<Tr> <Th> Red Hat Linux </Th> <Td> Split into Fedora Core and Red Hat Enterprise Linux . The last official release of the unsplit distribution was Red Hat Linux 9 in March 2003 . </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> CentOS </Th> <Td> Community - supported Linux distrubution designed as an OpenSource version of RHEL and well suited for servers . </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> Fedora </Th> <Td> Community - supported Linux distribution sponsored by Red Hat . It usually features cutting - edge Linux technologies . </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> openSUSE </Th> <Td> A community - developed Linux distribution, sponsored by SUSE . It maintains a strict policy of ensuring all code in the standard installs will be from FOSS solutions, including Linux kernel Modules . SUSE's enterprise Linux products are all based on the codebase that comes out of the openSUSE project . </Td> </Tr>

What linux distribution is considered a cutting-edge distribution