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Revision as of 14:09, 23 March 2009 by Jjmcd (talk | contribs) (Neaten up some prose)

Fedora 11 Beta:


Is a better operating system than Fedora 10 even possible? After all, this is the distro that prompted Linux Format magazine, on the cover of their February issue, to exclaim "Fedora 10 kicks ... ass". Well, you are about to find out. The Fedora Project has made the Beta of Fedora 11 available at:

http://fedoraproject.org/get-prerelease


We also hope to repeat the crazy success of Fedora 10's Beta contest! Test five things in the Beta that are important to you as a user. If you find a bug *and* report it, you get the free attention of a package maintainer on a problem personally important to you!

https://bugzilla.redhat.com


Do your part to make Fedora 11 that much better.


Among the top features of this ground-breaking release:


  • Automatic Fonts & Mime Installer - Allows programs on the desktop to automatically install applications, fonts, multimedia codecs and clipart.
  • Fingerprint - Better experience for systems with fingerprint readers, including support through the graphical Authentication Configuration tool and gnome-about-me.
  • Desktop Environments - Updates to Gnome 2.26 and KDE 4.2 incorporate new features for these popular desktops. Xfce and Sugar have also been updated.
  • Minimal Platform - New installer features make it much easier to create a very small installastion for embedded applications such as for a server or desktop appliance.
  • Virt Console - Fedora 11 provides more accurate mouse pointer positioning and higher screen resolutions for virtual machine consoles.
  • Volume Control - The multimedia experience of Fedora users is improved by an easily understandable and much more flexible volume control model.


But wait, there's more! For developers there are all sorts of goodies:


  • Windows Cross-compiler - Build and test full-featured Windows programs, from the comfort of the Fedora system, without needing to use Windows.
  • Python 2.6 - This new version in Fedora is a precursor to Python 3000 (3.0), including many compatibility measures to help developers get their code in order for the next generation of Python.
  • NetBeans 6.5 - NetBeans IDE 6.5 is a significant update of NetBeans IDE 6.1 that includes improved JavaScript, AJAX, Ruby, and database support.
  • gcc 4.4 - Switch GCC in Fedora 11 to 4.4 Rebuild all packages with gcc 4.4
  • Eclipse profiling tools - Add the power of various native profiling tools into the Eclipse IDE and integrate with the rest of the development environment.


Peek behind the kimono and there is still more:


  • Intel, ATI and Nvidia kernel modesetting - Fedora 10 provided the first steps by a major distribution into using the kernel modesetting (KMS) feature to speed up graphical boot. In Fedora 11 we have increased enormously the video card coverage of the KMS feature, with more to come.
  • Anaconda Storage - New storage code for the Anaconda installer improves the ability to handle new types of storage. The rewrite does not change the user interface.
  • Control groups - Allows system administrator to partition the system resources into different sub groups, and dedicate these sub groups resources to different applications' need.
  • DeviceKit - A simple, modular system service to manage devices and designed to partially replace hal. Users gain a graphical disk management application called palimpsest which integrates nicely into the desktop.
  • DNS Security - DNSSEC (DNS SECurity) is mechanism which can prove integrity and authenticity of DNS data.
  • ext4 filesystem - Make ext4 the default files system for anaconda-driven installs (replacing ext3). User should notice generally better performance, and benefit from things like persistent preallocation when using updated torrent clients, etc.
  • sVirt MAC - sVirt integrates SELinux with the Fedora virtualization stack to allow Mandatory Access Control (MAC) security be applied to guest virtual machines


And that is only the beginning. A more complete list and details of each new cited feature is available:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/11/FeatureList


For release information, including common and known bugs, please see our release notes:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_11_Beta_release_notes