Fedora 25 Beta Linux Distro Now Available For Raspberry Pi (betanews.com) 52
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli writes:
Fedora 25 Beta Workstation is now available for both the Raspberry Pi 2 and Raspberry Pi 3. In addition to the Workstation image, Fedora 25 Beta Server is available too. Owners of ARMv6-powered Pi models, such as the Pi Zero, are out of luck, as the operating system will not be made available for them.
Peter Robinson (from the Fedora release engineering team) writes, "The most asked question I've had for a number of years is around support of the Raspberry Pi. It's also something I've been working towards for a very long time on my own time... The kernel supports all the drivers you'd expect, like various USB WiFi dongles, etc. You can run whichever desktop you like or Docker/Kubernetes/Ceph/Gluster as a group of devices -- albeit it slowly over a single shared USB bus!"
Peter Robinson (from the Fedora release engineering team) writes, "The most asked question I've had for a number of years is around support of the Raspberry Pi. It's also something I've been working towards for a very long time on my own time... The kernel supports all the drivers you'd expect, like various USB WiFi dongles, etc. You can run whichever desktop you like or Docker/Kubernetes/Ceph/Gluster as a group of devices -- albeit it slowly over a single shared USB bus!"
Unicode? Can you speak it? (Score:1)
"The most asked question IÃ(TM)ve had for a number of years is around support of the Raspberry Pi. ItÃ(TM)s also something IÃ(TM)ve been working towards for a very long time on my own time... The kernel supports all the drivers youÃ(TM)d expect,
Good to see that the Slashdot web coders are still too incompetent to handle Unicode yet.
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Wouldn't be so bad if the editors bothered to proofread & just replaced them with plain ol' apostrophes.
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It's been a known bug for a long time. They should be aware of it.
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Slashdot already supports
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90% of the world's websites can handle UTF-8 just fine without the silly bugs of Slashcode. It clearly can't be that hard to do it correctly.
who nneds unicode? (Score:1)
Forklift? (Score:2)
Will I need to bring over my forklift to get you out of the basement first?
My first impression was that the implied accusation here is that the other person is extremeley fat, but while I would understand how something like a winch could help, how exactly would you operate a forklift in this situation?
Or maybe I read it wrong, and what you mean is that the other person is part of a subculture of basement dwellers (possibly with redneckish undertones) that can be lured out by the promise of showing them a forklift. I could see myself being enticed to get out of my house if someone
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He's only wrong by understatement. s/decades/millenia/.
There aren't any smilies on Trajan's column or the Rosetta stone.
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Slashdot is clearly not getting by by just pretending everything is 7 bits, because look at the mess of the summary.
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Paper and crayons is more their level.
Is the one for Rasperry Pi 3 64-bit? (Score:2)
It's not stated in the summary or article.
Re:Is the one for Rasperry Pi 3 64-bit? (Score:5, Informative)
The focus for Fedora 25 with the limited time and resources available, was to provide a polished experience with a single disk image for both the Raspberry Pi 2 and 3. At the time the work started it wasn't clear whether the aarch64 kernel support would land upstream in time. The intention is to officially support the Raspberry Pi 3 as an aarch64 device in Fedora 26. There has been significant enabling work in Fedora 25 but there is still quite a bit more work to do to finish the aarch64 support at time of writing.
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki... [fedoraproject.org]
Ubuntu user here (Score:2)
I love the Pi. (Score:5, Interesting)
What a great piece of kit. Shows how if you make something useful, documented, inexpensive, widely available, and open (yes to a point) -- build it and they will come. Hobbyists and professionals come together.
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Pi is cheap. It's not documented well at all (because Broadcom), and it's far less widely available than commodity PCs, tablets, and phones (which I can buy cash-and-carry at Walmart and, sometimes, even Aldi).
Hobbyists like it because it is cheap, and it has the GPIO lines from the SoC built-out on a header.
End-users like it because it is cheap, speaks HDMI, and runs Kodi and Retropie.
But it's not fast. It's definitely built down to a price. And open? No. Not even a little bit, unless you count the f
Ob (Score:3, Insightful)
Does it have shitstemd? I'll probably give it a miss.
Not exactly new (Score:2)
The Pi is used in a digital modem/radio communications system, and replaces a desktop or laptop computer, making the entire radio/computer fit in one small box.
But I see no reason to switch to the Fedora distro at the moment. The only disadvantage of the Pi is it's a little slow during the make process.
Not really new (Score:1)