403: Hidden Features of Fedora 34
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The new release of Fedora has more under the hood than you might know. It's a technology-packed release, and nearly all of it is coming to a distro near you. Plus the questions we think the University of Minnesota kernel ban raises, and more.Sponsored By:Linode Cloud Hosting: A special offer for all Linux Unplugged Podcast listeners and new Linode customers, visit linode.com/unplugged, and receive $100 towards your new account. MailRoute: Try out MailRoute today and get 10% off the lifetime of your account and start with a 30-day free trial, no credit card required.A Cloud Guru: By the end of this course, you will feel comfortable working with a large variety of networking tools and configurations to manage complex Linux networking implementations.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:Thoughts on The University of Minnesota Kernel BanSome 5.12 development statistics — By the time the 5.12 kernel was finally released, some 13,015 non-merge changesets had been pulled into the mainline repository for this development cycle. That makes 5.12 the slowest development cycle since 5.6, which was released at the end of March 2020. Still, there was plenty of work done for 5.12.Linux 5.12 Release AnnouncementAs Linux 5.12 released, Linus Torvalds warns next version will probably be rather large — "'Despite the extra week, this was actually a fairly small release overall. Judging by Linux-next, 5.13 will be making up for it."Flatpak 1.11.1 Brings Changes For Steam, Better Support For Command Line Programs — One of the changes with Flatpak 1.11.1 worth mentioning is allowing sub-sandboxes to have a different /usr and/or /app.steam-runtime-tools: pressure-vessel — pressure-vessel is a bit like a simplified version of Flatpak for Steam games.While we worry about WSLg Amazon is Positioned to Kill Server LinuxHumble Bundle is removing their pay sliders and replacing them with two preset pay splits.Looking forward to Fedora 34 — In 2021, complaints about PulseAudio are scarce indeed; the quirks have long since been ironed out and, for most people, sound just works. Obviously, it must be time to rip out the audio infrastructure and start over. That is what Fedora has done in the 34 release; PulseAudio is gone, replaced by PipeWire.How to Upgrade to Fedora 34 from Fedora 33 WorkstationCommon Fedora 34 BugsFedora Linux 34 is officially here!Fedora 34 ChangesGnome40DefaultPipeWireXwaylandStandaloneSome nice stuff not yet in stable that Fedora wantedWaylandByDefaultForPlasmaAArch64 KDE Plasma Desktop imageFedora Media Writer — Write Fedora Images to Portable MediaBtrfsTransparentCompressionbtrfs Wiki: CompressionFedora Workstation 34 feature focus: Btrfs transparent compression - Fedora Magazine — This article is going to go a little further under the hood and talk about data compression and transparent compression in btrfs. A term like that may sound scary at first, but less technical users need not be wary. This change is simple to grasp, and will help many Workstation users in several key areas.EnableSystemdOomdLINUX Unplugged 351: Lenovo Loves LinuxRemove Support For SELinux Runtime DisableUnifyGrubConfigUnplugged Core ContributorsFeedback: Running his own email for six yearsFeedback: Uses a Neat Trick with his Self Hosted EmailFeedback PIck: Modoboa, Open Source email serverPIck: zellij — A Rust and WebAssembly powered terminal workspace with batteries included.jupitergarage.com