Monday, 5 December 2016

6 More Great Linux Operating Systems For Netbooks

AntiX































AntiX uses the iceWM window manager which will help to keep the initial memory footprint low.

Whilst it may not look as stylish as a Ubuntu, Mint or Elementary it is fully functional. Basically what you lose in beauty you gain in performance.

For navigation purposes you have a taskbar at the bottom and icons on the desktop which has been fairly standard across operating systems for a large number of years.

The menu however can be pulled up by clicking anywhere on the screen which means you can get to your application of choice quite quickly.

There are 4 virtual desktops available which helps with the utilisation of space because you can have different applications open on different workspaces.

AntiX comes with a lot of applications and perhaps there are some of them that won’t necessarily fit well with a netbook. The one place I would recommend Abiword and Gnumeric over LibreOffice is on a netbook and that is purely for performance.

Most of the applications are lightweight such as IceWeasel for web browsing and the Claws Email Client.


SparkyLinux





























The version of SparkyLinux I tried had the Razor-Qt desktop environment and as with AntiX’s iceWM window manager the intention is clearly substance over style.

The look and feel of Razor-Qt is very traditional with a panel along the bottom and a menu in the bottom left corner.

SparkyLinux comes with a whole host of applications with almost too many too mention. Again the developers have plumped for the LibreOffice suite over the lighter Abiword and Gnumeric tools. GIMP is also installed for image editing which will eat up the memory.



Lubuntu






























In the original article I listed Xubuntu as a great operating system for netbooks but it’s LXDE based cousin, Lubuntu, is possibly even better.

The LXDE desktop is incredibly light and almost as easy to customise as Xubuntu.

The desktop is again a fairly familiar affair with a panel at the bottom with a menu and system tray icons.

You can however customise Lubuntu to look the way you want it to and so you can have multiple panels if you so wish.

The applications are very well suited to a netbook with the Sylpheed email client, the Firefox web browser as well as Abiword and Gnumeric.

The audio application is Audacious which is lightweight but functional and for watching movies MPlayer is installed.



OS4 OpenLinux





























OS4 is based on Xubuntu so in reality you are getting a fairly stock version of Xubuntu with a few tweaks in the choice of applications.

OS4 therefore uses the XFCE desktop which is great for customising and can work any way you want it to.

XFCE is also a lightweight desktop environment and so performs very well on a netbook.

With Xubuntu you will have to install the restricted extras package to get Flash videos and MP3s to play but with OS4 these things work straight away.

The office tools for OS4 include Abiword and Gnumeric. The browser is Chromium and Claws is the email client.

OS4 also comes with a Commodore Amiga Emulator installed so if you like to retro game on your netbook this is definitely an option.



Point Linux





























Point Linux is unique in this list because it is the only one that uses the MATE desktop.

The MATE desktop was initially forked from Gnome 2 but has grown to be a really good desktop environment in its own right.

Point Linux therefore looks very stylish. The menus look great and the performance on my netbook was really good.

As with the LXDE and XFCE desktops, MATE is highly customisable and so you can make it work for you the way you want it to. (Maximise display usage).

Point Linux has 4 virtual workspaces by default (can be increased) and so you can use these again to maximise the usage of your netbook so that you are limited by memory and processor power over display issues.

Point Linux has more powerful tools installed such as the VLC Media Player, the full LibreOffice suite, Thunderbird Email Client and Firefox for web browsing. I have tried this out on my Acer Aspire One D255 and they all work fairly well but you wouldn’t want too many of them open at one go.


Elementary OS





























If you want to try something really stylish on your netbook then look no further than Elementary OS.

The developers of Elementary have clearly spent a lot of time on design and it looks great.

I wasn’t sure whether to add Elementary OS to this list or not because when I tried it on my netbook it was a little sluggish compared to the other operating systems. This might have to do with the initial RAM usage when sitting idle.

Note that there isn’t an office suite when you first install Elementary but this means you can pick and choose the tools you want to use which I think is a good thing.

