>> I do know that there are lots of new stuff that show up in Fedora (like
>> ext4, Xen virtualization, KVM, gnome, kde, NetworkManager etc).
>> While that might lend it the label of being bleeding edge, generally
>> the code base at release is fairly stable.  This stability is increasing as
>> Fedora continues it's 6 monthly upgrade/update cycle.
>>
>
> yeah i know it's pretty bleeding edge. But i'm interested in that
> statement about "it got better because Fedora included it".

The only ones I can think off would be xen, kvm, NetworkManager
and ext4.

> I mean,
> there's like quite a big statement to make. I would be interested to
> follow if this were the case - but first I have to ascertain if this
> is indeed so. Looking at the site, I reckon the list I would be
> looking for would be at
> http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Overview#What_makes_Fedora_different.3F
> ?

Possibly.

>> So, give Fedora a shot.  You will not be disappointed.
>
> I have a might big todo list, would you believe it. :) But i can at
> least add Fedora now to the list :)

Just get the ISO (live cd) and run it in vm.  That should be good enough.
BTW, F11 is due out May 26th or so.

-- 
Harish Pillay [email protected] gpg id: 746809E3
fingerprint: F7F5 5CCD 25B9 FC25 303E 3DA2 0F80 27DB 7468 09E3

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