Red Hat may have quietly released RHEL 10 to its paying customers before its official announcement at the Red Hat Summit. The release, codenamed Coughlan, marks the removal of some features, including LibreOffice and X.org server, adhering to a GNOME on Wayland interface. Significant changes include eliminating 32-bit x86 support and raising system requirements to x86-64-v3 for CPUs like Intel Haswell or newer. While the company did not confirm, anticipation builds for an official announcement during the summit next week, coinciding with the timelines of other Linux distributions.
On Monday, the Red Hat Summit 2025 will kick off in Boston, Massachusetts. We would not be shocked if there were a significant announcement on the RHEL 10 release at the event.
RHEL 10 also moves the baseline system requirements to x86-64-v3, meaning Intel Haswell or newer or AMD Excavator and later.
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