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Fedora 17 Alpha released

From:  Dennis Gilmore <dennis-AT-ausil.us>
To:  announce-AT-lists.fedoraproject.org, devel-announce-AT-lists.fedoraproject.org, test-announce-AT-lists.fedoraproject.org
Subject:  Meat the Beefy Miracle: Announcing the release of Fedora 17 Alpha!
Date:  Tue, 28 Feb 2012 09:07:19 -0600
Message-ID:  <20120228090719.18603bd7@adria.ausil.us>
Archive‑link:  Article

Hot dog! The Fedora 17 "Beefy Miracle" Alpha Release is available! This 
release offers a preview of some of the best and meatiest free and open 
source technology currently under development. Relish in a glimpse of 
the future:

http://fedoraproject.org/get-prerelease

== What is the Alpha release? ==

The Alpha release contains all the bunderful features of Fedora 17 in a 
form that anyone can help test. This testing, guided by the Fedora QA 
team, helps us target and identify bugs. When these bugs are fixed, we 
make a Beta release available. A Beta release is code-complete, and 
bears a very strong resemblance to the third and final release. The 
final release of Fedora 17 is due in early May.
Frankly, we think Fedora 17 will be the best release ever, but we know 
we can't do it without your help. Please take a moment of your time to 
download and try out the Alpha and make sure the things that are 
important to you are working. If you find a bug, please report it -- 
every bug you uncover is a chance to improve the experience for millions 
of Fedora users worldwide. Together, we can make Fedora a franktastic, 
rock-solid distribution. (Read down to the end of this announcement for 
more information on how to help.)

== Condiments ==

When we said Beefy, we weren't kidding: an a-bun-dance of condiments, 
err, features, are available to help you feed your hunger for the best 
in free and open source software. We take pride in our toppings, and in 
our fine ingredients; Fedora 17 includes both over- and under-the-bun 
improvements that show off the power and flexibility of the advancing 
state of free (range) software.

Check out our menu, certain to please a variety of appetites:
<https://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=F17_Alpha_rel...>
* End Users *

End users will see numerous improvements in Fedora 17.

* GIMP has been updated to the long awaited 2.8 release, with an 
a-bun-dant list of new features, such as the single window mode, layer 
groups, and on-canvas text editing.
* Improved language and font support: A number of Lohit fonts, enabling 
Indian script, have been added, as well as support for Inscript 2 for 
keymapping; libpinyin increases pinyin input speed by adding predictive 
intelligence.
* Desktops galore! Whether you like your bun covered in GNOME, KDE, 
Sugar, or otherwise, we've updated it to the sauciest, tastiest version 
available. 
<https://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=F17_Alpha_rel...>

* Systems Administrators *

Serving up hot dogs all day long? Increase your reliability and 
versatility with the new enhancements to the clustering stack in Fedora 
17. Load balancing and high availability improvements have been made, 
allowing systems administrators to deploy Fedora in environments 
requiring greater availability and clustered file systems; both Corosync 
2.0 and the Pacemaker Cluster Resource Manager 1.1.7 are included. JBoss 
Application Server (AS) 7 has also been added to Fedora 17; this fast, 
lightweight, and modular application server allows you to run full Java 
EE applications.
<https://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=F17_Alpha_rel...>
* Developers *

Developers can cook up fresh code with the updates and additions of 
numerous languages in Fedora 17. Java 7, Ruby 1.9.3, and PHP 5.4 are 
just some of the latest-and-greatest; we've also got updates and 
additions in the Haskell platform, Erlang, and D, as well as the 
addition of the Opa programming language. GCC has been updated to 4.7, 
and Fedora 17 has additionally been rebuilt with this new version, 
resulting in compiled code improvements.
<https://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=F17_Alpha_rel...>
* Virtualization *

A a-bun-dance of virtualization features are ready for consumption in 
Fedora 17:

* Open vSwitch is a flexible, multi-layer software switch typically used 
in virtualization environments as the network switching component in the 
hypervisor, providing virtual machines their network connectivity.
* KVM improvements, including the addition of a virtualized PMU 
(performance monitoring unit)for guests, and a live block copy features, 
allowing an image backing a guest disk to be copied while the guest is 
online.
* Virtualization sandboxing provides a new application development 
library (libvirt-sandbox) to facilitate the embedding of virtualization. 
<https://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=F17_Alpha_rel...>

