Fedora 13 is a operating system. The Fedora 13 has been tested via the Phoronix Test Suite in the configurations listed below.
DELL - Tests on Fedora 13, Intel T2400, Intel Mobile 945GM, Dell Latitude D620
stream-all - Tests on MeeGo 1.1.80, Fedora 13, Intel, Intel Device 4102, Pentium T4200, Intel Mobile 4 IGP, emachines HM40
drafzzz - Tests on Fedora 13, Pentium E5200, ATI Radeon HD 4800, ASUS P5KPL-AM
drafzzz - Tests on Fedora 13, Pentium E5200, ATI Radeon HD 4800, ASUS P5KPL-AM
ECC-Scimark2-Composite - Tests on Fedora 13, RedHat 9, Intel Core i5 660, GeForce GTX 260, ASUS P7H55-M PRO, Intel Xeon X5650, GeForce GT 220, Supermicro X8DTG-QF
Evanscomputers.com-buildkernel - Tests on Fedora 13, Ubuntu 10.10, RedHat 9, Intel Core i5 660, GeForce GTX 260, ASUS P7H55-M PRO, NVIDIA GT200, Intel Xeon X5650, GeForce GT 220, Supermicro X8DTG-QF
Evanscomputers.com-Bork - Tests on Fedora 13, RedHat 9, Intel Core i5 660, GeForce GTX 260, ASUS P7H55-M PRO, Intel Xeon X5650, GeForce GT 220, Supermicro X8DTG-QF
20101216-compil - Tests on Fedora 13, Intel Atom D510, Intel N10 Family IGP, Intel D510MO
iozone benchmark - Tests on Linux, Fedora 13, Intel Pentium D 2.80GHz, Intel 440BX, Intel Atom 230, Intel 82945G, Intel D945GCLF
Evanscomputers.com-Bork - Tests on Fedora 13, Linux, Intel Core i5 660, GeForce GTX 260, ASUS P7H55-M PRO, Intel Xeon 3.00GHz, ATI ES1000 515E
Evanscomputers.com-Bork - Tests on Fedora 13, Intel Core i5 660, GeForce GTX 260, ASUS P7H55-M PRO
thinkpad - Tests on Fedora 13, Intel Core i5 M 520, NVS 3100M, LENOVO 25184JU
thinkpad - Tests on Fedora 13, Intel Core i5 M 520, NVS 3100M, LENOVO 25184JU
pc47.opengl.test - Tests on Fedora 13, AMD Athlon 64 X2 4800, GeForce 310, HP 0A64h
Fedora 13 vs. Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Benchmarks: Fedora 13 was released last week with a number of new features like Btrfs system rollback support and support for easily using the open-source 3D NVIDIA driver, but how does its performance compare to that of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, which was released a month earlier? We have the benchmarks today from three different systems to tell you.
Fedora 13 Is Set To Premiere Today: Following a last minute setback, Red Hat is set to release Fedora 13 this morning. Fedora 13 integrates many package updates and new features for this first major update to Red Hat's community operating system for 2010...
Fedora 13 Suffers Last Minute Delay Of One Week: While Fedora 13 was scheduled to be released in one week, that is no longer the case. Red Hat's Paul Frields has announced that due to the blocker bug list not being cleared, the release of Fedora 13 has to be pushed back by one week...
Nearing The Release Of Fedora 13: Last week marked the release of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, this week there was the releases of PCLinuxOS 2010.1 and a new openSUSE 11.3 milestone, and planned for unveiling in just over a week is the final release of Fedora 13. This week the Fedora 13 release candidate is available via their compose system as all hands are on deck to prepare for the release of Goddard.
Btrfs System Rollbacks In Fedora 13: One of the benefits of Btrfs besides offering competitive performance against other Linux file-systems and SSD optimizations is its support for sub-volumes and writable snapshots. While Btrfs is still in development and is not yet used as a default file-system by any Linux distribution, Red Hat has been looking to capitalize upon the capabilities of Btrfs by introducing support for system rollbacks into Fedora.
Taking A Hit With ATI Graphics In Fedora 13 Beta: With the release of Fedora 13 Beta earlier this week we have been testing out this Red Hat update on a few of our test systems. One area of interest to us has been to see how the open-source graphics are performing with Fedora 13, since after all Red Hat is known to always ship the very latest DRM/Mesa/DDX bits in Fedora due to all of their upstream involvement and this week is also the Fedora 13 Graphics Test Week.
Fedora 13 Beta Is Set To Sail: Besides the Fedora 13 Graphics Testing Week taking place over the next few days, this week is also significant within the Fedora community as it will mark the release of Fedora 13 Beta. There's just one month left to go until Fedora 13 (codenamed Goddard) will be officially released, but over the past few hours we have been testing out what will become the official Fedora 13 Beta spin this morning.
It's Time To Test The Graphics In Fedora 13: Fedora 13 will be officially released next month and while we have already used it in testing out the Nouveau Gallium3D drivers and trying out the new Intel graphics, this week Red Hat is hosting community test days for the graphics stack in Fedora 13...
Fedora 13 Alpha Benchmarks: Following the release of Fedora 13 Alpha this week we delivered Intel graphics benchmarks looking at the performance of an Intel Atom Netbook using the very latest kernel, DRM, and Mesa packages that Fedora is known for carrying. There are regressions in the Intel stack worth noting, but in this article, we are continuing in our Fedora 13 benchmarking by looking at the general system performance of the Linux desktop.
The Direction Of Intel Graphics With Fedora 13 Alpha: Fedora 13 Alpha was released yesterday with a plethora of new features and updated packages for this Red Hat Linux distribution. Aside from the features like Btrfs system rollback support and PolicyKit One support for Qt/KDE applications to excite end-users, each Fedora release always pulls in the very latest Linux graphics code.
Fedora 13 Alpha Released With Plenty Of Features: Following a one week delay, the first alpha release for Fedora 13 is now available. The final release of Fedora 13 is not due out until May, but this is the only development release of Goddard before this Red Hat Linux operating system reaches its beta stage...
Fedora 13 Alpha Pushed Back By A Week: Red Hat's Fedora lives on the bleeding edge of Linux development with many new features going into each release. While this is exciting for Linux enthusiasts and those looking to see the course Linux is on before most of this work ends up in other distributions, postponed releases have become a common occurrence for this free software project.