Here are features we think should be on the release notes: pretty much ones that make sense to average computer users.
Automatic printer driver installation
Automatic printer driver installation lets you connect a USB printer and install the printer drivers automatically. (this should probably just be mentioned briefly)
- This is *somewhat* the case now. The print driver installation is part of a larger theme of "better hardware enablement" in F13 which is the feature profile that Robyn (?) is working on. That profile can combine this feature with our free 3D video driver support, color management, and other enhancements (webcams and/or iPod/iPhone. In the interviews I'm starting to give to journalists in my role as project leader, rather than call out print driver installation as a superlative feature on its own -- even though it's very cool -- I'm tying it together with these other hardware enablements to make a better unified story about the work that Fedora does to make the overall user experience better in the F13 release. --Paul Frields
Color management
Color management helps artists, photographers, designers, and others display and print work more accurately using 100% free software
Video drivers
Fedora and its sponsor Red Hat are dedicated to improving the quality and coverage of completely free accelerated video drivers. While we support user choice and do not prevent use of closed, proprietary drivers, we also recognize that these drivers sometimes conflict with and cause problems in the software written by FOSS community members.
Fedora 13 features and contributes to experimental 3D support for many NVidia video cards using the 100% free software Nouveau driver
since I'm not really a developer or administrator I'm less sure what should go in these next sections, recommendations from the more experienced community members would be great
- You might benefit from comparing the Fedora 12 talking points to the Fedora 12 one-page release notes. The talking points are designed for our community members and Ambassadors, and since they understand Fedora deeply, the talking points focus on features. The one-page release notes are designed to be more "glossy" and appeal directly to end users.
- If you look at the F12 versions, you can see how our talking points get transformed from a statement of "Here's a cool feature" into the one-page release notes statements of "Hers's what YOU can do with Fedora" -- making the user the focus, as opposed to the technology.
- Here are the links you'll want to look at: F12_talking_points and Fedora_12_one_page_release_notes.
boot.fedoraproject.org
boot.fedoraproject.org (BFO) is a unique feature in Fedora. It allows users to download a single, tiny image and install current and future versions of Fedora without having to download additional images
Boot.fedoraproject.org allows you to kick off installation and testing with a tiny image file.
SSSD
SSSD provides expanded features for logging into managed domains, including caching for offline authentication. This means that, for example, users on laptops can still login when disconnected from the company's managed network
For developes
While Fedora used to have pretty decent introspection tools for the kernel, this release expands the visibility of monitoring on a higher level what is happening inside language runtimes like Java, Python and TCL In addition, Engineering team member David Malcolm has added new support that allows developers working with mixed libraries (Python and C/C++) to get more complete information when debugging. Backtraces will now show output from code written in both languages, including those generated by Fedora's Automatic Bug Reporting Tool (ABRT), and developers can more quickly improve software
NetBeans IDE 6.8 is the first IDE to offer complete support for the entire Java EE 6 spec with improved support
Spins
- You may want to add a description of what "spins" are when you write the one-page release notes text, since this is a new section for us for this "flyer." There may be text from http://spins.fedoraproject.org you can re-use for this introduction. Mel Chua 16:27, 14 April 2010 (UTC)
The Moblin Spin has updated support for the Netbook Environment. The Moblin Architecture is designed to support multiple platforms and usage models ranging from Netbooks and NetTops to Mobile Internet Devices (MID) and various embedded usage models
Sugar on a Stick (SoaS) combines the deployability of Fedora with the award-winning Sugar Learning Platform, used every school day by one-million children in more than forty countries, to bring Sugar's principles of Sharing, Reflecting, and Discovering using free and open source software within the reach of any student with a thumbdrive. Instead of purchasing expensive dedicated hardware, a teacher or a classroom volunteer can simply flash SoaS onto a USB "stick" for each student. Students can then go to any machine running any operating system - at school, at home, at a local library or community center - and boot their personalized Sugar environment without touching the hard disk.
- This seems disproportionately long compared to the other spin sections. Mel Chua 16:27, 14 April 2010 (UTC)
The Fedora Design Suite includes well-selected applications, fitting a variety of use cases. Whether you decide to work on publishing documents, creating images and pictures or even 3D content, the Design Suite has a fitting tool
The Fedora Security Spin provides a safe test environment to work
- Hm - I think it might be worth trying to find the Spin owners and asking them how they'd describe this. Mel Chua 16:27, 14 April 2010 (UTC)