* Hot Dogs as a Service (HDaaS) *

Kidding! We couldn't resist jumping into the game with our own acronym. 
Seriously, though, we have a frank-tastic variety of cloud technologies 
coming in Fedora 17, including the fresh additions of some of the best 
Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) platforms in free and open source 
software -- Cloudstack, Eucalyptus, and OpenNebula. OpenStack gets 
bumped in Fedora 17 to the Essex release, and other OpenStack features 
have been added or updated as well, including Horizon and Quantum, and 
the ability to use OpenStack with libguestfs and qpid.

These and many other improvements provide a wide and solid base for 
future Fedora releases. This release increases the range of 
possibilities for developers and helps Fedora to maintain its position 
at the leading edge of free and open source technology.

Ketchup with the full list of features for Fedora 17 here:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/17/FeatureList

We also have nightly composes of alternate spins available here:
http://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/nightly-composes/

== Issues and Details ==

For more information including common and known bugs, tips on how to 
report bugs, and the official release schedule, please refer to the 
release notes:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_17_Alpha_release_notes

A shorter list of common bugs can be found here:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F17_bugs

== Contributing ==

Ever wonder how sausage is made? Yeah, we didn't want to know either. 
Hot dogs, on the other hand, are glorious creations, and the Alpha 
release of Beefy Miracle is yet another fine example of a long line of 
solid Alpha releases. We can't do it without you, though. Bug reports 
are especially helpful as we move from the hot dog factory to the 
finished Beefy Miracle. If you encounter any issues, please report them!

Mustard up the confidence to contribute? Don't worry -- we don't bite! 
(Except... tasty, delicious hot dogs. Mmmmmm. Hot dogs.) Fedora is a 
fantastic, friendly community, and we have many ways in which you can 
contribute, including Documentation, Marketing, Design, QA, Development, 
and more.

To learn how to help us cook a better hot dog, visit:
http://join.fedoraproject.org

Thank you, and we hope to see you in the Fedora project!
-- 
announce mailing list
announce@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/announce


to post comments

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:06 UTC (Tue) by dennisk (guest, #12308) [Link] (2 responses)

Beefy? Hmm, I wonder if there is a vegan option.

Dennisk

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 18:54 UTC (Tue) by jwakely (subscriber, #60262) [Link] (1 responses)

You'll be wanting the alfalfa release, this announcement is for the alpha.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 29, 2012 3:16 UTC (Wed) by ghane (guest, #1805) [Link]

Excellent, jwakely!

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:08 UTC (Tue) by JEFFREY (guest, #79095) [Link] (9 responses)

*sigh*

These release notes embody the reason why we (Linux evangelists) are constantly struggling to convince businesses that Linux is a "professional" quality system.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:17 UTC (Tue) by niner (subscriber, #26151) [Link]

I'd rather have entertaining release announcements than having businesses use a Fedora Alpha as "professional" quality system.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:25 UTC (Tue) by flammon (guest, #807) [Link]

After working for a conservative corporation, I've realized that conservative professionalism won't make much of a difference. If the company is that conservative, Linux isn't even on the radar. If they're less conservative, they're already running Linux. Besides, these notes will mostly be seen by developers so no harm done and at least someone's having fun.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 17:27 UTC (Tue) by drag (guest, #31333) [Link]

If people are running Fedora on production systems and don't have enough of a clue to look past the 'beefy' then they have more problems then just being 'conservative'.

One thing Linux evangelists need to be aware of is that not ever Linux distribution is appropriate for everybody and that giving bad/incorrect/invalid advice because they are not aware of their clients needs is far worse then not evangelizing at all.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 18:18 UTC (Tue) by SEJeff (guest, #51588) [Link]

Do you present Fedora as a "professional system"? Thats what RHEL (and clones) is for.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 18:23 UTC (Tue) by geofft (subscriber, #59789) [Link]

I haven't had any trouble convincing anyone of that, and it's quite obvious to both my current and previous workplaces that Linux was the right choice for just about everything and we shouldn't be running servers on, say, Solaris, or in many cases NT. Who are you evangelizing, and how, and what are they using instead?

