No, Download the net install or DVD (and enable the update repositories during install on the DVD) then you'll get the most up to date version during installation.Do they release any subversions? Like Fedora 12.1
No, Download the net install or DVD (and enable the update repositories during install on the DVD) then you'll get the most up to date version during installation.Do they release any subversions? Like Fedora 12.1
Fedora is becoming more popular, at least according to distrowatch :
http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20100104#stats
Ubuntu is still in the lead, at least according to the method used by distrowatch.
There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth...not going all the way, and not starting.
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Think I need to download fedora, I havent played with it in a few releases.
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It definitely is interesting. Though if only the xorg devs would introduce some backwards compatibility so that closed source GPU drivers would work on each Fedora release. Though it is possible to run the older version of Fedora (11 instead of 12 for example) and then when the drivers are released for 12 in RPMFusion or something just upgrade the whole system, I've done that with Fedora for years and it's always worked.That is pretty interesting that fedora has seem to replace OpenSUSE for the #2 position.
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