Version: 2008
  • On MovieTome: The 10 worst movies of 2009 so far!

May 18, 2004 2:15 PM PDT

Red Hat releases new hobbyist Linux

  • 1 comment
Red Hat released its newest Linux product on Tuesday, Fedora Core 2, a free version designed for enthusiasts and developers who want to try out newer features.


Get Up to Speed on...
Open source
Get the latest headlines and
company-specific news in our
expanded GUTS section.


Fedora is designed as a proving ground where new technology can mature before incorporation into Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), the company's corporate product. Although Fedora can be downloaded for free, it lacks long-term support from Red Hat and hardware and software partners such as IBM and Oracle.

Among Fedora Core 2's new features are the 2.6 kernel, updated code for Linux that's snappier and better for multiprocessor machines, and Security-Enhanced Linux, which makes it harder to perform unauthorized actions. Those features will be incorporated in RHEL 4, due to arrive in early 2005, Red Hat has said.

Red Hat, the top Linux seller, peeved some Linux fans when it split its product line, forcing a choice between Fedora, free but unsupported and rough around the edges, and Enterprise Linux, mature and supported but costing $350 per year for a basic version. The Raleigh, N.C.-based company, however, argues that the split better represents the divide among Linux users--between early adopters eager for the latest update and conservative businesses that don't enjoy change or being guinea pigs.

The company now has new pressure from Novell in currying favor with the enthusiasts. Novell is releasing e-mail software, management utilities and other programs as open-source packages.

"Red Hat needs to re-establish its open-source credentials," RedMonk analyst James Governor said. "Right now Novell looks a little more open-source-focused."

Good ties with open-source programmers are important for Linux companies, not just because programmers are potential customers but because they often are directly responsible for building software the Linux firms rely on.

Some programmers are happy with Red Hat, however--including Gary Sandine, the chief technology officer of Los Alamos Computers, which sells Linux computers chiefly to tech-savvy researchers in Los Alamos, N.M.

"So far, Fedora has been as good as or better than any Red Hat Linux release I have seen," he said in an interview. Among the improvements: faster security updates and broader software availability. "I expect we will be among the first GNU/Linux PC vendors shipping systems preinstalled with FC2," he said. (GNU stands for Gnu's Not Unix, a project Richard Stallman launched in the 1980s to clone Unix, the software on which Linux is based.)

Fedora Core 2 also marks a break with the XFree86 project for graphics infrastructure. Because of a licensing dispute, Red Hat and most other Linux sellers are supporting an offshoot of that project under the auspices of X.org, the consortium that originally developed the X Window System widely used to handle graphics for Unix computers.

For user interfaces, Red Hat still offers new versions of the two prevailing choices: Gnome 2.6 and KDE 3.2.2.

Although Security-Enhanced Linux is installed by default, it's not enabled unless specifically turned on.

Fedora also incorporates a newer subsystem for audio tasks, the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture.

Fedora requires a 200MHz Pentium processor and 64MB of memory for people who don't need graphics abilities. For others, a 400MHz Pentium and 256MB of memory is recommended.

Add a Comment (Log in or register)
More than a hobby, a solid OS
by May 18, 2004 3:31 PM PDT
I use Fedora as my primary production servers. I'm not sure RedHat is accurate in saying it is just version of Linux for personal or hobby use. It is LINUX after all, and as long as they don't put stuff that is really unstable in the actual kernel, then is just a good as any OTHER distribution -- company support or otherwise. What you are buying when you go with the "Enterprise" version is a support contract, a very expensive installation disc, the knowledge that RedHat spent a few more hours testing it, and longer life-cycles (before retirement). The vast majority of distributions are in this category -- only a few offer company-backed support -- like Mandrake, SuSe, and a handful of others.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

advertisement

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Novell (0.25%) 0.01 4.05
Dow Jones Industrials (0.72%) 73.00 10,270.47
S&P 500 (0.57%) 6.24 1,093.48
NASDAQ (0.88%) 18.86 2,167.88
CNET TECH (0.63%) 9.86 1,587.17
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right