For web browsing there is Midori and the email client is Geary. Totem is installed for watching movies and the audio application is a nice little tool called Noise.
source:http://www.everydaylinuxuser.com/

Friday, 25 November 2016

Red Hat Enterprise Linux Release Dates



The tables below list the major and minor Red Hat Enterprise Linux updates, their release dates, and the kernel versions that shipped with them.
Red Hat does not generally disclose future release schedules.

The tables below list the major and minor Red Hat Enterprise Linux updates, their release dates, and the kernel versions that shipped with them.
Red Hat does not generally disclose future release schedules.
Refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Life Cycle Policy for details on the life cycle of Red Hat Enterprise Linux releases.
To find your Red Hat Enterprise Linux release please:
cat /etc/redhat-release
To find your kernel version please:
uname -a

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7

ReleaseGeneral Availability Dateredhat-release Errata Date*Kernel Version
RHEL 7.32016-11-032016-11-03 RHSA-2016:2574-13.10.0-514
RHEL 7.22015-11-192015-11-19 RHEA-2015:24613.10.0-327
RHEL 7.12015-03-052015-03-05 RHEA-2015:05243.10.0-229
RHEL 7.0 GA2014-06-09-3.10.0-123
RHEL 7.0 Beta2013-12-11-3.10.0-54.0.1
Codename: Maipo (based on a mix of Fedora 19, Fedora 20, and several modifications)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6

ReleaseGeneral Availability Dateredhat-release Errata Date*Kernel Version
RHEL 6.82016-05-102016-05-10 RHSA-2016:0855-12.6.32-642
RHEL 6.72015-07-222015-07-22 RHEA-2015:14232.6.32-573
RHEL 6.62014-10-142014-10-13 RHEA-2014:16082.6.32-504
RHEL 6.52013-11-212013-11-20 RHSA-2013:1645-22.6.32-431
RHEL 6.42013-02-212013-02-21 RHSA-2013-04962.6.32-358
RHEL 6.32012-06-202012-06-19 RHSA-2012-08622.6.32-279
RHEL 6.22011-12-062011-12-06 RHEA-2011:17432.6.32-220
RHEL 6.12011-05-192011-05-19 RHEA-2011:05402.6.32-131.0.15
RHEL 6.02010-11-09-2.6.32-71
Codename: Santiago (based on a mix of Fedora 12, Fedora 13, and several modifications)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5

ReleaseGeneral Availability Dateredhat-release Errata Date*Kernel Version
RHEL 5.112014-09-162014-09-16 RHEA-2014-12382.6.18-398
RHEL 5.102013-10-012013-09-30 RHEA-2013-13112.6.18-371
RHEL 5.92013-01-072013-01-07 RHEA-2013-00212.6.18-348
RHEL 5.82012-02-202012-02-20 RHEA-2012:03152.6.18-308
RHEL 5.72011-07-212011-07-20 RHEA-2011:09772.6.18-274
RHEL 5.62011-01-132011-01-12 RHEA-2011:00202.6.18-238
RHEL 5.52010-03-302010-03-30 RHEA-2010:02072.6.18-194
RHEL 5.42009-09-022009-09-02 RHEA-2009:14002.6.18-164
RHEL 5.32009-01-202009-01-20 RHEA-2009:01332.6.18-128
RHEL 5.22008-05-212008-05-20 RHEA-2008:04362.6.18-92
RHEL 5. 12007-11-072007-11-07 RHEA-2007:08542.6.18-53
RHEL 5.02007-03-15-2.6.18-8
Codename: Tikanga (based on Fedora Core 6)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4

Release/UpdateGeneral Availability Dateredhat-release Errata Date*Kernel Version
RHEL 4 Update 92011-02-162011-02-16 RHEA-2011:02512.6.9-100
RHEL 4 Update 82009-05-192009-05-18 RHEA-2009:10022.6.9-89
RHEL 4 Update 72008-07-292008-07-24 RHEA-2008:07692.6.9-78
RHEL 4 Update 62007-11-152007-11-15 RHBA-2007:08972.6.9-67
RHEL 4 Update 52007-05-012007-04-27 RHBA-2007:01962.6.9-55
RHEL 4 Update 42006-08-102006-08-10 RHBA-2006:06012.6.9-42
RHEL 4 Update 32006-03-122006-03-07 RHBA-2006:01492.6.9-34
RHEL 4 Update 22005-10-052005-10-05 RHEA-2005:7862.6.9-22
RHEL 4 Update 12005-06-082005-06-08 RHEA-2005:3182.6.9-11
RHEL 4 GA2005-02-15-2.6.9-5
Codename: Nahant (based on Fedora Core 3)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3

