Fedora 15 Adds Cloud Deployment Builder, GNOME 3 Desktop, Robotics Suite

The Fedora Project has released an update to its flagship Linux-based operating system, Fedora 15, incorporating a fully revamped desktop environment, new robotics development tools, and an appliance creator for building virtual machines and disk images for desktop and cloud deployment.

Fedora is a widely distributed free and open source desktop operating system suite that includes a core OS (based on the Linux kernel) and a comprehensive suite of open source components, including productivity software and a GNOME graphical user interface. Fedora is sponsored by open source developer Red Hat.

Version 15, which formally launched last week, rolls in a range of major enhancements for end users, admins, and developers alike.

New and GNU: Environments and Open Source Productivity Software
On the end user front, it includes new versions of its primary and alternative desktop operating environment, including GNOME 3, KDE Plasma Workspaces 4.6, Xfce 4.8, and Sugar Learning Platform 0.92.

GNOME 3 ("GNU Network Object Model Environment 3") is the new default environment for Fedora and includes a refined user interface, a redesigned file manager, and enhancements focused on usability. Two of the alternative desktop environments included with Fedora 15, KDE Plasma Workspaces and Xfce, have also been recently updated with new releases in in 2011.

The third alternative, Sugar 0.92, is the latest release of the computing environment originally developed for XO-1 netbook from One Laptop per Child (OLPC) and designed specifically for education. Unlike GUIs, Sugar does not adopt a desktop/files/application metaphor but, rather, focuses on activities, discovery, and collaboration, with built-in tools for simplified file sharing, communications tools, and a portfolio assessment system.

GNOME 3, the default desktop environment in Fedora 15, includes window management features for creating custom workspaces..
GNOME 3, the default desktop environment in Fedora 15, includes window management features for creating custom workspaces..

In addition to the updated computing environments, new features in Fedora 15 for end users include:

  • Improved power management, including a daemon that dynamically balances performance and power consumption, as well as bug fixes and profile updates designed to improve efficiency;
  • Integrated LibreOffice suite, which replaces OpenOfice.org as the default office suite (with features similar to those found in Microsoft Office, such as presentations, word processing, and spreadsheets);
  • The Firefox 4 browser;
  • Improved image compression;
  • An intermediate implementation of the filesystem called Btrfs, which is slated eventually to become Fedora's default filesystem; and
  • Troubleshooting and reporting tools.

Fedora Does the Robot
New developer tools in Fedora 15 include an open source development suite designed to provide out-of-the-box functionality for robotics programming and simulation. It includes two multi-robot simulators, one of them a RoboCup Soccer simulator; multi-platform application framework; and robotics server with drivers for more than 130 devices.

Also on the development front, version 15 bundles updated versions of Maven (3.0), Python (3.2), OCami 3.12, Rails 3.0.5, GCC 4.6, and GDB 7.3.

Fedora Behind the Firewall, out in the Cloud
For virtualized environments and cloud deployments, Fedora now includes the BoxGrinder utility suite. BoxGrinder, the first JBoss Community project to be included with Fedora, creates complete disk images or appliances ready for deployment on a variety of platforms, including KVM, Citrix Xen, VMware, and Amazon EC2.

Also on the virtualization front, support for Spice has been added to the Virt Manager, providing communications with virtualized desktops without using the command line.

Fedora's firewall has been updated to support on-the-fly settings adjustments without restarting the firewall.

Other features new in version 15 include:

  • The addition of the Tryton enterprise resource planning system (ERP), with business modules that include accounting and invoicing, inventory management, and purchasing management;
  • A new system and session manager called systemd, which replaces SysVinit and Upstart; and
  • An RPM update to version 4.9.

Fedora 15 is freely available now. An expanded list of new features can be found on the Fedora 15 feature list page. Additional details, documentation, and downloads can be found on the Fedora Project wiki.

The next major release, Fedora 16, will follow the usual six-month development cycle for the OS. It's expected to surface in final form Oct. 25.

Featured

  • hand touching glowing connected dots

    Registration Now Open for Tech Tactics in Education: Thriving in the Age of AI

    Tech Tactics in Education has officially opened registration for its May 7 virtual conference on "Thriving in the Age of AI." The annual event, brought to you by the producers of Campus Technology and THE Journal, offers hands-on learning and interactive discussions on the most critical technology issues and practices across K–12 and higher education.

  • teenager interacts with a chatbot on a computer screen

    Character.AI Rolls Out New Parental Insights Feature Amid Safety Concerns

    Chatbot platform Character.AI has introduced a new Parental Insights feature aimed at giving parents a window into their children's activity on the platform. The feature allows users under 18 to share a weekly report of their chatbot interactions directly with a parent's e-mail address.

  • laptop screen displaying a typed essay, on a child

    McGraw Hill Acquires Essaypop Digital Learning Tool

    Education company McGraw Hill has announced the acquisition of Essaypop, a cloud-based writing tool that will enhance the former's portfolio of personalized learning capabilities.

  • a professional worker in business casual attire interacting with a large screen displaying a generative AI interface in a modern office

    Study Finds Generative AI Could Inhibit Critical Thinking

    A new study on how knowledge workers engage in critical thinking found that workers with higher confidence in generative AI technology tend to employ less critical thinking to AI-generated outputs than workers with higher confidence in personal skills.