The Fedora Project is incredibly delighted to announce the release of Fedora 18 
("Spherical Cow"). Heck, we'd even say that getting this release to you has 
been a mooving experience.

Fedora is a leading-edge, free and open source operating system that continues 
to deliver innovative features to many users, with a new release about every 
six months...or so. :-D  But no bull: Spherical Cow, is of course, Fedora's 
best release yet. You'll go through the hoof when you hear about the Grade A 
Prime F18 features. You can always cownt on us to bring you the best features 
first.

Can't wait for a taste? You can get started downloading now:
http://fedoraproject.org/get-fedora

Detailed information about this release can be seen in the release notes:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/18/html/Release_Notes/

== What's New in Fedora 18? ==

The Fedora Project takes great pride in being able to show off features for all 
types of use cases, including traditional desktop users, systems 
administration, development, the cloud, and many more. But a few new features 
are guaranteed to be seen by nearly anyone installing Fedora and are 
improvements that deserve to be called out on their own.

The user interface for Fedora's installation software, Anaconda, has been 
completely re-written from the ground up. Making its debut in Fedora 18, the 
new UI introduces major improvements to the installation experience. It uses a 
hub-and-spoke model that makes installation easier for new users, offering them 
concise explanations about their choices. Advanced users and system 
administrators are of course still able to take advantage of more complex 
options. The general look and feel of the installation experience has been 
vastly upgraded, providing modern, clean, and comprehensible visuals during the 
process. While the new installer should work well for most users in most 
configurations, there are inevitably a few teething problems in the first 
release of such a major revision. 

Known design limitations of the new installer in F18 are listed here: 
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Anaconda/NewInstaller
Known significant bugs can be seen here: 
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F18_bugs#Installation_issues

We welcome your constructive and specific feedback as we continue to work on 
refining the installer for future releases. 

The upgrade process for Fedora now uses a new tool called FedUp (Fedora 
Upgrader). FedUp replaces pre-upgrade as well as the DVD methods for upgrading 
that have been used in previous Fedora releases. FedUp integrates with systemd 
to enable the upgrade functionality, doing the work in a pristine boot 
environment.

Of course, it wouldn't be a release announcement without a spotted -- er, 
dotted -- list of all the other fantastic features you'll see in Fedora 18:

=== For desktop users ===

Moooove over, stale desktops. We've got a small herd of choices udderly suited 
to your preferences.

* GNOME 3.6: The newest version of the GNOME desktop provides an enhanced 
Messaging Tray, support for Microsoft Exchange and Skydrive, and many more new 
features. 

* Cinnamon: Fedora users now have the option of using Cinnamon, an advanced 
desktop environment based on GNOME 3. Cinnamon takes advantage of advanced 
features provided by the GNOME backend while providing users with a more 
traditional desktop experience.

* MATE Desktop: The MATE desktop provides users with a classic GNOME 2.x style 
user interface. This desktop is perfect for users who have been running GNOME 
Classic or other window managers like XFCE as an alternative to GNOME 3. 

* KDE Plasma Workspaces 4.9: KDE Plasma Workspaces has been updated with many 
new features and improved stability and performance, including updates to the 
Dolphin File Manager, Konsole, and KWin Window manager. 

* Xfce 4.10: The lightweight and easy-to-use Xfce desktop has been updated to 
the 4.10 version with many bug fixes and enhancements, including a new MIME 
type editor, a reworked xfce4-run dialog, improved mouse settings, tabs in the 
Thunar file manager, and options to tile windows in xfwm4. Through all of these 
and more, Xfce continues to improve without getting in your way. 

Regardless of your desktop choice, Fedora 18 offers...

* Improved storage management: SSM (System Storage Manager) is an easy-to-use 
command-line interface tool that presents a unified view of storage management 
tools. Devices, storage pools, volumes, and snapshots can now be managed with 
one tool, with the same syntax for managing all of your storage. (It's great 
for systems administrators, too!)

=== For developers ===

For developers there are all sorts of moo-tivating goodies:

* Fresh versions of programming languages: Using Perl, Rails, or Python? All 
three of these languages are updated in Fedora 18. We've got Rails 3.2, Python 
3.3, and Perl 5.16 fresh off the farm. 

* Clojure gets more love with the addition of tooling packages, including the 
Leinengen build tool, as well as Clojure libraries and frameworks, including 
Korma and Noir.

* DragonEgg connects GCC and LLVM: DragonEgg is a plugin for the GCC compilers 
to allow use of the LLVM optimization and code-generation framework. DragonEgg 
provides software developers with more optimization and code-generation options 
for use with the GCC compilers. DragonEgg also allows GCC to be used for 
cross-compilation to target architectures supported by LLVM without requiring 
any special cross-compilation compiler packages.  Fedora continues to develop 
and use GCC as the standard default compiler. 

