On 06/21/2014 06:56 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
Just to emphasize, people want COMPATIBILITY with RHEL, that is why we use it. If there will be no PERCEIVED compatibility, people will start waling away from CentOS. As simple as that.
And the CentOS goal is full functional compatibility.
We do now have and will continue to have that.
Changing a number in the name does not impact that at all ... it just means we are trying to better describe what CentOS is.
That IS the point over board and users are arguing about. Just like "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder", so is the "truth" what something is or isn't. All of users are trying to PRESERVE what was established. We do not think CentOS should be redefined just because of minority that uses apps that are meant for certain point-in-time.
So if you choose to keep with this PR nightmare, be ready to have diminishing membership, instead of increasing it. That is at least what vast majority of us, majority of community, on this list think. If you were to conduct referendum on this issue, I think 99% of CentOS users would vote against.
And then, to the all that follow this, it would look like selected few, now on the payroll of company that has vested interest in future of CentOS distro/project will go against will of vast majority of projects community, and play in the hand of that same company and it's profits.
While we are at it, why is Red Hat owner of "centos.org" domain name? And why is the Red Hat owner of CentOS trademark? "The CentOS Project is a community project. The CentOS Project leadership has transferred the CentOS trademark to Red Hat for protection and stewardship. The CentOS Governing Board will be responsible for policing use of the mark."
Who voted on it? Larger Community hasn't.
In fact, up to this point I thought CentOS is just joining forces with Red Hat. But text of the announcement says "The new initiative is going to be overseen by the new CentOS Governing Board." So this is actually NEW project that will claim CentOS name, but will not continue as CentOS, but in fat will be OpenRHEL. Only when I put together 2 and 2, Boards intention to remove OpenRHEL from CentOS that existed until January did I understood that my arbitrary story about what might happen is actually right.
Whois on centos.org:
Registrant Contact Information: Name: Red Hat, Inc. Organization: Red Hat, Inc. Address 1: 100 East Davie Street City: Raleigh State: NC Zip: 27601 Country: US Phone: +1.9197543700 Fax: +1.9197543704 Email: Email Masking Image@redhat.com
Administrative Contact Information: Name: Domain Admin Organization: Red Hat, Inc. Address 1: 1801 Varsity Drive City: Raleigh State: NC Zip: 27606 Country: US Phone: +1.9197543700 Fax: +1.9197543704 Email: Email Masking Image@redhat.com
Technical Contact Information: Name: Domain Admin Organization: Red Hat, Inc. Address 1: 100 East Davie Street City: Raleigh State: NC Zip: 27601 Country: US Phone: +1.9197543700 Fax: +1.9197543704 Email: Email Masking Image@redhat.com
In light of this new revelation, if you go on with the change, count me out of any further contributing. I will continue to use it, but will welcome any attempt to restore old CentOS even under some other name.