !GCC 2.96, totally butchered by RH.
The most egregious abuse that Red Hat has perpetrated upon the Linux community in my humble opinion - and this is hard because there are just so many candidates to choose from - but the worst of the worst in my opinion is using script files for network initialization instead of designing some sane file format as Debian did. Thou shall not excute thy data unless thou be a LISP interpreter. Red Hat guys, please stop that crap, it's the level of design competence we might expect from Microsoft.
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:5, Insightful)
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To be honest, I'd be much happier if Redhat/Fedora leveraged a more Debian-like system. I mean, with systemd and all; but call apache2 apache2 instead of 'httpd' (isn't nginx httpd?), have /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled} and so on; /etc/default instead of /etc/sysconfig and the huge mess in there; and so on. Also apt and deb outstrip RPM and Yum in just about every way, from stability to speed to feature set; yum has all kinds of plug-ins that poorly approximate some of the basic features of apt l
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:5, Informative)
I concur that. I switched to Debian after the fiasco of RH7 and never looked back.
You do know that RH 7 came out in 2000 and was discontinued after RH 9 in 2003 for Redhat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) version 2. The latest release of RHEL is version 6 which will be supported for 13 years. Go to the Redhat site, they don't hide anything if you don't believe me.
Personally I don't really like the Debian distributions and prefer the Fedora/Redhat ones since I have never had many problems with Fedora Core 7 and have updated regularly all the way to Fedora 18 which IMHO is actually the best distribution to date although I would say that the new installer is a little bit cosmetically challenged, however it does what it is supposed to do and it does it well. I do think Alan Cox's statement saying that the new installer is unusable is totally wrong, although I do agree it is different.
For me to go from Fedora 17 to Fedora 18 I always do a fresh install of the OS which in this case took me about 45 minutes, then it took me an additional 30 minutes to install all software i use and potentially use. Then it took me about an hour to do the updates on over 1700 packages and during that time I actually did other things such as watching a video and surfing the web on the machine I was updating.
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:4, Funny)
Personally I don't really like the Debian distributions and prefer the Fedora/Redhat ones since I have never had many problems with Fedora Core 7 and have updated regularly all the way to Fedora 18 which IMHO is actually the best distribution to date although I would say that the new installer is a little bit cosmetically challenged, however it does what it is supposed to do and it does it well. I do think Alan Cox's statement saying that the new installer is unusable is totally wrong, although I do agree it is different.
I'm running a Redmond distribution, Windows 7 I think it's called. It's not bad, reasonably stable, the installer works just fine, has a nice polished look to it, and seems to have built-in Wine support because Office runs fine on it. I've heard it's been forked into something called Metro/Win8 which is pretty unpleasant, so I'll be sticking with the current distro for awhile.
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:5, Funny)
I'm running a Redmond distribution, Windows 7 I think it's called. It's not bad, reasonably stable, the installer works just fine, has a nice polished look to it, and seems to have built-in Wine support because Office runs fine on it. I've heard it's been forked into something called Metro/Win8 which is pretty unpleasant, so I'll be sticking with the current distro for awhile.
I tried that same distribution, I tried really hard to like it, I really did, but it just didn't work out. After a couple of weeks of constant irritations like being nagged about viruses and rebooting in the middle of important work I just gave up. That Windows distribution is trying hard to imitate Linux but just can't seem to get the details right.
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:forgot RH7 (Score:5, Insightful)
Once you've got it running it's a mixed bag. The built-in Wine is flat-out awesome (it even has near-perfect compatibility with DirectX) but the preinstalled software is extremely sparse for such a big distro (you don't even get GCC!), for some reason the login screen doesn't allow you to select the window manager, leaving you stuck with the default one... Oh yeah, and you can't even get out of X11 while the system is running. No shell, no nothing. Who does that?
I'd recommend it for compatibility purposes only. If you need Wine for something this is the distro to use. For everything else just use another distro.
Come on, Alan ;( (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Come on, Alan ;( (Score:5, Funny)
They can't all be the worst!
You might very well think that, but then you encounter the non-Euclidean badness that is Unity/Gnome3 and all sanity goes out the window.
