GNOME Has a New Infrastructure Partner: Welcome AWS!

This post was contributed by Andrea Veri from the GNOME Foundation.

GNOME has historically hosted its infrastructure on premises. That changed with an AWS Open Source Credits program sponsorship which has allowed our team of two SREs to migrate the majority of the workloads to the cloud and turn the existing OpenShift environment into a fully scalable and fault tolerant one thanks to the infrastructure provided by AWS. By moving to the cloud, we have dramatically reduced the maintenance burden, achieved lower latency for our users and contributors and increased security through better access controls.

Our original infrastructure did not account for the exponential growth that GNOME has seen in its contributors and userbase over the past 4-5 years thanks to the introduction of GNOME Circle. GNOME Circle is composed of applications that are not part of core GNOME but are meant to extend the ecosystem without being bound to the stricter core policies and release schedules. Contributions on these projects also make contributors eligible for GNOME Foundation membership and potentially allow them to receive direct commit access to GitLab in case the contributions are consistent over a long period of time in order to gain more trust from the community. GNOME recently migrated to GitLab, away from cgit and Bugzilla.

In this post, we’d like to share some of the improvements we’ve made as a result of our migration to the cloud.

A history of network and storage challenges

In 2020, we documented our main architectural challenges:

  1. Our infrastructure was built on OpenShift in a hyperconverged setup, using OpenShift Data Foundations (ODF), running Ceph and Rook behind the scenes. Our control plane and workloads were also running on top of the same nodes.
  2. Because GNOME historically did not have an L3 network and generally had no plans to upgrade the underlying network equipment and/or invest time in refactoring it, we would have to run our gateway using a plain Linux VM with all the associated consequences.
  3. We also wanted to make use of an external Ceph cluster with slower storage, but this was not supported in ODF and required extra glue to make it work.
  4. No changes were planned on the networking equipment side to make links redundant. That meant a code upgrade on switches would have required full service downtime.
  5. We had to work with with Dell support for every broken hardware component, which added further toil.
  6. With the GNOME user and contributor base always increasing, we never really had a good way to scale our compute resources due to budget constraints.

Cloud migration improvements

In 2024, during a hardware refresh cycle, we started evaluating the idea of migrating to the public cloud. We have been participating in the AWS Open Source Credits program for many years and received sponsorship for a set of Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) buckets that we use widely across GNOME services. Based on our previous experience with the program and the people running it, we decided to request sponsorship from AWS for the entire infrastructure, which was kindly accepted.

I believe it’s crucial to understand how AWS resolved the architectural challenges we had as a small SRE team (just two engineers!). Most importantly, the move dramatically reduced the maintenance toil we had:

  1. Using AWS’s provided software-defined networking services, we no longer have to rely on an external team to apply changes to the underlying networking layout. This also gave us a way to use a redundant gateway and NAT without having to expose worker nodes to the internet.
  2. We now use AWS Elastic Load Balancing (ELB) instances (classic load balancers are the only type supported by OpenShift for now) as a traffic ingress for our OpenShift cluster. This reduces latency as we now operate within the same VPC instead of relying on an external load balancing provider. This also comes with the ability to have access to the security group APIs which we can use to dynamically add IP addresses. This is critical when we have individuals or organizations abusing specific GNOME services with thousands of queries per minute.
  3. We also use Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) and Amazon Elastic File System (EFS) via the OpenShift CSI driver. This allows us to avoid having to manage a Ceph cluster, which is a major win in terms of maintenance and operability.
  4. With AWS Graviton instances, we now have access to ARM64 machines, which we heavily leverage as they’re generally cheaper than their Intel counterparts.
  5. Given how extensively we use Amazon S3 across the infrastructure, we were able to reduce latency and costs due to the use of internal VPC S3 endpoints.
  6. We took advantage of AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) to provide granular access to AWS services, giving us the possibility to allow individual contributors to manage a limited set of resources without requiring higher privileges.
  7. We now have complete hardware management abstraction, which is vital for a team of only two engineers who are trying to avoid any additional maintenance burden.

