Fedora 18 "Spherical Cow" Has Been Delayed

Posted by Michael Larabel on August 22, 2012

A Go/No-Go meeting today was held today concerning the Fedora 18 Alpha release. It was decided the F18 Alpha needs to slip by one week, which is already pushing back the final release of the Spherical Cow.

Pushing back the Fedora 18 schedule was agreed upon due to a number of outstanding blocker blugs and insufficient test results for the current base, installation, and desktop tests. At the moment there's just shy of two dozen Fedora 18 blocker bugs as shown by Fedora QA.

As said on the Fedora test-announce list, "As a result, ALL MAJOR MILESTONES, and their dependent tasks, will be pushed out by one week."

As a result of the slip, the Fedora 18 Alpha is now scheduled for 4 September, the Fedora 18 Beta for 9 October, and the Fedora 18 final release for the 13th of November.

There's a tradition to delays within the Fedora camp so today's setback of one week isn't entirely surprising nor will it be surprising if other delays crop up by the time of the planned Fedora 18 "Spherical Cow" release in mid-November. In fact, it will be surprising if there are not anymore F18 delays.

At least though Fedora Linux puts its standards higher than some other distributions than wanting to just ship on a commemorative date (e.g. 10.10.10 for Ubuntu 10.10) and that they have real, committed upstream innovations going on. For the upcoming work in this Red Hat sponsored Linux distribution, see the best features of Fedora 18 -- there were also some feature freeze exceptions earlier this week.

Discuss this article in our forums, IRC channel, or email the author. You can also follow our content via RSS and on social networks like Facebook, Identi.ca, and Twitter (@Phoronix and @MichaelLarabel). Subscribe to Phoronix Premium to view our content without advertisements, view entire articles on a single page, and experience other benefits.
Latest Hardware Reviews
  1. Gallium3D Continues Improving OpenGL For Older Radeon GPUs
  2. 15-Way Open vs. Closed Source NVIDIA/AMD Linux GPU Comparison
  3. Nouveau vs. NVIDIA Linux Comparison Shows Shortcomings
  4. AMD Radeon Gallium3D More Competitive With Catalyst On Linux
Latest Software Articles
  1. Btrfs vs. EXT4 vs. XFS vs. F2FS On Linux 3.10
  2. AMD Radeon R600 GPU LLVM 3.3 Back-End Testing
  3. F2FS File-System Shows Regressions On Linux 3.10
  4. Previewing The Radeon Gallium3D Shader Optimizations
Latest Linux News
  1. Linux 3.10 Kernel Benchmarks On A Core i7 Laptop
  2. GCC 4.8.1 Compiler Due To Be Out Next Week
  3. Linux 3.10 Kernel Benchmarks For Intel Ivy Bridge
  4. Linux's "Ondemand" Governor Is No Longer Fit
  5. Firefox 22 Beta Enables WebRTC Support
  6. OpenSUSE 13.1 Milestone 1 Released
  7. DRM Graphics Driver Comes For Dove/Cubox
  8. JADE: An LLVM-Based Video Decoder For MPEG RVC
  9. Ubuntu 13.10 Likely Switching To Chromium Browser
  10. Unity 7, Compiz To Be Polished For Ubuntu 13.10
  11. Unity 8, Mir To Be Experimental Choice In Ubuntu 13.10
Latest Forum Talk
  1. Unity 8, Mir To Be Experimental Choice In Ubuntu...
  2. Btrfs vs. EXT4 vs. XFS vs. F2FS On Linux 3.10
  3. OpenSUSE Considers Replacing LXDE With E17
  4. Greater Radeon Gallium3D Shader Optimization Tests
  5. Linux Game Development and a Qt Developers Rage
  6. Linux's "Ondemand" Governor Is No...
  1. Computers
  2. Display Drivers
  3. Graphics Cards
  4. Motherboards
  5. Peripherals
  6. Processors
  7. Software
  8. Operating Systems
  9. All Articles
  1. Linux Benchmarking
  2. OpenBenchmarking.org
  3. Phoronix Test Suite