A million distributions, all simultaneously worse than each other is entirely possible with the way that Linux desktop development is trending at the moment.
Re:Come on, Alan ;( (Score:5, Informative)
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They can't all be the worst!
No, they can't, but as far as I am concerned it''s a tossup between Fedora 18 and Ubuntu 12.x when it comes to deciding which is more crappy. Ubuntu absolutely dies when I fire up VirtualBox and it has a legion of really annoying bugs, some of which have been around since 11.x or earlier; as for Fedora 18 the 64 bit version didn't even boot on my IBM desktop. Still searching for a Linux distro that actually does a modicum of QA...
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slackware is nice ... ?
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>If you don't like it you can uninstall it.
That's like saying if someone shits in your bed you can always wash your bedding. The fact is that they shit in your bed.
People use Red Hat? (Score:2, Insightful)
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The first distro I ever bought was a Red Hat 4.something in a retail box. Tried several others, including Mandrake when it appeared ('cause at the time Red Hat didn't have KDE and I wanted to try it.) Settled on Debian for a number of years, then switched to Ubuntu. Using Ubuntu now, but considering a future switch to Mint.
Re:People use Red Hat? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you like Ubuntu okay and are frustrated with other distros, you will probably love Mint. I've moved on to Mint's Debian Edition, which still has some unfortunate flaws, but I keep hoping they'll change their focus to the Debian base and just forget Ubuntu. I keep testing new releases when they become available, thinking maybe I'm missing something. Invariably I wipe the test partitions and sleep well knowing Mint works for me, looks how I like, does everything I ask of it, and is reliable. Of course I call this sort of testing "fun," but it reaffirms my OS choice. And BTW, I had high hopes for Fedora 18, but it is a joke.
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Darkside (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome Alan! We've been waiting for you.
ONE OF US!! ONE OF US!!
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He will realize Ubuntu has problems, and he will eventually switch to Debian.
Give him a few weeks.
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Go Arch (Score:4, Informative)
After making the switch from Ubuntu to Fedora after the Unity fiasco, I recently switched from F17 to Arch due to all the delays. I couldn't be happier.
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If you want Ubuntu without all the bullshit just use Debian.
FTFY.
U = D + BS_U
LM = U - BS_U/2 + BS_LM
Re:Go Arch (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know - pure Debian tends to be a bit conservative and lagging. Have they made the switch to ELF yet?
Re:Go Arch (Score:5, Funny)
I guess you haven't tried Debian experimental.
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bullshit like ... support? That's fine if you are a home hobby user, but not in a corporate env. We need someone to blame.
Redhat provides that.
Ubuntu provides that.
Arch, mint, debian do not - except from 3rd parties. I'm not claiming that 3rd party support is not really better, just that explaining that to management is a loosing effort.
Re:Go Arch (Score:5, Interesting)
Where I work we purchase Debian support from HP. We're a huge HP shop, so all HP blades and storage systems (EVA 4400 and 6000). It's nice to have the same contacts for both hardware and software support. I don't understand why HP doesn't market this more.
Re:HP provides Debian support? (Score:4, Informative)
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I actually find pacman to be a little better than apt/aptitude. Additionally, dealing with packages not in the standard repos tends to be a better experience in Arch.
On the flip side of the coin though, Arch feels a bit like Gentoo at times in that some tasks can require a bit of manual intervention.
Plusses and minuses to both I suppose.
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A bit? I played with Arch for about six months and gave up the second time I ran into an update that broke the system because I didn't read the homepage first.
I'll stick with Ubuntu Server if I want a fully customized barebones install. That sucks too, but not quite so strongly and I won't have to do a reinstall every time the devs want to randomly make incompatible changes.
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I'll admit that systemd has a learning curve as some commands don't have equivalents, but after a couple of days of having to google for the right commands, I don't think its as bad as its made out to be (most likely by those who aren't willing to atleast try to use it for an extended period of time).
IMHO, it seems to be a "simple but limited" vs "complex and powerful" argument. I also find switching distros solely because of the init system to be a little much. Do yourself a favor and at least attempt to l
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Where can I find a 10' Model M keyboard?