Thank you, AWS!

I’d like to thank AWS for their sponsorship and the massive opportunity they are giving to the GNOME Infrastructure to provide resilient, stable and highly available workloads to GNOME’s users and contributors across the globe.

GNOME Foundation Welcomes Steven Deobald as Executive Director

The GNOME Foundation is delighted to announce the appointment of Steven Deobald as our new Executive Director. Steven brings decades of experience in free software, open design, and open documentation efforts to the Foundation, and we are excited to have him lead our organization into its next chapter.

“I’m incredibly excited to serve the GNOME Foundation as its new full-time Executive Director,” said Steven Deobald. “The global network of contributors that makes up the GNOME community is awe-inspiring. I’m thrilled to serve the community in this role. GNOME’s clear mission as a universal computing environment for everyone, everywhere has remained consistent for a quarter century—that kind of continuity is exceptional.”

Steven has been a GNOME user since 2002 and has been involved in numerous free software initiatives throughout his career. His professional background spans technical leadership, business development, and nonprofit work, and he was one of the founding members of Nilenso, India’s first worker-owned tech cooperative. Having worked with projects like XTDB and Endatabas and founding India’s first employee-own, he brings valuable experience in open source product development. Based in Halifax, Canada, Steven is well-positioned to collaborate with our global community across time zones.

“Steven’s wealth of experience in open source communities and his clear understanding of GNOME’s mission make him the ideal leader for the Foundation at this time,” said Robert McQueen, GNOME Foundation Board President. “His vision for transparency and financial resilience aligns perfectly with our goals as we support and grow the diversity and sustainability of GNOME’s free software personal computing ecosystem.”

Steven plans to focus on increasing transparency about the people and processes behind GNOME, reestablishing the Foundation’s financial stability, and building resilience across finances, people, documentation, and processes to ensure GNOME thrives for decades to come. You can read more from Steven in his introductory post on his GNOME blog.

Heartfelt Thanks to Richard Littauer

The GNOME Foundation extends its deepest gratitude to Richard Littauer, who has served as Interim Executive Director for the past ten months. Despite initially signing on for just two months while simultaneously moving to New Zealand and beginning a PhD program, Richard extended his commitment to ensure stability during our search for a permanent director.

During his tenure, Richard worked closely with the board and staff to pass a balanced budget, secure additional funding, support successful events including GUADEC, and navigate numerous challenges facing the Foundation. His dedication to ensuring GNOME’s continued success, often while working across challenging time zones, has been invaluable.

“I knew this day would come at some point,” Richard shared in his farewell post. “My time has been exceedingly difficult… I feel that I have done very little; all of the gains happened with the help of others.” Richard’s humility belies the significant impact he made during his time with us, creating a solid foundation for our new Executive Director.

Richard will return full-time to his PhD studies at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington, but remains available to the GNOME community and can be reached via Mastodon, his website, or at richard@gnome.org.

Looking Ahead

As we welcome Steven and thank Richard, we also recognize the dedicated contributors, volunteers, staff, and board members who keep GNOME thriving. The Foundation remains committed to supporting the development of a free and accessible desktop environment for all users around the world.

The GNOME community can look forward to meeting Steven at upcoming events and through community channels. We encourage everyone to join us in welcoming him to the GNOME family and supporting his vision for the Foundation’s future.

GUADEC 2025 Registrations are Open!

The GNOME Foundation is thrilled to share that registration for GUADEC 2025 is now open!

GUADEC is the largest annual gathering of GNOME developers, contributors, and community members. This year we welcome everyone to join us in the beautiful city of Brescia, Italy from July 24th to 29th or online! For those who cannot join us in person, we will live-stream the event so you can attend or present remotely.