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 18:49 UTC (Tue) by jwakely (subscriber, #60262) [Link]

It's an alpha release announcement, do you expect a marketing team to draft and approve a call for alpha testers?

Plus it's fun.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 29, 2012 8:48 UTC (Wed) by marcH (subscriber, #57642) [Link]

> These release notes embody the reason why we (Linux evangelists) are constantly struggling to convince businesses that Linux is a "professional" quality system.

This is not even wrong. Linux is not a system. Fedora, Redhat, Android, etc. are operating systems with brand recognition and widely different quality expectations.

If some businesses are not clued enough to make that kind of difference then you should probably stop wasting your time with them, they'll soon become irrelevant anyway. Open source really does not need any "desperate evangelism" any more. http://www.h-online.com/open/features/We-won-and-we-didn-...

BTW, I like Fedora for workstations but I would not recommend it for a server. Not because it's not professional but because of the feature/stability trade-off.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Mar 1, 2012 5:35 UTC (Thu) by Rudd-O (guest, #61155) [Link] (1 responses)

Ah, Jesus, SHUT UP. Go hate somewhere else. The whole Beefy Miracle thing is probably the funniest and most community-endearing thing that Fedora has had in a long time. And I LOVE it.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Mar 6, 2012 15:51 UTC (Tue) by lsatenstein (guest, #34741) [Link]

Fedora is a community and a private project. RedHat needs Fedora as a testbed for future RH Linux enhancements. How can RH test that a release is bug free?

Fedora developers (paid and volunteer), work their best to distribute bug-free code. But a few hundred developers cannot test a few thousand packages, and that is why there is alpha, beta, Release candidates and release versions.

My experience with Fedora has always been positive. It works, it is secure, it is fast, and it is reliable. Other distributions stay 6 months or so behind, to let leading distributions take the risk for the new features. I always do what I can do to further Linux development.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:25 UTC (Tue) by dashesy (guest, #74652) [Link] (2 responses)

I am wondering if Cinnamon is going to be in the Fedora 17 spins, or I should do resort to unofficial repos. It seems there is a ticket and discussion for this, but I do not know if Fedora 17 will finally include it or I should wait for Fedora 18. Thanks to the great work, it should not be a big deal (the unofficial repo works fine so far), but one cannot be sure it wont break in the future.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:43 UTC (Tue) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946) [Link] (1 responses)

I have assigned myself the package and intend to review and approve it. Just got delayed a bit waiting on clarification from FESCo. Even otherwise, the same person who has submitted the package for review has been maintaining the unofficial repo you point out. So the chances of breaking is just the same.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 17:02 UTC (Tue) by dashesy (guest, #74652) [Link]

Great, it will at least make it easier to file bug reports.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 16:47 UTC (Tue) by kragil (guest, #34373) [Link]

Way too much low quality comedy on this page. Is fedora now owned by Clown Hat?

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 17:00 UTC (Tue) by slashdot (guest, #22014) [Link]

Nom nom nom!

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 17:31 UTC (Tue) by drag (guest, #31333) [Link]

> * Open vSwitch is a flexible, multi-layer software switch typically used in virtualization environments as the network switching component in the hypervisor, providing virtual machines their network connectivity.

Awesome!!

> * Virtualization sandboxing provides a new application development library (libvirt-sandbox) to facilitate the embedding of virtualization.

Hope to see more of this!

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 17:47 UTC (Tue) by AdamW (subscriber, #48457) [Link]

Quick note for anyone interested in trying this out: we're really not joking about the Common Bugs page:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F17_bugs

You're definitely going to want to read it. Sometimes the stars align and Alpha / Beta builds are very solid, near production quality stuff. This is not one of those times :) F17 Alpha is a very Alpha-y alpha. It has giant bugs you would never expect to see in a production release. Most of the really big ones are documented on the common bugs page, with explanations and workarounds. So before you complain that sound doesn't work (we know!) or the installer falls over if you have another distro installed (we know!), please read the Common Bugs page:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F17_bugs

Thanks folks.

Fedora 17 Alpha released

Posted Feb 28, 2012 21:41 UTC (Tue) by PaulWay (guest, #45600) [Link]

I see we are in for more than six months of hot-dog-related puns. :-/

Have fun,

Paul


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