Fedora Core 5 Review 40
Posted
by
Hemos
from the whether-to-install-or-not dept.
from the whether-to-install-or-not dept.
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If two people love each other, there can be no happy end to it. -- Ernest Hemingway
"best" out there? (Score:1)
"best" is like what a kid would write.
Why not say "rated the highest at $BLAH" or "was the best amongst competitors at doing $BLAH".
At least qualify what it was best at.
Tom
Re:"best" out there? (Score:2)
Re:"best" out there? (Score:1)
Re:"best" out there? (Score:2)
Re:"best" out there? (Score:2, Insightful)
"best" != "one of the best" (Score:2)
just a set of screenshots (Score:2, Informative)
"Thanks to the Gnome Theme Manager it is also very easy to change and modify your desktop theme." As if this was some sort of a new boombastic feature
I am still waiting for a review which can explain a non-Linux person [such as myself] why the GUI is so slow. My guess is that the video card's hardware acceleration is not used. Ot
Re:just a set of screenshots (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently by forcing the graphics card companies to open source their drivers, much in the same way that the peace protesters prevented the war in Iraq....
Oh wait.
Re:just a set of screenshots (Score:3, Informative)
Take a look at http://kororaa.org/static.php?page=static060318-18 1203 [kororaa.org]. It is a Live CD that is showcasing the latest developments of 3D accellerated GUIs.
Just burn it, put it in your drive and boot your rig - how more newbie-friendly can it possible get ?
PS: Here's a list of supported graphics cards: http://kororaa.org/release [kororaa.org]
Re:just a set of screenshots (Score:2)
Probably because people experienced enough to write quality reviews don't think the GUI is "slow".
I'll note that GNOME is substantially faster than in any previous release, in terms of application startup time and rendering. A number of applications have been heavily optimized, in addition to the GNOME/GTK+ libraries.
How is THAT supposed to NOT anti-attract a newbie?
It's a bug. It was introduced in
Re:just a set of screenshots (Score:2)
Yes, it is. I'm using FC5, and I'm telling you based on my own experience that GNOME is significantly faster than the version included in FC4.
For that matter, cairo appears to be required by only pango and librsvg2, which means that GTK is not built on top of Cairo. You imply that GTK+ is using Cairo for rendering, which it supports, but is not doing in FC5.
Seriously, the review was short on substance, but I agree that FC5 is by far the best release that I've used, and I encourage other people
Re:just a set of screenshots (Score:2)
Anyone who has had the misfortune to muck about with gconf will see that it IS a new boombastic feature - if it works. Being able to export gpanel icons (eg.log on icons for 27 cluster nodes) to other users even on other systems will be a major step beyond the single user non-network aware aproach gnome started with.
Single page version (Score:5, Informative)
Soooo... (Score:5, Insightful)
How about once posting a review that include some mentions of
- security
- stability (including doing some major upgrading)
- hardware support
- performance as: server, office workstation, development environment, multimedia/htpc
I realise it is difficult to go in-depth on all these topics, especially with a recently released OS version. But perhaps we could set the standards a little higher than a few "ooh, shiny" screenshots?
I concur - how about some real world benchmarks (Score:2)
I agree screenshots are nice, but I'd prefer to see data that something runs faster or more stable, or is easier to install/use.
Re:Soooo... (Score:2)
Well, as you can probably guess, it is not only harder to write such an in-depth review, but it also takes more time. So by the time such a review would be released, it would not matter anymore, because FC5 would be close to its end-of-life.
Also, such review would be biased anyway: Hardware support? what hardwa
Yum? (Score:2)
Naturally of course, a yum "dist-upgrade" type feature is likely never going to happen, despite the fact that Fedora is now in five CDs.
Re:Yum? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes it is. Apt doesn't support multi-arch, which unfortuantley is required if you're running a 64 bit processor (Real, Macromedia, etc need to wake up and relesae 64 bit versions...).
You can use apt, several repositores still support it. Apt is still included in Fedora. In my experience, though, yum seems to handle conflicting repositores better.
I'm tired of Yum's idosycracies. It's gotten better, but as of 2.3.2, yum has no local cache search, no download resuming, and still bombs out if it can't contact a respositiory.
That is a major anoyance. Espcially if, like me, you're stuck with only dialup being available. It seems to be a little better in this release than previous, but it still needs work. Is it really so much to ask to be able to cache the repo data? Yes I'm aware of -C.
Re:Yum? (Score:2)
Re:Yum? (Score:4, Informative)
2) Fedora also comes on DVDs, you may have heard of that. Also, for anybody with at least one other nfs capable server at home mounts the image over the network. It's the only way to fly.
Re:Yum? (Score:4, Informative)
"yum has no local cache search, no download resuming..."
The local cache for yum is located in
yum is very strict on how to handle errors and personally if I was getting a kernel upgrade (or something else important) via yum I would definately want it to be careful! This is mentioned in the YumTodont [duke.edu] - the discussion [duke.edu] linked from the YumTodont gives some good insight on the topic aswell.
Haydn.
Re:Yum? (Score:2)
Not quite meaty enough. (Score:2)
Re:Not quite meaty enough. (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been using it for about two weeks and I think it's a good improvement over FC4. Everything just seems to work better, though KDE is still seems broken (looking forward for kde-redhat to support FC5...). The new version of Gnome actually feels usable. Older versions to me (Athlon 64 3200+, 2 GB RAM) always felt very sluggish but 2.14 feels much faster. I always try new released of Gnome but end up switching back to KDE after the first week. This is the first release of Gnome I don't feel like switching from. I'm actually liking it.
Re:Not quite meaty enough. (Score:1)
Apart from that the underlying st
Re:Not quite meaty enough. (Score:1)
It's packaged with MySQL 5, which was enough incentive for me. Being a Linux newbie, I was getting all sorts of errors trying to upgrade MySQL. Upgrading the entire OS was easier.
Plus the boot screen looks cool. That's important.
Re:Not quite meaty enough. (Score:2)
Newer version of Gnome -> 2.0.14
Internal support for Mono and stuff like f-spot.
New theme.
Uglier background that looks like Fedora Bubbles.
Uglier startup screen that looks like Fedora Bubbles.
No more xfce4 on base install. You need to install from yum.
Man, someone was really colour blind when they picked the new default them for FC5. The first thing people see after installing FC5 is the most god-awful desktop
Ruby on Rails and FC5 (Score:2)
One of the best? (Score:2)
It works just fine on my dualbooted Slackware Current (on the same machine, of course).
Re:One of the best? (Score:1)
Fixing Flash (Score:5, Informative)
It turns out that Flash has hard-coded the font paths and is still looking in
You can work around the problem [hyperborea.org] by creating
I found the solution in the comments on a Mozilla bug report. Remember, Bugzilla doesn't allow direct links from Slashdot, so if you really need to read the bug discussion, go to bugzilla.mozilla.org and search for bug 317655.
Nah (Score:2, Funny)
Errors in the article (Score:1)
Fedora 5 (Score:1)
I've found that for the most part I hate all X related desktops, and I've tried a few... enlightenment, gnome, kde, afterstep... I hate them all.
The gnome 2.14 with fedora 5 is fabulous... It's got enough eye-candy to make it pleasant, with a minimal feel that is just usable.
The memory footprint of the standard fedora 5 seems to be smaller than fedora 4, and things seem snappier.
The Hardware compatibilit