Fedora Updates
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FOSS Weekly #22.43: Fedora 37 Released, Firewalls and More Linux Stuff
Fedora 37: From features to upgrade procedure, tip your Fedora
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CPE Weekly Update – Week 46 2022 - Fedora Community Blog
Purpose of this team is to take care of day to day business regarding CentOS and Fedora Infrastructure and Fedora release engineering work.
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Friday’s Fedora Facts: 2022-46 - Fedora Community Blog
Here’s your weekly Fedora report. Read what happened this week and what’s coming up. Your contributions are welcome (see the end of the post)!
Fedora Linux 37 was released on Tuesday! Fedora Linux 35 will reach end of life on 2022-12-13.
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Ben Williams: F37-20221118 updated Live isos released
The Fedora Respins SIG is pleased to announce the latest release of Updated F37-20221118-Live ISOs, carrying the 6.0.8-300 kernel.
This set of updated isos will save considerable amounts of updates after install. ((for new installs.)(New installs of Workstation have about 1GB of updates savings )).
A huge thank you goes out to irc nicks: geraldosimiao, ledini, Southern_Gentlem for testing these iso.
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Fedora 37, openQA news, Mastodon and more | AdamW on Linux and more
Hey, time for my now-apparently-annual blog post, I guess? First, a quick note: I joined the herd showing up on Mastodon, on the Fosstodon server, as @adamw@fosstodon.org. So, you know, follow me or whatever. I posted to Twitter even less than I post here, but we'll see what happens!
The big news lately is of course that Fedora 37 is out. Pulling this release together was a bit more painful than has been the norm lately, and it does have at least one bug I'm sad we didn't sort out, but unless you have one of a very few motherboards from six years ago and want to do a reinstall, everything should be great!
Personally I've been running Fedora Silverblue this cycle, as an experiment to see how it fares as a daily driver and a dogfooding base. Overall it's been working fine; there are still some awkward corners if you are strict about avoiding RPM overlays, though. I'm definitely interested in Colin's big native container rework proposal, which would significantly change how the rpm-ostree-based systems work and make package layering a more 'accepted' thing to do. I also found that sourcing apps feels slightly odd - I'd kinda like to use Fedora Flatpaks for everything, from a dogfooding perspective, but not everything I use is available as one, so I wound up with kind of a mix of things sourced from Flathub and from Fedora Flatpaks. I was also surprised that Fedora Flatpaks aren't generally updated terribly often, and don't seem to have 'development' branches - while Fedora 37 was in development, I couldn't get Flatpak builds of apps that matched the Fedora 37 RPM builds, I was stuck running Fedora 36-based Flatpaks. So it actually impeded my ability to test the latest versions of everything. It'd be nice to see some improvement here going forward.