Red Hat and Fedora
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Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE:RHT) – Large Cap Afternoon Report
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Red Hat JBoss Fuse: Integrating Database, Java Bean, and Restful Services in EAP, Spring DSL
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Is Red Hat Inc (NYSE:RHT) Going to Burn These Institutional Investors?
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Red Hat Inc (NYSE:RHT) Receives $83.09 Consensus Target Price from Brokerages
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Red Hat Incorporated Inflow, Earnings and Results
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Farewell F21, Elections, Wayland by Default, Vacations — and then F24!
Fedora produces new releases approximately every six months — targeted at May and October. We always have two currently-supported releases, the latest and “n minus one”. We also have a one-month overlap after a new release comes out where “n minus two” is supported for a month. That lets you skip a release, if you like, and upgrade only once a year. I can’t believe this year has gone so fast, but the time has come to say goodbye to Fedora 21, which reached end of life status on December 1st, 2015. No further updates will be produced, even for security issues. If you’re still on F21 (or something older!) now’s the time to upgrade. Check out the upgrade instructions here.
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Two week Atomic images now on getfedora.org
One of the tasks websites team had for the final F23 release were the two week atomic images. In fact, for the past two Fedora releases, we’ve included an Atomic Host cloud image as a non-blocking deliverable. However, upstream Atomic is moving very fast — by the end of the alpha, beta, final stabilization cycle Fedora uses, the released artifact is basically obsolete. Additionally, the Project Atomic team at Red Hat wanted to do their ongoing development work in the Fedora upstream, and the six-month release cycle does not lend itself to that.
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Git, binary files, and patches
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FAmSCo Elections: Interview with Sirko Kemter (gnokii)
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FAmSCo Elections: Interview with Dan Mossor (danofsatx)
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Council Elections: Interview with Robert Mayr (robyduck)
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Dilution and Misuse of the "Linux" Brand
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