On 16.12.2020 22:50, Johnny Hughes wrote:
On 12/15/20 9:59 PM, Joshua Kramer wrote:
On Tue, Dec 15, 2020 at 7:41 PM Johnny Hughes johnny@centos.org wrote:
$250K is not even close. That is one employee, when you also take into account unemployment insurance, HR, medical insurance etc. now multiply that by 8. Now, outfit those 8 employees to work from home .. all over the world, different countries, different laws.
I'm genuinely curious about something, and this is mostly academic since it's probably the subject of proprietary discussions within RedHat. Presumably, RedHat had a build pipeline for RHEL that worked well for them, by supplying alpha/beta releases of point releases to their customers and giving them time to "cook" before releasing those point releases into production. Why would RedHat invest millions more in buying the CentOS process just to have CentOS act as the beta?
Why did they change the development process of RHEL ..
Because they want to do the development in the community. The current process of RHEL development is closed .. they want it to be open. It is that simple.
I think Stream is also very usable as a distro. I think it will be just as usable as CentOS Linux is now.
It's usable, as Fedora is certainly usable - in its separate use cases. It's not bug-for-bug copy of current RHEL, so it's *not* as usable as CentOS Linux was.
It is not a beta .. I keep saying that. Before a .0 release (the main, or first, main reelase) is a beta. Point releases do not really need betas .. certainly not open to anyone other than customers. Now CentOS Stream is available all the time to everyone, customer or not. Once the full infrastructure is in place, everyone (not just RHEL customers) can provide feed back and bugs, do pull requests, etc.
Now please tell me whether Chris Wright was lying when saying the below to ZDNet:
"To be exact, CentOS Stream is an upstream development platform for ecosystem developers. It will be updated several times a day. This is not a production operating system. It's purely a developer's distro."
It's purely a developer's distro. Shall I explain difference between a developer's distro and the one suitable for production servers (a rhetoric question)?