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Try Mageia. It has all the Mandriva goodness and none of the suckitude.
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I upgraded a couple of days before the actual F18 release once I saw that they had signed off on release code. I went to use preupgrade as I've done (with very mixed success) in the past and found it wasn't showing upgrade possibilities. I saw something about the new fedup method, ran that, and it went more smoothly than any distro upgrade I've ever done. I had to work around one package from a repo that hadn't rolled out F18 code yet and KDE wouldn't start without a separate update (quickly applied from
Recent Linux updates... (Score:4, Insightful)
It seems like whenever I wipe and re-upgrade a distro I end up having to take weeks to make it work the way I want it to. Although, I have to say I like it better than Windows 8...
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Given all the talk about up/downgrading Windows 8 ->7, I'd say we're there.
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It seems like whenever I wipe and re-upgrade a distro I end up having to take weeks to make it work the way I want it to. Although, I have to say I like it better than Windows 8...
It took me about 3 hours to do a fresh install of Fedora 18 over my original Fedora 17 before I was fully operational again however i do set-up my file-systems such that I only need to reformat the operating system parts not my data. I do actually backup all my data on a regular basis however because I am careful with my file-system layout there is never a need for me to do a recovery. Of course I do my homework prior to doing an upgrade which is no different to what I do when planning any upgrade to any ma
Alan Cox rants on G+! Film at 11! (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is this news? Slashdot already covered F18's wacky installer.
F18 is a bleeding-edge testing distribution. People who use bleeding-edge testing distributions should expect the odd glitch. New things get tried in Fedora. Some of them are great; some of them are dubious. It's always been this way. This is surely not news.
We're using F18 here on all our desktop machines; there have been zero issues. The installer was a "WTF? Oh, got it." inconvenience the first time around.
Thanks for the kernels, AC, and you can say what you like, but people whose OS installs get screwed up tend to be louder than those for whom things just work. I wonder if he even bothered to report a bug. Probably not.
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people whose OS installs get screwed up tend to be louder than those for whom things just work.
Apparently not.
Re:Alan Cox rants on G+! Film at 11! (Score:5, Interesting)
>> We're using F18 here on all our desktop machines
Do you use kickstarts to automate deployment? /dev/tty2 during installation?
On top of that, do you
* password-protect GRUB?
* lock out users from accessing a shell on
* expect GDM to show up (or, heck, Xorg to run) after doing an automated install?
* require that updated packages be installed during automated installation?
As of today, all these things are completely broken in F18 and the new installer. If you know workarounds, please reply! We could use your help and I'd send you a nice gift in return. :-)
—DMW
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I think the grub2 password protect thing is fixable - need to add --unrestricted to allow anyone to boot the entry, so it doesn't ask for a password every time. There is a bug for it with the details. Granted it should just work, but it's being tracked and should see the light of day someday... I gather from the trail of comments it is not as trivial as would be liked to fix.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=840204 [redhat.com] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=853430 [redhat.com]
On the updated packages, use c
Re:Alan Cox rants on G+! Film at 11! (Score:4, Informative)
"As of today, all these things are completely broken in F18 and the new installer."
No they are not. You may be having problems with them, in which case sorry, but it is not correct to say they are completely broken, as they are not.
We tested kickstart installs extensively during F18 validation and they work fine. Just fine. In fact they're the part of install that has changed least since F17. It is impossible to help you with whatever problem you're seeing without any details at all, but it is definitely not the case that kickstarts are 'completely broken'.
On "password-protect GRUB" - see the other guy's response. It is not 'completely broken'. The default behaviour of password protection changed upstream between grub1 and grub2; we are following upstream behaviour. 'Restoring' the grub1 behaviour is, as the other guy said, not as straightforward as it might seem.
"lock out users from accessing a shell on /dev/tty2 during installation"
This seems like an odd thing to talk about. Are you saying you want to do that but you can't? Or what? Details.
"expect GDM to show up (or, heck, Xorg to run) after doing an automated install"
Works fine in testing.