=== For systems administrators ===

Keep track of your infrastructure herds with these new features:

* Offline system updates: Systems can now be updated offline, allowing for a 
more stable update of critical system components. This functionality is only 
integrated with GNOME Desktop Environment in this release but uses the 
distribution neutral PackageKit and systemd API's and hence can be made 
available for other desktop environments as well based on the interest from 
upstream developers. 

* Storage enhancements: StorageManagement is a collection of tools and 
libraries for managing storage area networks (SAN) and network attached storage 
(NAS).

* Samba 4: This popular suite of tools has long provided file- and 
print-sharing services in heterogeneous operating system environments. The 
long-awaited Samba 4 introduces the first free and open source implementation 
of Active Directory protocols and includes a new scripting interface, allowing 
Python programs to interface to Samba's internals.

* Riak: A fault-tolerant key-value store, Riak provides easy operations and 
predictable scaling as a NoSQL database.

=== For clouds and virtualization ===

Do you spend your days <strike>grazing</strike> gazing into the clouds? Here's 
just a taste of some of the cloud and virt features you'll see in Fedora 18:

* Eucalyptus makes its first appearance in Fedora, with their 3.2 release 
included in F18. This platform for on-premise (private) 
Infrastructure-as-a-Service clouds uses existing infrastructure to create 
scalable and secure AWS-compatible cloud resources for compute, network, and 
storage.

* OpenStack: With the Folsom release in Fedora 18, OpenStack continues to have 
the newest releases in Fedora. This open source cloud computing platform 
enables users to deploy their own cloud infrastructures for private or public 
cloud deployments. Heat, an incubated OpenStack project, is also available in 
F18, providing an API that enables the orchestration of cloud applications 
using file or web based templates.

* oVirt Engine: The management application for the oVirt virtualization 
platform, oVirt Engine, is updated to the newest version, 3.1. This release 
includes extensive new features, including support for live snapshots, cloning 
virtual machines from snapshots, quotas, and more.

* Suspend and resume support for virt guests: Virtual machines get love with 
this feature, enabling the ability to suspend and resume guests, with the close 
of a laptop lid or menu option or via the command line.

And that's only the beginning. For a more complete list with details of all the 
new features in Fedora 18, steer over to:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/18/FeatureList

== Downloads, upgrades, documentation, and common bugs ==

The steaks are high--don't miss out on installing the best version of Fedora 
yet! Get it now:

http://get.fedoraproject.org/

If you are upgrading from a previous release of Fedora, refer to: 
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Upgrading

Fedora has replaced pre-upgrade with FedUp (excuse the pun.. or don't), a more 
robust solution, and pushed several bug fixes to older releases of Fedora to 
enable an easy upgrade to Fedora 18.

Graze...er, gaze...upon the full release notes for Fedora 18, guides for 
several languages, and learn about known bugs and how to report new ones, here: 
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/

With all the changes to the installer, we particularly recommend reading the 
Installation Guide:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/18/html/Installation_Guide/index.html

Everyone makes missteaks. Fedora 18 common bugs are documented at:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F18_bugs

This page includes information on several known bugs in the installer, so we 
recommend reading it before installing Fedora 18.

== Fedora Spins ==

Fedora spins are alternate versions of Fedora tailored for various types of 
users via hand-picked application set or customizations, from desktop options 
to spins for those interested in gaming, robotics, or design software. More 
information on our various spins is available at:

http://spins.fedoraproject.org

== Contributing ==

There are many ways to contribute beyond bug reporting. You can help translate 
software and content, test and give feedback on software updates, write and 
edit documentation, design and do artwork, help with all sorts of promotional 
activities, and package free software for use by millions of Fedora users 
worldwide. To get started, visit http://join.fedoraproject.org today!

== Fedora 19 ==

Even as we continue to provide updates with enhancements and bug fixes to 
improve the Fedora number experience, our next release, Fedora 19, is already 
being developed in parallel and has been open for active development for 
several months already. We have an early plan for release at the end of May 
2013, and the final schedule for F19 is going to be based on the results of the 
planning process:

https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/19/Schedule

== Feature Deprecation ==

Fedora has always been full of great features, but sometimes we need to cull 
the herd. Saying good-bye is always hard, but here are the ones we had to put 
out to pasture this time around. 

* /etc/sysconfig Deprecations: Several system configurations have moved out of 
/etc/sysconfig. The goal of these changes is to reduce - as described in 
http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/the-new-configuration-files.html - the 
unnecessary differences between Linux distributions and share a standard 
location for common settings. 

For a full list of changes read the release notes. 
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/18/html/Release_Notes/index.html


== Contact information ==

If you are a journalist or reporter, you can find additional information here:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Press

Enjoy!

-Robyn Bergeron
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