Red Hat this week announced the release of Fedora 24, an open source Linux operating system maintained by the Fedora Project community. Fedora Linux is the community version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, or RHEL. Fedora 24 is comprised of a set of base packages that form the foundation of three distinct editions: Fedora 24 Cloud, Fedora 24 Server and Fedora 24 Workstation. Delayed four times during its development cycle, Fedora 24 includes glibc 2.23 for better performance, and improvements to POSIX compliance and GNU Compiler Collection 6.
I want to like Linux on a desktop platform. But for me it's still to this day buggy and not polished. The argument it keeps getting more stable is getting old. I installed Ubuntu,Mint and a couple other distro's and none ever got things working properly. Nobody except for a few computer science geeks wants to invest a lot of time fiddling to get stuff working. My new Dell laptop had it's battery life cut in half compared to Windows 10. The screen had tearing in Mint and Ubuntu when scrolling. This is with basic Intel hardware. Yea, I am sure some install Linux with no issues, or they are willing to accept these issues as just minor problems sure to be fixed on next kernel or update. But for me coming from using Mac's and PC's all my life. I cannot accept these days such flaky operating systems that cannot properly identify hardware and run it efficiently.
Fedora 24 Pushes Linux Boundaries
Posted by: Jack M. Germain June 25, 2016 10:30 AMRed Hat this week announced the release of Fedora 24, an open source Linux operating system maintained by the Fedora Project community. Fedora Linux is the community version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, or RHEL. Fedora 24 is comprised of a set of base packages that form the foundation of three distinct editions: Fedora 24 Cloud, Fedora 24 Server and Fedora 24 Workstation. Delayed four times during its development cycle, Fedora 24 includes glibc 2.23 for better performance, and improvements to POSIX compliance and GNU Compiler Collection 6.