"require that updated packages be installed during automated installation"
Kickstart install uses the repos you define. Define repos that include updates and updates will be installed. Don't, and they won't. It's entirely up to you. This has not changed at all between F17 and F18.
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Arch is bleeding edge, and way more than Fedora. I've never seen broken installers or any important packages broken. Most issues in general, are upstream packages, but nothing as important as the installer.
Re:Alan Cox rants on G+! Film at 11! (Score:5, Interesting)
People who use bleeding-edge testing distributions should expect the odd glitch
General rules of thumb (assuming a normal 6-month cycle):
A Fedora release is broken for the first 30 days. Things are rapidly fixed. Yeah, that should be beta, but too few people test. Personally, I can't have my daily work machines broken for beta, but I do install it when I'm on the previous release and developers are working on something that needs fixing that I need fixed, or when I have a spare machine I don't have to rely on.
Months 2-5 are where most of the annoying bugs get fixed. I usually upgrade my daily use machines around month 3.
Months 6-12 are where most people can use the system. I upgrade my wife's machine around month 6. She likes the snazzy new features in Digikam or whatever.
Month 12 is when you start to realize you need stuff that's going in the next version only.
Month 14 is when you realize that you forgot to upgrade to the next release when it was at month 6.
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We're using F18 here on all our desktop machines; there have been zero issues.
I have two machines and everything I use including wireless works perfectly and I do use allot of things.
The installer was a "WTF? Oh, got it." inconvenience the first time around.
My sentiments exactly. Personally the new installer is IMO cosmetically challenged but it does work and it works well.
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Before is was a some guy on the Internet complaining about the installer, now it's a big name in the Linux community (and a former employee of Red Hat) saying the whole release has big problems.
It could be that he was unlucky enough to have a bad experience but he's enough of a name that his rant is minor news.
Personally on the two machines I've tried on one the upgrade went well but evolution ignored all my old configuration (and the configuration backup I made) and I only avoided reconfiguring it from scr
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F18 is a bleeding-edge testing distribution.
I wouldn't really call Fedora "bleeding edge," as in being futuristic currently. Perhaps a "bloody mess" is a better description. I find it interesting that you warn about expecting "glitches" and downplay the installer, while the Fedora teams officially promotes it as stable and reliable and makes a big deal about what a step forward their crappy installer is. I'll do the same with this as I have for the last 10+ Fedora releases - get rid of it and forget about it.
Shame on me for banging my head against t
Must be really bad (Score:3)
If he's switching to the distro where the UI looks like they tried to copy OSX (and failed), audio is broken, and all your searches are sent to Amanzon (?), then RH must be *really* bad.
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Yeah. I just wonder what they'll be doing with the next RHEL since last I heard it was supposed to be based on Fedora 18. From the sounds of things, they'd better either keep parts from Fedora 17 or get scrambling to fix the clusterfuck they've created in Fedora 18, test the hell out of it, and then put that in RHEL instead...
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that they failed to copy OSX is actually a good thing
Duuuh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Duuuh.
Never, ever, switch to a Fedora release until it has been out for at least 6 weeks.
I consider Fedora to be (at best) beta-test RHEL. I've been using it for years, and I can tell you, it *always* sucks at release. Always. Give it a month or two for the worst bugs to get addressed, then install it.
Despite its warts, I'll take Fedora 18 for $0 over Windows 8 any day.
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consider Fedora to be (at best) beta-test RHEL. I
That's what Red Hat considers it to be as well from what I've read, except that its not a bad thing, because they were pretty upfront about it when they spun Fedora up in the first place.
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Never, ever, switch to a Fedora release until it has been out for at least 6 weeks.
