Tag Archives: Fedora

Fedora 17 first impressions

Fedora 17 default desktop

Fedora 17 default desktop

Fedora 17 Linux was released May 29, 2012. As many of you know I’ve been an Ubuntu Linux fan pretty much since Ubuntu 4.10 was released back in 2006. Since Ubuntu 12.04 refuses to work (more on this in another post) on my Lenovo 3000 C100 notebook I decided to give the latest Fedora 17 a shot.

Not only did Fedora 17 boot from the Live CD (the Ubuntu 12.04 Live CD wouldn’t boot even after trying every boot option I could think of), but when I installed it wireless worked out of the box (I didn’t need to tell Fedora that I had a broadcom wireless chipset).

Fedora 17 uses Gnome Shell (Gnome 3) as the desktop environment. I’ve started to like Ubuntu’s Unity interface, but Gnome Shell works pretty good on my hardware (Celeron 1.5GHz, 2GB RAM, 80GB HD, Intel graphics).

One of the first applications I tried was Gimp 2.8. Gimp version 2.8 has been highly anticipated by many long time Gimp users. I first tried it on Windows and was surprised at how awfully slow it was, but on Fedora it booted up rather quickly (on lesser hardware).

What’s new in Fedora 17, not a lot that jumped out at me. It looks like Fedora 16, behaves perhaps a tiny bit better, but still crashes applications on occasion. One annoyance that’s still present in Fedora 17 (I’m convinced it’s a Gnome 3 thing) is that the delete key does not delete highlighted files. It works under Windows and just about every non-Gnome 3 distribution I’ve tried and is just annoying that it doesn’t work (or work well if it ever does work) under Fedora 17.

A new note-taking application, Cherry Tree, has been added to Fedora. Cherry Tree looks promising, but lacks some of the features of the BasKet note taking application for KDE (but is better than gnote or Tomboy). I found Cherry Tree to boot really fast, it is an editor after all. Sadly it crashed and I lost a couple of pages of data and some code, and there’s no recovery option like LibreOffice.

There are a few updates to programs like vym (View Your Mind), LibreOffice, and most notably Gimp which I’ve already mentioned.

There’s no “wow” factor to Fedora 17, it’s just a good, stable operating system that installed without a hitch on my Lenovo 3000 C100 0761, something I cannot say for Ubuntu 12.04. If you’ve tried Gnome Shell on Ubuntu, the experience on Fedora is far smoother, but Ubuntu has focused on Unity so this is no surprise.

 

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Days of Linux – Reason #1 Why I like Linux

Fedora 16 Linux displaying the calendar

Fedora 16 Linux displaying the calendar

Starting this evening I’m going to try to post on a regular at least bi-weekly basis a short article about why I like Linux.

Reason #1 why I like Linux is because Linux is about choice. Lots of changes have been going on lately in Linux desktop development, and not everyone is pleased with the direction these desktop environments are heading. With proprietary operating systems like Windows and Mac OS X you’re somewhat limited to how much you can customize your desktop environment (Windows users if you want to get more out of your Windows desktop environment I recommend Stardock’s Window Blinds), but Linux offers a huge amount of desktop environments: Gnome, KDE, XFCE, LXDE, Blackbox, FVWM, WindowMaker, OpenBox, TWM just to name a few.

If you don’t like how a Linux distribution handles software you can switch to a system that supports the kind of package manager you like. Maybe you’re just the curious type who likes to see how they other guy is doing things.

Linux is about choice, it always has been. The open nature of Linux just lends itself to choice. Being free to choose between software and environments is just one of the many great things about Linux.

Above I’m running Fedora 16 Linux. I’m a huge Ubuntu Linux fan, but I’ve always also liked Fedora (and Red Hat Linux). I’m currently re-evaluating Fedora Linux looking at some of its strengths and weaknesses. This is running on a 1.7GHz system with 1GB RAM.

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Linux on PowerPCs

For the past few years The Working Centre’s Computer Recycling Project has primarily worked with x86-compatible hardware. We’ve had several donations of older Apple Macintosh systems, mostly G3 systems, but some G4′s as well. Unfortunately Apple’s license dictates we do not sell machines with Mac OS unless the machines come with the CDs. There’s lots of debate among refurbishers about this but the above info is from an Apple EULA and we adhere to EULAs. Mostly due to time we haven’t made much of an effort to get these systems going.

Fedora 12 running on an iMac G3 450MHz tower

Fedora 12 running on an iMac G3 450MHz tower

Over the past few weeks a few of us have been looking at various Linux distributions supporting the PowerPC architecture with the hope we can do a decent job installing something up-to-date yet with reasonable speed. Fedora 12 while attractive and functional was incredibly slow on the 450MHz machine we tried it on (with 1GB RAM). Now these are not target machines and we might recycle anything less than a G4. Alternatively we might just do text/server installs for Kitchener geeks who just want a Mac server.

Debian Squeeze running on an iBook G4

Debian Squeeze running on an iBook G4

I also downloaded Debian Squeeze and had one of our volunteers install it on an iBook G4. Squeeze had okay performance considering the machine only had 256MB RAM (but a 1.2GHz CPU). Unfortunately the touchpad didn’t work. We still have Debian at the top of our list, but we also downloaded Ubuntu 10.04 PPC and plan on giving it a shot on a few memory-loaded PowerPC’s.

emac computer

An eMac G4

While it would be nice to rebuild the G3′s I expect our low-target machine for a usable desktop will be these eMac G4 700MHz machines. We probably won’t be hurrying to install Linux on these machines given all the work on our plates, but it’s something that’s been stewing in my mind for awhile.

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