The development team Fedora is considering taking a short break from the distribution's semi-annual releases to make some changes to the project's development infrastructure.
Paul Frields suggested that after the release of Fedora 30, the team will postpone its development Fedora 31 to make these changes.
We should skip the F31 cycle and leave the F30 for longer to focus on improving our tools and testing the distribution. These tool changes will improve Fedora's overall reliability, reduce manual coding, and the complexities associated with distributing production. Although we did this to create "versions", our intention is to monitor more actively this effort of many teams, so that we can use more time and give the project maximum transparency.
You can find more details about this suggestion in the publication of Frields.
Frields also posted this week in Fedora Magazine to remind Fedora users that the support of version 27 of the distribution has reached its end.
"With the recent release of Fedora 29, Fedora 27 officially enters End of Life (EOL) mode on November 30, 2018. This will affect any systems that continue to use Fedora 27."
More information and instructions for upgrading can be found at official announcement.
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