These are the Talking Points for the Fedora 15 release. For information on how these talking points were chosen, see Talking Points SOP. They are intended to help Ambassadors quickly present an overview of highlighted features when talking about the release.
The talking points are based in part on the features for this release. Any Fedora community member can introduce a feature, using our feature process.
For desktop users and everyone
Things of general interest to most people using Fedora.
GNOME 3 Feature
GNOME 3 is the next major version of the GNOME desktop. GNOME 3 brings a fresh look and feel with gnome-shell, which is a compositing window manager and desktop shell. It replaces the GNOME 2 desktop shell, which consisted of metacity, gnome-panel, notification-daemon and nautilus. Apart from pure window management, gnome-shell provides the top bar on the screen, which hosts the 'system status' area in the top right, a clock in the center, and a hot corner that switches to the so-called 'overview' mode, which provides easy access to applications and windows.
Additional information is available at the Gnome 3 website.
GNOME 3 is a major rewrite of the GNOME desktop.
LibreOffice Feature
LibreOffice(R) is an office productivity suite that will replace OpenOffice(R). It will be completely open source and driven solely by the community supporting it. It has a word processor, presentation creator, spreadsheet creator, database creator, formula editor, and drawing editor.
Additional information is available at the Document Foundation Website.
Feature one liner. LibreOffice is the Next generation of Free Office Productivity software.
Power Management Feature
Go Green. Power Management improvements include the PowerTOP tool, which identifies the software components that make your computer use more energy than necessary while idle. Automatic tuning of power consumption and performance helps conserve on laptop battery usage, too!
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
Tryton Feature
Tryton is a three-tier high-level general purpose application platform, providing solutions for accounting, invoicing, sale management, purchase management, analytic accounting, and inventory management.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
Feature
Feature description.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
For administrators
Improvements that make system administrators' lives better.
Consistent Network Device Naming Feature
Consistent Network Device Naming feature
Servers often have multiple Ethernet ports, either embedded on the motherboard, or on add-in PCI cards. Linux has traditionally named these ports ethX, but there has been no correlation of the ethX names to the chassis labels - the ethX names are non-deterministic. Starting in Fedora 15, Ethernet ports will have a new naming scheme corresponding to physical locations, rather than ethX. Ethernet ports embedded on server motherboards will be named em<port_number>, while ports on PCI cards will be named pci<slot_number>p<port_number>, corresponding to the chassis labels. Additionally, if the network device is an SR-IOV Virtual Function or has Network Partitioning (NPAR) capability, the name will have a suffix of _<virtual_function> or _<partition>.
By changing the naming convention, system administrators will no longer have to guess at the ethX to physical port mapping, or invoke workarounds on each system to rename them into some "sane" order.
This feature affects all physical systems that expose network port naming information in SMBIOS 2.6 or later (specifically field types 9 and 41). Dell PowerEdge 10G and newer servers (PowerEdge 1950 III family, PowerEdge R710 family, and newer), and HP ProLiant G6 servers and newer are known to expose this information, as do some newer desktop models. Furthermore, most older systems expose some information in the PCI IRQ Routing Table, which will be consulted if information is not provided by SMBIOS.
Consistent network device naming based on BIOS-provided port names
Dynamic Firewall Feature
Fedora 15 adds support for the optional firewall daemon, that provides a dynamic firewall management with a D-Bus interface.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
LZMA for Live Images Feature
LZMA for Live Images feature description.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
systemd System and Session Manager Feature
systemd System and Session Manager feature
systemd System and Session Manager feature description.
Additional information is available at the SysVinit to Systemd Cheatsheet.
Feature one liner.
Feature
Feature description.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
For developers
Innovations that make Fedora a great platform for software developers.
BoxGrinder Feature
BoxGrinder feature description.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
GCC 4.6 Feature
GCC 4.6 feature description.
Additional information is available from the Release Notes.
Feature one liner.
Maven 3 Feature
"[Maven] is a tool that can now be used for building and managing any Java-based project. We hope that we have created something that will make the day-to-day work of Java developers easier and generally help with the comprehension of any Java-based project."
"Maven 3 aims to ensure backward compatibility with Maven 2, improve usability, increase performance, allow safe embedding, and pave the way to implement many highly demanded features."
Additional information is available at the Maven.apache.org website.
Feature one liner.
Python 3.2 Feature
Python 3.2 offers a stability increase to the already solid 3.x line.
Additional information is available at the python Website Release Notes .
Feature one liner.
Rails 3.0.3 Feature
"Rails 3.0.3 includes a much faster version of Active Record that reclaims the performance lost when we went from Rails 2.3.x to 3.x and then some [added preformance]."
Additional information is available at the Rails Website.
Feature one liner.
Feature
Feature description.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.
Spins
A few highlighted Fedora Spins coming out with this release.
Including, but not limited to;
Not to mention the very famous,
For the Official Fedora 15 Release Spins, see the Fedora 15 Release Spins link.
KDE 4.6 Name
KDE Puts You In Control with New Workspaces, Applications and Platform
Additional information is available at the KDE announcement page.
Feature one liner.
Sugar 0.92 Name
Sugar 0.92 feature description. Sugar 0.92 is full of bug-fixes and performance increases.
A Change list is available at This website.
Feature one liner.
Xfce 4.8 Name
Xfce 4.8 feature description.
Additional information is available at the Xfce Tour Website.
Feature one liner.
Spin Name
Feature description.
Additional information is available at the .
Feature one liner.