To register, visit guadec.org and select whether you will attend in person or remotely.
In-person attendees will notice a slight change on their registration form. This year we’ve added a section for “Registration Type” and provided 4 options for ticket fees. These costs go directly towards supporting the conference and helping us build a better GUADEC experience.
We ask that in-person attendees select the option they are most comfortable with. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us at guadec@gnome.org.

Register for In-Person Attendance
Register for Remote Attendance

The Call for Participation is ongoing but once are talks are selected you will find speaker details and a full schedule on guadec.org. We will also be adding more information about social events, accommodations, and activities throughout Brescia soon!

We are still looking for conference sponsors. If you or your company would like to become a GUADEC 2025 sponsor, please take a look at our sponsorship brochure and reach out to us at guadec@gnome.org.

To stay up-to-date on conference news, be sure to follow us on Mastodon @gnome@floss.social.

We look forward to seeing you in Brescia and online!

Introducing GNOME 48

The GNOME Project is proud to announce the release of GNOME 48, ‘Bengaluru’.

GNOME 48 brings several exciting updates, including improved notification stacking for a cleaner experience, better performance with dynamic triple buffering, and the introduction of new fonts like Adwaita Sans & Mono. The release also includes Decibels, a minimalist audio player, new digital well-being features, battery health preservation with an 80% charge limit, and HDR support for compatible displays.

For a detailed breakdown, visit the GNOME 48 Release Notes.

GNOME 48 will be available shortly in many distributions, such as Fedora 42 and Ubuntu 25.04. If you want to try it today, you can look for their beta releases, which will be available very soon

Getting GNOME

We are also providing our own installer images for debugging and testing features. These images are meant for installation in a vm and require GNOME Boxes with UEFI support. We suggest getting Boxes from Flathub.

GNOME OS Nightly

If you’re looking to build applications for GNOME 48, check out the GNOME 48 Flatpak SDK on Flathub.
You can also support the GNOME project by donating—your contributions help us improve infrastructure, host community events, and keep Flathub running. Every donation makes a difference!

This six-month effort wouldn’t have been possible without the whole GNOME community, made of contributors and friends from all around the world: developers, designers, documentation writers, usability and accessibility specialists, translators, maintainers, students, system administrators, companies, artists, testers, the local GNOME.Asia team in Bengaluru, and last, but not least, our users.

We hope to see some of you at GUADEC 2025 in Brescia, Italy!

Our next release, GNOME 49, is planned for September. Until then, enjoy GNOME 48.

:heart: The GNOME release team

Linux App Summit 2025 – Registrations are now open!

The Linux App Summit (LAS) 2025 is just around the corner, and we’re thrilled to remind you that registrations are now open for both online and in-person attendees!

Event Dates: April 25-26, 2025
Location: Tirana, Albania

Join us for two days of inspiring talks and community engagement. Whether you’re are a developer, a contributor, or someone curious about the open source ecosystem, LAS is the perfect place to connect, learn, and share ideas.

Register now: Linux App Summit Registration

Stay tuned for more updates, and we can’t wait to see you in Tirana!

GNOME Internship: Get Ready for GSoC and Outreachy!

Exciting news! The GNOME Internship Committee and Open Source Community Africa (OSCA) are teaming up to host the GNOME Internship event!
If you plan to apply for Google Summer of Code (GSoC) or Outreachy internships, this online event is for you!

Join us to:
✅ Learn about these internship programs
✅ Gain insights from past participants
✅ Ask questions directly to mentors and organizers

This is a great opportunity to prepare your application, understand the selection process, and boost your chances of success!

Date: March 15th (Saturday)
Time: 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM UTC
Join here: https://meet.gnome.org/rooms/tl3-fsa-gyb-arq/join

Don’t miss out—mark your calendars and get ready to start your open source internship journey with GNOME

Registration Now Open for GNOME Asia 2024

Registration for GNOME Asia 2024 is now open! This year’s summit will be held from December 6-8, 2024, in the dynamic city of Bangalore, India, with both in-person and remote participation options.