That is a bit a of a blanket statement which would not really apply to most Fedora users since developers would have been testing the Alpha and Release Candidates so the final release would be the same one you are going to get for the lifetime of the particular distribution discounting updates of course. I actually did an update on both my machines on the day and I have not had any issues. In fact I would go as far as to say that the final release of Fedora 18 is the best to date although the installer may
A small addendum (Slashdot slapdown) (Score:5, Informative)
From his G+ page:
Re:A small addendum (Slashdot slapdown) (Score:5, Funny)
From his G+ page:
Ah, I get it. It's like how sleeping with just one member of the same sex doesn't 'switch you to gay'. You see, just like with sexuality there can be degrees of distro use, it doesn't have to be so black and white -- you don't have to be just a Fedora or Ubuntu user, you could be Bi-distro. Ah, but it doesn't even end there: You could even enjoy OS hybrids like that Arch/BSD chick with a dick, or you can even use Wubi to run GNU/Linux inside Windows, if you're more the man with a clam type.
As a kernel developer, he's beyond mere experimenting; Alan Cox is a connoisseur of all flavors...
With a name like that, would you expect any less?
Where is everyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
I understand that Fedora is an experimental platform for bleeding edge changes, but if you take the perpetual beta status too far, nobody will bother to do your testing.
Correction from Alan Cox (Score:5, Informative)
(and Slashdot, moving one PC from Fedora with Ubuntu VM to just Ubuntu isn't 'switching to Ubuntu')
Color me shocked, shocked that a Slashdot story is sensationalized.
I hope redhat is paying attention to this (Score:2)
RedHat drives and influences much of what goes on out there. Among these, it influences GNOME and the audio and all the stuff people are complaining about the most. It's almost as if they are intentionally damaging themselves for some reason.
Fedora is supposed ot be like a test for RHEL. Fedora is NOT a "bleeding edge" distro. If you want that, run "Rawhide." Fedora is supposed to be usable and is essentially a usability study for things that would end up in the next RHEL.
Now, with all the negative fee
Worst Debian Distro (Score:5, Funny)
So he's switched from the "Worst Red Hat Distro" to the worst Debian distro. Got it.
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He what? (Score:4, Insightful)
IS the man insane?
Just go to Debian and all will be right with his world....
I completely agree... (Score:4, Informative)
But oh my god, this release is a complete piece of SHIT. I'm not going to uninstall it because of how much hassle I went through (and this is my work PC), but damn, just damn. Having said this, they did fix some problems in F15, and it looks nicer, but the number of new problems outweighs the benefits. If you're thinking about upgrading, don't do it.
Some of the problems I had to deal with:
That's all I can think of for now. Some of these problems are GNOME 3.6's. WTFITQA (Where the f/ck is the QA?)
I tried FC18.. well TRIED to try... (Score:2)
It wouldn't install. Right after where you choose to install the bootloader, it would just crash. The debug info didn't tell why at all. That happened with both the Beta and final releases. Linux Mint and lubuntu installed just fine (as did centos 6.3).
I finally figured out what was causing it.. the optimus or whatever on my Dell laptop, where it uses the integrated Intel video for low demand stuff and an Nvidia chip for higher demand periods. I only figured this out after trying to get the nvidia binary dr
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I'm impressed that you're putting so much effort in installing something you don't actually like.
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Well.. issue is the systems at work are all RHEL, CentOS or FC... I haven't used FC for ages so I figured I'd give it a try. Wasn't thinking FC 18 would use gnome 3.. just a brain fart (since we use it in a server role with a different WM for xrdp).
In the end I just went with centos since I have to setup an ipsec/l2tp vpn on a centos machine
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Hey, why else are we all visiting /. and bothering to comment?!
in other news (Score:2)
Who cares (Score:2)
What just one person thinks? Think for yourself. Jeebus.
I care a little... (Score:2)
I don't have time to test multiple distros. I've been on Fedora since it was RedHat 4. Hearing they've messed up the installer this much makes me think I should switch.
Interesting post from Red Hat employee at Phoronix (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes I know, Phoronix is a pretty scummy website at times with Michael taking credit for basically every new thing that happens to Linux, but there are some interesting posts on its forum when its users are not constantly fighting with each other.
