On ma, 28 joulu 2020, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
On 12/28/20 8:35 AM, Alexander Bokovoy wrote:
On ma, 28 joulu 2020, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
On 12/28/20 1:50 AM, Julien Pivotto wrote:
On 28 Dec 01:24, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
On 12/27/20 3:48 PM, Alexander Bokovoy wrote:
Following your approach to a detailed information about the Stream, we've been told there are various RHEL subscription programs coming next year that would address use of RHEL for many existing CentOS users. Perhaps, those programs would address the needs of consumers of 3rd-party drivers too, before we'd reach the collaboration ideal I outlined above. Let's see how that goes.
So you think Red Hat will offer no-cost subscription to a small 5-10 employee company, not in any way related to education or non-profits, that needs 1 CPU / 16-32GB RAM Linux server for mdadm RAID10 + Samba
- KVM ?
This is a question for centos-questions@redhat.com not for this list.
It was not me but Red Hat employee who started suggesting outlandish ideas like Red Hat giving away hundreds of thousands or millions of no-cost subscriptions for small businesses :-) I was just being sarcastic.
You seem to have a very peculiar way of reading what was said. Please re-read Chris Wright's blog post if you need more help with that.
You have used phrases "we've been *told*"(buy people who reserve right to change their mind without notice), "for *many* existing" (many != all), then wrote that just getting RHEL subscription "would address the needs of consumers of 3rd-party drivers too". One could suggest you have peculiar way of writing nonsense and use semantics to muddle the discussion.
Since those 3rd-party drivers were built against RHEL kernel, using RHEL bits would address the need, by definition. Neither of us knows whether there will be a specific answer in those new subscription programs but the technical answer is there, definitely.
I hope a subscription solution would be there too. So far, we (and I'll keep saying 'we' here) have the statements already made by the Red Hat representatives who can talk about the programs being developed. I don't myself have a reason to doubt those. Yes, I think a fair amount of trust was lost in the way how things were handled by everyone. However, the trust is something that goes in both directions. Putting others' words in my mouth is not something I'd find engaging.
Whether that is confusing to you is up to you. I am trying to find a way to address the technical problem within the CentOS Stream. After all, this is development mailing list.