GNOME Asia 2024 will feature a fantastic lineup of presentations and workshops centered around the latest innovations in the GNOME ecosystem and its community. Whether you’re attending on-site in Bangalore or joining online from anywhere in the world, there’s something for everyone.

The full conference schedule, including session and speaker details, will soon be available on the event website.

Registration is open to everyone—whether you’re an experienced developer, new to the open-source world, or simply curious about what’s happening in GNOME. We look forward to welcoming you, both in person and online, from December 6-8!

Become a GNOME Asia 2024 Sponsor!

We’re still looking for sponsors for this year’s summit. If you or your company are interested in sponsoring GNOME Asia 2024, please find more details and our sponsorship brochure on the event website or reach out to asia@gnome.org.

2024-2025 budget and economic review

Dear community members,

As promised in the previous communication the Board would like to share some more details on our current financial situation and the budget for our 2024-2025 financial year, which runs from 1st October 2024 to 30th September 2025.

Background

  • The Foundation needs an approved budget in place because our spending policies use the budget to authorise what staff and committees are allowed to spend money on. This year we passed the budget on time for the start of the financial year, which was thanks to a lot of detailed and particularly challenging work by Richard, which the board is grateful for.
  • We consider the budget in 2 distinct parts:
    • Budget for our fiscally-sponsored projects. We consider their income, but not their expenses. The reason for that is that the Foundation takes a small part of the income as the fiscal sponsorship fee, supporting our administrative and operating costs. Funds received on behalf of other projects are tracked separately, called “reserved funds”, and the Foundation cannot spend money that belongs to the other projects.
    • General operating budget for the GNOME Foundation, which is what this post is all about! At any later point, when talking about the budget, we’re talking about the general/unrestricted operating funds and it is safe to assume that income for fiscally-sponsored projects is not included.
  • The budget for the previous 2023-2024 fiscal year was presented to the board as a roughly balanced break-even budget, anticipating $1.201M of revenue and $1.195M of expenses. The board considered two fundraising scenarios proposed by our previous ED, with the most ambitious scenario planning to raise an additional $2M for the Foundation, and one more conservative which anticipated an additional $475k of revenue from various sources (donations, grants, event sponsorship). This more conservative scenario was included in the budget, but in practice things did not work out as planned. This additional funding was not raised, meaning that in practice the Foundation once again ran at a deficit over the past year and used funds from our reserves.
  • The new 2024-2025 budget considers a total income of $586k, and total expense of $550k. Two things are clearly different from last year: the expenses have been greatly reduced, and we have aimed for a surplus instead of the deficit we ended up with last year. Both things were a consequence of the budget from previous year not being executed as expected. Since our reserve policy requires us to retain enough money to sustain core operations without income for another year (specifically, 1.1 times core spending), we’ve had to reduce expenses to save money and restore our reserves.

So, let’s dig into the details:

Income

  • $205,100 in donations. This number is based on previous years income, of individual contributions ($75,000), Advisory Board fees ($105,800), and other small contributions ($7,800) like matching donations (where companies double what employees donate). It also includes $16,500 currently pending from Wau Holland Stiftung, an organization we had a historic agreement with to collect funds from European donors that is tax deductible. We believe that there is a great potential for the GNOME Foundation to increase the amount of individual contributions received, and this has been included in the Strategic Plan and many board discussions. Unfortunately, without a permanent Executive Director, we cannot guarantee that we will be able to establish a program to do so in the short-term, so we have decided to budget conservatively to ensure economic sustainability.
  • $64,500 from event sponsorship. Most of that money comes from GUADEC ($61,000), with some from LAS and GNOME Asia, which is one of the main reasons why we are able to maintain our events: because they are sponsored separately, they are mostly self-sustaining.
  • $65,500 in fiscal sponsorship fees. This is based on a % fee the GNOME Foundation takes for our operational costs from hosting GIMP and Black Python Devs. This number is uncommonly high due as we have been workng with the GIMP on financial and legal arrangements to receive approx $1M of historical Bitcoin donations. (And sell them immediately – holding Bitcoin assets creates a regulatory/reporting problem for US nonprofits and our accountants have advised us against it.)
  • $1,000 in interest from money in the bank account. This is budgeted higher than previous years, as work is already in progress to change bank accounts to increase this income, as recommended by our auditors.
  • $500 profit from selling T-shirts and other goods ($2,500 income, $2,000 in expenses).
  • $250,000 from the 2nd year of an Endless grant that was approved last year. This grant provides $50,000 for general funds that the Foundation can use at its discretion, and $200,000 that need to be spent on specific tasks. Currently, those are assigned to Flathub, Parental Controls, GNOME Software maintenance, and internships. Some of those will be detailed in the expense section.

