This is my first post. This also will be my last.
I really must have picked the wrong time to join this list. I joined b/c I was thinking of switching to CentOS at home. We have RHEL at work and it is great, I just can't afford the cost for home.
I first went to Whitebox, but that seems to be plagued by slow updates and a dependency on one person. Then the seriously broken mailing list removal system happened and the list was flooded with unsubscribe requests - this was all before the hurricane hit. Most everyone on that list claimed they were moving to CentOS. So I thought I'd check into it.
What I encountered here is just horrible. I've only seen about a day's worth of posts, but it is one of the worst flame wars I've ever seen. I'm of course not going use CentOS either. With a list like this there will never be any support if I run into a problem. If CentOS is still around in a year or two and I still have found a good distro, I'll check and see if anything has improved.
I'd suggest you take Mr. Knaddison's advice below. #2 seems like the best plan as there will be a forum moderator who can lock threads and delete posts. At worst a flame will only be visible until the moderator gets around to delete it.
Good Bye.
On 9/15/05, Greg Knaddison greg.knaddison@gmail.com wrote:
Possible solutions that require zero involvement from the already busy project team:
- Use your email client to better manage the flow and turn it into a trickle
- Use the forums on your time rather than having it emailed in and
disrupting your life http://www.centos.org/modules/newbb 3. Subscribe to the list using an account that you use specifically for the list (I'll send gmail invites to anyone interested) and only read that account when you want...otherwise, ignore it 4. Unsubscribe
You can combine 2 and 4 for maximum effect.
Given those options, why does the project team need to get involved?
Greg _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos