3.2.0
2.6.29.4
They are both long obsolete, so there is no difference between them as to whether you should use them or not. The major changes Fedora 16 made as compared to Fedora 15 were: GRUB2 became the default bootloader The HAL daemon was removed, in favor of udisks and udev The kernel version was upgraded to 3.1
No. Hybrid implies that there is a mix with something else. Fedora uses only the Linux kernel.
The NIC on that motherboard, a Realtek RTL8111, is already supported in Fedora's kernel.
A bootloader is what loads the kernel into RAM and transfers control to it from the BIOS.
Linux is an operating system kernel. By itself, it can do very little. It needs to be combined with an interface and applications in order to be useful. When you take the kernel and add the parts to create a working system, you create what is called a "Linux distrbution", or "distro." Fedora is an example of a Linux distro. In summary, Linux is a kernel, and Fedora is a full operating system.
It is a kernel version that enables realtime.
please check ns-allinone-2.33 on fedora 8
All versions of the Linux kernel are "full featured." The latest stable version of the Linux kernel as of May 17, 2011 is 2.6.38.6.
The 2.4 version of the Linux kernel was released in 2001.
the latest stable version is 3.4.4
If you're using the latest version of Fedora (Fedora 12), Firefox 3.5 comes pre-installed on your system, and it is kept up-to-date automatically via yum/packageKit. However, if you have an older version of Fedora, or you want to get a more bleeding-edge version of Firefox (sometimes the updates lag behind a few days or you want the development version), you can compile it from source. Instructions can found in the link below.