Expenditures

  • $10,000 interim ED salary. This is to be able to pay Richard to continue managing the Foundation and staff team until 10th December.
  • $100,000 for development contractors for work associated with the Endless grant. This work includes improvements in Parental Controls and GNOME Software, and is being executed by Philip Withnall (development), Sam Hewitt (design) and potentially one more developer over the coming year. Philip gave an update on the work in his presentation at GUADEC.
  • $110,600 in contractor costs for program staff, including events and infrastructure. This covers Kristi’s work which is the backbone of events such as GUADEC, LAS and GNOME.Asia, and Bart’s work running GNOME and Flathub infrastructure. The Flathub portion of this work is funded by the Endless grant.
  • $32,000 in Outreachy interships. This is a long-term partnership with Conservancy and commitment by the GNOME Foundation as the original birthplace of the Outreachy initiative. They are supported this year by reallocating some of the Endless grant, with their permission. This will pay for a total 4 interns between the winter and summer cohort.
  • $20,000 in contractor support. This is allocated for part-time contracting of Thibault Martin and Dawid Jankowiak to support the STF team and work on a crowdfunding platform for our development fundraising. Some of this is funded by the Endless grant and will be spent on coordinating the next steps of the Flathub payments/donations launch.
  • $158,000 in employment/contractor costs for operations and admin staff, supporting the GNOME Foundation across finances, events and community initiatives.
  • $47,500 in professional services, ie legal and accounting. These include a reserve for legal fees ($10,000), an external accounts audit for the previous financial year ($17,500), which is required due to our income (mostly due to STF) being over the $2M threshold, and accounting fees ($20,000). Some of the financial and legal costs are driven by work setting up Flathub LLC and are covered by the Endless grant.
  • $3,200 in office expenses, mostly related to postal expenses required for sending material between contractors, staff, and event organisers.
  • $54,000 in conferences and travel. These include the budget for the conferences themselves ($30,000), which includes GUADEC, GNOME Asia, and hackathons around the globe, but also travel for staff ($12,000) and community ($12,000). Travel particularly has been significantly reduced from previous year, but should still allow for staff/organisers to attend our events, and for the travel committee to support some community travel to GUADEC and GNOME Asia.
  • $15,000 in other fees. These include banking costs for sending money from the US to Europe, PayPal fees, and insurance. They might seem high, but are in total less than 1.5% of the cash flow of the Foundation, which is within the expected value for any organization.

Balance

  • As of the preparation of this budget, we have approx $140,000 in GNOME Foundation reserves. There’s a lot more money in the bank, but they are reserved funds held for GIMP and BPD.
  • We need to ensure that we meet our reserve policy of retaining 1.1 times core spending. Unfortunately, core spending is fairly loosely defined. This year, we have considered: Events and minimal staff travel, part-time infrastructure support, minimal staff, and some fees and professional services. In total, we accounted that we would need at least $158,000 at the end of the year to be able meet the policy.
  • The approved budget should put our reserves around $176,000 at the year end, which is slightly above our reserve policy. Considering we used a very limited interpretation of the reserves policy, it’s better to include a small safety margin for any unanticipated costs.

