Red Hat and Fedora

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F23 is Go! Plus, internships, Atomic job opening, a Fedora book, and … systemd total conversion.
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Linux Voice looks back at Fedora Core 1
Linux Voice magazine periodically releases older issues of their magazine under a CC-BY-SA license so the entire Linux community can read, share and use the articles they publish (they also donate 50% of their profits to the Free Software community).Today, they released Issue 12 of Linux Voice under the CC-BY-SA license, nine months after the release of the magazine back in February.
Of particular interest to Fedora users is at the end of their Distro Hopper segment, they take a look at our first ever release — Fedora Core 1. While obviously a little dated, with the release of Fedora 23 so close, there is also a review of Fedora 21. The issue also features an interview with systemd developer Lennart Poettering.
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Fedora 23 Reaches Gold, Launches on November 3
The Red Hat developers have finally greenlit the launch of Fedora 23 and it looks like the new version will finally arrive on November 3, the date that was previously tracked.
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Changes To Look Forward To With Next Week's Fedora 23
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Fedora 23 Met By Another "No-Go" Today
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$0.31 EPS Expected for Red Hat This Quarter (NYSE:RHT)
Wall Street brokerages expect that Red Hat (NYSE:RHT) will post $0.31 earnings per share for the current quarter, according to Zacks Investment Research. Nine analysts have provided estimates for Red Hat’s earnings. The highest EPS estimate is $0.32 and the lowest is $0.30. Red Hat posted earnings of $0.30 per share in the same quarter last year, which suggests a positive year-over-year growth rate of 3.3%. The firm is expected to issue its next earnings results on Thursday, December 17th.
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Worth Watching Stocks: Red Hat Inc (NYSE:RHT), NXP Semiconductors NV (NASDAQ:NXPI), salesforce.com, inc. (NYSE:CRM)
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Ceph community creates board to drive open source storage software
The Ceph Community, an open-source object and file cloud storage stack, has formed an advisory board that will work in governance with the community.
The Ceph Advisory Board will assist the community in driving open-source software-defined storage technology, and in collaborating with the community’s technical and user committees.
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Linux Support Is Coming To Allow De-Authorizing Thunderbolt Devices
While in recent years there has been growing interest in enhancing Linux's Thunderbolt security with offering security levels and other functionality to authorize supported/known Thunderbolt devices, surprisingly it's taken until 2021 to see the ability for Linux's Thunderbolt software connection manage to handle de-authorizing devices.
If wanting to de-authorize a previously authorized Thunderbolt device for whatever reason or if wanting to establish policies like where on user log-out that devices would be automatically de-authorized, it's looking like Linux 5.12 will support this ability.
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Opensource.com exists to educate the world about everything open source, from new tools and frameworks to scaling communities. We aim to make open source more accessible to anyone who wants to use or contribute to it.
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To help you begin, we curated the 10 most popular articles on getting started in open source we published in 2020. We hope they'll inspire you to learn something new in 2021.
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