The Fedora Project Announces The General Availability Of Fedora Linux 34

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  • Fedora Linux 34 further improves the overall user experience with key updates like GNOME 40
  • It provides a foundation for new use cases, like edge computing, with improved support for hardware watchdogs for automated system recovery

The Fedora Project, a Red Hat, Inc. sponsored and community-driven open source collaboration, today announced the general availability of Fedora Linux 34, the latest version of the fully open source Fedora operating system. Fedora Linux 34 further improves the overall user experience with key updates like GNOME 40. It provides a foundation for new use cases, like edge computing, with improved support for hardware watchdogs for automated system recovery.

It added, “A more integrated, unified desktop experience with GNOME 40, which makes key features of the GNOME shell, like search, windows and workspaces more spatially coherent. GNOME shell now starts in the overview after login, with the GNOME welcome tour adapted to the new design. It also improves multi-monitor handling and allows users to choose between workspaces on primary displays only or workspaces on all displays.”

Increasing read and write performance of larger files

Btrfs transparent compression for more disk space on desktop variants of Fedora Linux, help to increase the lifespan of flash-based media by reducing write amplification for solid-state disks (SSDs). This compression will be essential for increasing read and write performance of larger files, with the potential to speed up related workflows.

Fedora CoreOS is an automatically updating, minimal operating system for running containerized workloads more securely and at scale. It is available in three different streams. The stable stream is offered with changes only reaching that stream after spending a period of time in the testing stream. The next stream represents the future.

The project plans this to be used to experiment with new features and also test out rebases of its platform on top of the next major version of Fedora. A rebase to Fedora Linux 34 has been in the testing stream during the beta period and is rolling out to the stable stream now, and the next stream will advance to future development based on Fedora’s “Rawhide” development branch.

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