Conclusion

With limited time from our interim Executive Director (ED), Richard Littauer, who is working part-time, the board is prioritising: recruiting our new ED, delivering our current project/grant commitments (to STF and to Endless), and fundraising for development work. This includes working with the community to launch our development fund crowdfunder/platform and plan a follow-up project for STF grant, so that the GNOME Foundation can support and grow its direct investment in project development.

Keen readers will note that there is nothing in the current budget for the ED’s salary. We are in discussions with a potential donor to see whether we can find support for the salary for the ED for the first year. In any case, transparently sharing our financial situation and fundraising needs is an essential part of any ED recruitment process, so we could still recruit somebody with “raise money for your own salary” being their first priority.

Hopefully this additional detail helps to show the challenges of our current situation, and why we had to make really tough decisions, like parting ways with some greatly appreciated members of our staff team. We hope this sheds some more light on why those decisions were taken, provides confidence on the work done by the board and the ED, and where we currently stand. We are also very relieved to be able to provide a surplus budget for the first time in many years, and doing so while still being able to support the community: events, infrastructure, internships, travel funding, and meeting our commitment to donors for work done in some parts of the stack, e.g.: Flathub, parental controls and GNOME Software.

We welcome any feedback and questions from the GNOME community. Thanks to all of our GNOME members, contributors, donors, sponsors and advisory board members!

The GNOME Foundation Board of Directors

Update from the Board: 2024-10

Dear GNOME community members,

We want to provide you with an important update on recent developments at the GNOME Foundation.

What Has Happened

The GNOME Foundation Board of Directors has approved a budget for the coming financial year (October 1, 2024, to September 30, 2025). In the process, we’ve had to make some tough decisions to ensure the Foundation’s long-term financial sustainability.

What Is Impacted

Staff Changes

Regrettably, we have had to reduce our staff. Caroline Henriksen (Creative Director) and Melissa Wu (Director of Community Development) are no longer members of the GNOME Foundation staff team. We sincerely thank Caroline and Melissa for their significant contributions over the past years and wish them the best in their future endeavors.

Operational Adjustments

Critical tasks will be redistributed among remaining staff and the Board. We will be reaching out to the community for more support in areas such as:

  • Event organization and representation
  • Marketing initiatives
  • Fundraising efforts
  • Graphic design

Reduced Travel

Unless additional funds are secured, there will be significant reductions on community, board and staff travel to events. We’ll be reassessing which events are most critical for staff attendance.

What Is Unaffected

Key Events: LAS, GNOME.Asia, GUADEC

We are hosting the Linux App Summit in partnership with KDE this weekend, on 4th-5th October in Monterrey, Mexico. Other events such as GNOME.Asia and GUADEC are continuing as planned and remain a core priority for our team. We’re very grateful to our event sponsors for separately supporting these important events to bring our community together.

Internships

We have secured funding to continue our participation in Outreachy at our previous level of four interns a year, two later this year and two early next year. Our participation in Google Summer of Code is supported by our greatly-appreciated Internship Committee and is also not impacted by these changes.

Externally Sponsored Projects

Certain other projects, including all of the infrastructure, staff, legal and operating costs of Flathub, and ongoing development work on Digital Wellbeing / Parental Controls, are fully sponsored by an existing grant from Endless. We are also working with our team of contractors to complete the delivery of the remaining elements of the Sovereign Tech Fund contract. We are not able to divert these funds to different purposes, but equally, they are fully funded to continue even though we’ve had to reduce spending in other areas.

Infrastructure & Operations

All of the gnome.org infrastructure remains fully funded and staffed as before, together with our core finance, operations and administrative functions.

