If you have automatic enabled on Fedora CoreOS (the default) then you're stable stream nodes will be automatically updated to
@fedora 43 based content this week!
It's always satisfying when you see the tools you helped design working like they are supposed to. For the F43 CoreOS test week this week I dusted off my Raspberry Pi 4, which hadn't been powered on in almost a year, and let autoupdates happen. It fully updated to the latest version even though there were many changes in between with how we deliver updates.
I'd love to start a conversation to highlight a comparison between #fedora#coreos and
@opensuse#microos, given that they're both immutable and can be bootstrapped with butane/ignition. What do you prefer, and why?
This past week I went on The Self Hosted Show from Jupiter Broadcasting Studios to talk about
@fedora CoreOS edition. Was great to chat with
@ironicbadger, Brent Gervais and Chris Fisher, especially since it's been a few years since we were last able to catch up.
Screenshot on mobile (detail) of Hetzner web site showing supporter OS Images for rapid deployment. The two visible are Ubuntu (with 24.04 selected in a drop down) and Fedora (with 41 selected).
Happy to see Fedora has implemented CoreOS support for Hetzner. Guess the ball’s in Hetzner’s court now: would be great to see it as one of the natively-supported operating systems with rapid deploy (under 10 seconds deployment).
Feel free to reach out if you want to meet and chat about Fedora CoreOS, Atomic Desktops, sysexts, KDE or Flatpaks. I'll likely hand around the image-based, container or Rust dev rooms.