AdamW (Adam Williamson, "the Fedora QA Community Monkey" according to the project wiki) posted this in response to this very topic:
(http://phoronix.com/forums/showthread.php?77039-Alan-Cox-Calls-Fedora-18-quot-The-Worst-Red-Hat-Distro-quot/page4)
To which someone immediately pointed out the obvious:
This is becoming too common in the Linux world, with distros being released with half-implemented pet projects of its developers (Unity, PulseAudio, Fedora's new installer) under the guise of a final release. Rough rough rough, and not something people coming from say OS X or even Windows 7 would expect. Yes it's free, but it's also very off-putting and tends to reinforce the idea that you get what you pay for.
well... (Score:4, Funny)
My experience is opposite... Fedora 18 is better! (Score:3)
I've been using Red Hat's linux distributions for 14 years, since I first switched my aging Slackware installation to Redhat 5.2. Since then, I've been upgrading or installing every new Redhat/Fedora release that came out.
The last few upgrades, to F15, F16 and F17 were a real pain - on every release the upgrade failed in the middle, or succeeded and left me with half the system not running and I needed to spend a whole day on fixing things (a person with less experience would just give up and switch to a different distribution...).
But the upgrade to F18 (with the new "fedup" tool) was surprisingly smooth. The upgrade just worked, and when the new system came up, everything just worked... A few annoying new bugs (like the new gphoto2 suddenly not working correctly, but that's not Fedora's fault) but nothing serious.
So if anything, F18 was the first time in years that I did *not* consider switch to Ubuntu right after the upgrade.
Fedora is bleeding-edge (Score:3)
I really don't understand what is the fuss about. Fedora 18 was just released, what are you expecting? From Wikipedia:
A version of Fedora has a relatively short life cycle—the maintenance period is only 13 months: there are 6 months between releases, and version X is supported only until 1 month after version X+2.[8]
Fedora is a bleeding-edge distribution. Much like Debian Sid. Fedora is the playground for new technology that was always so. You can't expect to have a new version of Fedora and everything be perfect.
Just wait 6 months and upgrade then. So do I with my Fedora. I install it release+6 months and everything is fine.
You just can't compare Fedora with OpenSuse, Ubuntu, Debian Stable etc. The goals are totally different.
If you want a bleeding-edge distribution with new technology then Fedora is the right distribution for you.
If you want a stable desktop then Debian Stable is the choice for you.
Interesting Place To Runaway To (Score:3)
Ubuntu is still *one* of the best distros. As someone who has been using it since it came out I am surprised Cox chose to runaway from Fedora to Ubuntu. Ubuntu used to be the most "least hassle" and user friendly distro. I would say with the default desktop of Unity that title now belongs to MINT linux and that is what I am putting on the new home PC I am buying in March.
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Desperate times mean desperate measures!
Re:Ubuntu, really? (Score:5, Insightful)
These people have lives.
Re:Ubuntu, really? (Score:5, Funny)
If you weren't anon, I'd mod this comment up so hard you'd get an orgasm that could be felt from across the world.
Re:Ubuntu, really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Alan Cox doesn't have to pretend to be 1337 so there's no point in him using Arch.
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What a silly suggestion. It's only certain kinds of people who think it is a good idea to pay *more* for a restricted platform.
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I tend to use the package repository most of the time, not install packages directly, so I don't know what your point is. Even with openSUSE I have managed to install certain packages with minimal to no trouble (Opera, Chrome). I think the real problem is the repositories themselves, not the package format.
That said... I do prefer Debian's and even Ubuntu's system, but that is more due to the fact that both of their repositories have nearly everything I can think of. And also the fact that I know the Deb
Re:Giving up so quickly? (Score:5, Funny)
Dear Alan: Thank you for your comments. You are free to download the source, make any fixes you deem appropriate, and send us back the patches.
What, isn't that the Linux Way?
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Re:This will be followed by a new headline tomorro (Score:5, Funny)
In the old days we had a choice of shock therapy!
Slackware is still available!
Re:This will be followed by a new headline tomorro (Score:4, Insightful)
Alan Cox: Ubuntu "Most useless and senseless desktop ever," Switches to Gentoo
You obviously don't know him. He will install xfce as soon as he figures out how apt-get works, which will take him about 2 nanoseconds.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
And the headline next week (Score:5, Funny)
Alan Cox: "Just finished compiling, looks good so far."