Why This Has Happened

Our plan for the previous financial year was to operate a break-even budget. We raised less than expected last year, due to a very challenging fundraising environment for nonprofits, on top of internal changes such as the departure of our previous Executive Director, Holly Million.

The Foundation has a reserves policy which requires us to keep a certain amount of money in the bank account, to preserve core operations in the event of interruptions to our income.

In order to meet our reserves policy, this year’s budget had to reduce our expenditure to below expected income, and generate a small surplus to reinstate the Foundation’s financial reserves to the necessary level.

What’s Next

  • Executive Director Recruitment: We are actively searching for a new Executive Director. This process is unaffected by the current budget constraints as we are exploring different ways to fund the role.
  • Community Support: We’re asking for your support in several ways:
    • Look out for opportunities to volunteer your time and skills in areas where we’ve had to reduce staff involvement.
    • Share ideas on how to organize and improve our activities in this new context.
    • Consider making donations to support the GNOME Foundation’s core priorities, if you’re able.
  • Transparency: In the coming weeks, we’ll share a more detailed report of the current finances and the approved budget, including specific categories and the reasoning behind various decisions.
  • Ongoing Communication: We’re committed to providing regular updates on our progress and welcome your feedback on how often you’d like to hear from us.

Through these difficult decisions, the GNOME Foundation is able to meet its reserves policy, ensuring sufficient funds for the coming year. Our budget for the new financial year is realistic and supports four full time staff, who are able to support key operations like finance, infrastructure and events. We are additionally contracting a number of other individuals on a short term or part time basis, to help with fund raising, websites and delivering on our project commitments.

We are going to be looking to the GNOME community to help with the areas that are most affected by our reduced staffing. If you would like to help GNOME with its events, marketing, or fundraising, we would love to hear from you. We would also welcome the community’s input on the best way to organize these activities, so please feel free to reach out to our Interim Executive Director, Richard Littauer (richard@gnome.org), or the Board if you have ideas.

Thank you all for your continued commitment to the GNOME community, and thanks to all of the existing donors, sponsors and advisory board members whose support year on year is essential to maintain the Foundation’s core operations.

The GNOME Foundation Board of Directors

This document was previously posted on the Discourse, and is mirrored here without changes (except adding Richard’s email, above). https://discourse.gnome.org/t/update-from-the-board-2024-10/24346

Introducing GNOME 47

The GNOME Project is proud to announce the release of GNOME 47, ‘Denver’.

This release brings support for customizable Accent Colors, improved support for small screens, persistent remote sessions, and new-style dialog windows. Like many other core apps, Files has received improvements and now also used for file open and save dialogs. Once again, a whole slew of new apps have joined the GNOME Circle initiative: find GNOME apps for anything from currency conversion to resource monitoring.

To learn more about the changes in GNOME 47 you can read the release notes:

GNOME release notes

You can also watch our release video.

GNOME release video 1

GNOME 47 will be available shortly in many distributions, such as Fedora 41 and Ubuntu 24.10. If you want to try it today, you can look for their beta releases, which will be available very soon:

Getting GNOME

We are also providing our own installer images for debugging and testing features. These images are meant for installation in a vm and require GNOME Boxes with UEFI support. We suggest getting Boxes from Flathub.

GNOME OS Nightly

If you are interested in building applications for GNOME 47, look for the GNOME 47 Flatpak SDK, which is available in the http://www.flathub.org/ repository.

This six-month effort wouldn’t have been possible without the whole GNOME community, made of contributors and friends from all around the world: developers, designers, documentation writers, usability and accessibility specialists, translators, maintainers, students, system administrators, companies, artists, testers, the local GUADEC team in Denver,
and last, but not least, our users.

GNOME would not exist without all of you. Thank you to everyone!

We hope to see some of you at GNOME Asia 2024 in Bengaluru, India!

Our next release, GNOME 48, is planned for March 2025. Until then, enjoy GNOME 47.

:heart: The GNOME release team

[See the original Discourse Post]

This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0.