Friendlier version of Fedora Linux desktop now available

By Jacqueline Emigh, BetaNews

May 13, 2008, 2:58 PM


Download Fedora Linux 9 Final from BetaNews FileForum now.

A new and easier-to-use edition of Fedora -- the Red Hat-sponsored open source Linux desktop OS -- is available for free download starting today from the Fedora Project's Web site.

"There are far too many improvements to list them all, but certainly even to the naked eye there are worlds of difference between our present and our past -- and the change is overwhelmingly for the better!" contended Fedora Project Leader Paul W. Fields.

"In about 12 hours, more of less, the official release of Fedora 9 will be out the door, and we'll all immediately start looking toward Fedora 10's release, approximately six months from now," he wrote in a blog entry posted on the Red Hat site last night.

In one change in Fedora 9, targeted largely at current Windows users, a bootable, portable Fedora desktop can now be be created on a USB key through the use of either a Linux or Windows application, without the need to repartition or reformat the USB key in either case. This is done by adding Fedora 9 Live images to the key.

This "persistence" feature -- viewed by project members as the first of its kind -- is aimed at letting users of a USB system remove and add software -- and download and store data -- in the same way as with any other desktop system.

Also new in version 9 is support for the latest versions of the two competing open source Linux desktops traditionally used with the Fedora OS: KDE and Gnome. New capabilities in KDE 4, for example, include integrated desktop search, a new multimedia API, and a hardware integration framework.

Gnome 2.22 adds a world time clock; power management at the log-in screen; and improvements to system integration, security, Bluetooth integration, and podcast support.

The five-year-old Fedora also now adds improvements and enhancements such as OpenJDK support, the Firefox 3 Beta 5 Browser, the Anaconda installer, and NetworkManager, with first-time support for mobile broadband.

For the commercial Linux market, the company produces Red Hat Enteprise Desktop, a desktop OS designed to work with Red Hat Enterprise Server (RHES). Red Hat has also announced another desktop OS, Red Hat Global Desktop (RHGD), which might have given Red Hat a stronger edge against its rival Novell on the commercial side. But Red Hat recently delayed the release of RHGD indefinitely.

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By ab_irato

posted May 13, 2008 - 10:13 PM

Hmm, been a while since I've last tried Fedora. My judgment might be different now, but I used Fedora Core 2, (yes, back when it was called Fedora Core and not just Fedora) and I thought it went downhill from there. Not sure what the situation is like now, but I've got my system set up the way I like it right now... and I don't know if I want experience RPM again. Heh.

Score: 0

By Michael.Hatamoto

posted May 13, 2008 - 9:41 PM

Haven't used Fedora in a while, but I am going to download it and give it a try later this evening.

I've been obsessed with Ubuntu and Mandriva the past few months, so maybe a nice change of pace is in order at the moment.

Score: 0

By PC_Tool

edited May 13, 2008 - 6:00 PM

Downloaded and installed the 64-bit LiveCD and tried it out on a Dell D620 Lappy here.

Sucked.

While I was able to enable "Desktop Effects", so I know the GPU was detected as able to handle them, the actual fonts were too large for the menus. Don't know if it was just they way it detected the GPU, but it looked horrible.

Will give it a try on my home system (running Ubuntu flawlessly) and perhaps an Acre lappy later this week. Hopefully will have some better luck.

I did like the default theme better than Ubuntu's, but that's 100% subjective.

For those who want to download the "Official" Fedora torrent, clicky.(Fedoraproject.org).

Score: 0

By fewt

posted May 14, 2008 - 7:03 AM

Fedora == RedHat's battleground for technology. Your issues aren't surprising. I abandoned Fedora after trying to shoehorn Core 1 on to some things, and haven't looked back.

Ubuntu just works, and for the enterprise there is RHEL (until Ubuntu server matures a little more anyway).

eh just my $.02

Score: 0

By PC_Tool

posted May 14, 2008 - 8:42 AM

RH even admits such. They were going after, what was it, "Red Hat Global Desktop"(?) and dropped it indefinitely wihtout giving much of a reason.

Yeah, not too interested in the "desktop", it seems.

Score: 0

By Paul Skinner

posted May 13, 2008 - 3:39 PM

I've always preffered Fedora over the others if I am forced to use Linux. It just feels more right than any of the others.

It's always good to see it's improving some more.

Score: 0