Release/UpdateGeneral Availability DateKernel Version
RHEL 3 Update 92007-06-202.4.21-50
RHEL 3 Update 82006-07-202.4.21-47
RHEL 3 Update 72006-03-172.4.21-40
RHEL 3 Update 62005-09-282.4.21-37
RHEL 3 Update 52005-05-182.4.21-32
RHEL 3 Update 42004-12-122.4.21-27
RHEL 3 Update 32004-09-032.4.21-20
RHEL 3 Update 22004-05-122.4.21-15
RHEL 3 Update 12004-01-162.4.21-9
RHEL 3 GA2003-10-222.4.21-4
Codename: Taroon (based on Red Hat Linux 9)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 2.1

Release/UpdateGeneral Availability DateKernel Version
RHEL 2.1 Update 72005-04-28-
RHEL 2.1 Update 62004-12-132.4.9-e.57
RHEL 2.1 Update 52004-08-182.4.9-e.49
RHEL 2.1 Update 42004-04-212.4.9-e.40
RHEL 2.1 Update 32004-12-192.4.9-e.34
RHEL 2.1 Update 22003-03-292.4.9-e.24
RHEL 2.1 Update 12003-02-142.4.9-e.12
RHEL 2.1 GA2002-03-232.4.9-e.3
Codename: Pensacola (AS) / Panama (ES) (based on Red Hat Linux 7.2)
* Helpful when cloning channels in Satellite for a minor version plus all errata prior to the next minor release using spacewalk-clone-by-date or the webUI.

What’s New in Ubuntu 17.04 (Zesty Zapus) – Overview



Ubuntu 17.04, code named Zesty Zapus, is the future release that will succeed Ubuntu 16.10, and even though it’s End of life date has been scheduled for January 2018, the development team aims to bring a lot of upgrades, fixes, and additions in this release.
Its official release has been scheduled for April 2017.
Its codename, Zesty, is an adjective for ‘great enthusiasm and energy’, while Zapus, is the genus name of a North-American mouse that is said to be the only mammal on Earth that has up to 18 teeth in total.

Regarding the codename, Mark wrote on his blog that:
Ubuntu is moving even faster to the center of the cloud and edge operations. From AWS to the zaniest new devices, Ubuntu helps people get things done faster, cleaner, and more efficiently, thanks to you. We love the pace of change and we change the face of love

What’s New in Ubuntu 17.04 (Zesty Zapus)

The Zesty Zapus will have an updated Linux kernel, version 4.8, which is the latest line of Linux release series upon which Ubuntu 16.10 is based.
Ubuntu 17.04 Kernel Version
Ubuntu 17.04 Kernel Version

Future Changes include

Canonical is yet to release any information about the changes to look forward to in this future release, but we are sure a release will be around the corner soon.

Upgrade to Ubuntu 17.04 (Zesty Zapus)

With Ubuntu, you can trust that upgrading to later distro releases is easy.
All you need to do is enter
$ sudo do-release-upgrade

to upgrade to a newer release or to upgrade to a development version of Ubuntu (like in this case of 17.04).
$ sudo do-release-upgrade -d
Upgrade to Ubuntu 17.04
Upgrade to Ubuntu 17.04
You can also check the article on upgrading to 17.04 from 16.10.

Download and Install Ubuntu 17.04 (Zesty Zapus)

To avoid potential bugs and data loss I advise that you perform a clean installation on a virtual machine since this release is not official yet.
You can download the disk image for either 32-bit or 64-bit architecture:
Including the images for Ubuntu 17.04 official flavors, and then go about installing the image like you would any other.
Do you plan on trying out Ubuntu 17.04? Or are you already a steady user? Share your thoughts in the comments section.