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Red Hat Software Businesses Software Linux

Fedora Core 3 Test 2 Available 30

p0 writes "Fedora Core 3 Test 2 is now available for downloading. The official .torrent tracker is here. It is also interesting that the Fedora Steering Committee has transferred Fedora Core 1 into the Fedora Legacy Project. If you would like to know the proposed development and release schedule for Fedora Core 3, you will find it here."
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Fedora Core 3 Test 2 Available

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  • Obsolescence (Score:4, Interesting)

    by alatesystems ( 51331 ) <chris&chrisbenard,net> on Monday September 20, 2004 @12:48PM (#10299255) Homepage Journal
    I can't believe how fast the FC1 has gone into legacy. I know this isn't RH supported, but I think I'm going to have to switch to an RHEL rebuild like WhiteBox [whiteboxlinux.org].

    For the interested, we use WhiteBox at work on one of our AMD 64 bit servers and it works like a champ. They added yum, but other than that it's binary compatible with Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

    Chris
    • Re:Obsolescence (Score:4, Interesting)

      by dtfinch ( 661405 ) * on Monday September 20, 2004 @12:59PM (#10299378) Journal
      I use CentOS [centos.org]. It's nearly identical to WhiteBox, but with seemingly better community support, rather than having the appearance of being a one man project.
    • Re:Obsolescence (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Godeke ( 32895 ) * on Monday September 20, 2004 @01:13PM (#10299512)
      Fedora Core has the stated goal of being a development operating system for those who wish to be on the edge of development, not a stable operating system for running your enterprise. The fact that you would have to "switch" to something else tells me you are using Core for the wrong purposes.

      Core works great for my desktop, because it doesn't matter if it gets blown away (everything is mirrored to my server) and I do want to work with the latest-and-maybe-greatest. For other applications, *please* switch to something that has the intent of being a platform and not a development base.
      • So basically you're saying that FC is useless for enterprise usage, aren't you? Have you read their "about" thing [redhat.com] on the FC site?

        The goal of The Fedora Project is to work with the Linux community to build a complete, general purpose operating system exclusively from open source software.

        FC is a general purpose linux distro, great for desktop and great for enterprise (although I'm a gentoo boy).

        Of course it will never be widely used on a normal production environment, as it happens with gentoo, wh

    • I can't believe how fast the FC1 has gone into legacy.


      I can. Though I can't seem to find it documented anywhere off the top of my head, redhat has stated that they will only support (ie, provide updates) for the current and 1-release old version(s) of Fedora Core. Now that FC3 is around the corner, that means FC1 is being pushed out of the nest.
    • It didn't even last a year! From the roadmap:

      Fedora Core 1 / Cambridge
      21 July 2003 - Test 1 (originally called Beta 1) release
      25 September 2003 - Test 2 release
      13 October 2003 - Test 3 release
      5 November 2003 - General Availability

      That's what, 10 months from release to 'legacy'? Even Mac OS X takes longer that that between 'forced upgrades' :)

      Mark
      • And with MacOS you pay for software you can't inspect, share, or modify as well as the free software parts. Perhaps you would be willing to trade in some money to extend the support on Fedora Core? Fedora Core seems to me to be a pretty good deal considering it helps me retain my software freedom and I can hire someone to keep old versions updated if I care to.
      • Yes but if you read the release_notes, half the time there is nothing really that new from the version jumps. It's just a slightly more updated gcc or something. You can download whatever whenever individually. There is no need for these massive fedora updates.

    • It went into legacy right on schedule. The problem is that "legacy" is a support state without meaning. They continue to provide the infrastructure for people to contribute patches, but they do not provide patches, or quality control, or anything. As a result, no patches ever get released. Conclusion: you have to upgrade to a currently-supported release, just like you would if Legacy didn't exist.

      Oh, for those who don't believe me, check out bug 1345 [fedora.us] which I submitted on March 4. It was ignored until

  • What is the Fedora community?

    Seems more like an open beta to me.
  • by t482 ( 193197 ) on Monday September 20, 2004 @01:49PM (#10299923) Homepage
    GCC 3.4.x - Precompiled Headers (Speed up) and C++ improvements (and more coming)
    Kernel 2.6.8
    KDE 3.3 - which includes a much improved KDE PIM groupwhere packages.
    X.org x11 6.8 - with translucency & Drop shadows
    GNOME 2.8 - New Admin stuff and a lot of other features
    Evolution 2.0 - Offline IMAP & WebCal support
    SELinux
    IIIMF - Standardized Asian character input
    Wow! [redhat.com]. Torrents are available [duke.edu]
  • It is also interesting that the Fedora Steering Committee has transferred Fedora Core 1 into the Fedora Legacy Project.

    Really? I'd love to know where the source of that information is. I see no mention of it on the Fedora Legacy Project site. In fact, the fedora legacy download site [fedoralegacy.org] only has up to RHL9.

    More info, please!
  • by josepha48 ( 13953 ) on Monday September 20, 2004 @02:52PM (#10300726) Journal
    I upgraded from fedora core 1 to fedora core 2 and gnome desktop got much much slower. So did kde. I also noticed that they switched to xorg. xorg in fedora core 2 is slow. No really really slow, and used up about 72 megs of ram. Run that with Gnome and a gnome panel or two and mozilla firebird, and I saw about 80% or my memory being sucked out the window, and I have 512 megs of ram / 1.2Ghz AMD CPU. I'll probably try fedora core 3 when it comes out, but if it is like this, I may switch to using gentoo on my desktop. Fedora does not make it easy to use the openbox window manager ( read gdm does not allow it as a selection ). They do not make it easy to use any of the other window managers that they include, except windowmaker. Why include this stuff it you are going to make it more difficult for someone to switch to it. It only confuses the end user.

    I thought I had a fast PC then I installed fedora core 2 and it seems as slow as my old P233 with 64megs of ram did.

    I'm not trying to be a troll, or flamebait, I'm just kinda supprised that the performance is as bad as it is, on my system. I'd really like to know if anyone else is experiencing performance degradation with thier fc2 system and what they did to overcome it?

    • Runs with no hiccups on my P2-350 with 512M of PC100 RAM. Not blazingly fast, but no annoying slowdowns either.
    • I don't know about performance of FC3T2 (yet), but I'll throw in my 2 cents on Gentoo. Yes, it allows you to build everything from scratch with as many (or few) compiler optimization flags as you like, but from my experience, it takes way too much attention to get it installed at all.

      For me, I'm not sure it's really worth spending a day or 2 of really paying attention to the install. For others, it may be worth it. I just found it to be annoying to need to spend that much effort just to get a functionin
    • I use FC2/GNOME on a P3-450, 262Mb RAM (PC100), and although it is not fast, it is quite usable. I always have at least Evolution, Firefox, Pan, text editor, XMMS, and a shell or two open with no swappage that I notice. This is with an ancient nVidia RivaTNT2(32Mb) video card, and a 1Gb swap partition. I've been a Red Hat user since 5.0, although IIRC, my FC2 was a fresh install over my existing FC1.

      I've noticed that themes can make a big difference, but with default BlueCurve and a few others (Digital-Cr

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