On Sat, 2011-09-17 at 02:54 +0100, Ned Slider wrote: > On 09/16/2011 01:00 PM, Always Learning wrote: > > > > On Fri, 2011-09-16 at 13:45 +0200, Janez Kosmrlj wrote: > > > >> The page http://www.centos.org/product.html has product specifications > >> for all centos releases except for centos6. Is there a reason why or > >> did the site maintainers just forget about it. > > > > The Centos web site needs updating. Perhaps willing volunteers can > > assist ? > > > > > > No, only a select few have the appropriate privileges to perform that task. Regrettably those few have not been performing much web site activity for a noticeable period of time. For example, see below. Its time to express thanks to the previous web team and invite fresh volunteers to continue the work. Regards, Paul. ---------------------------------------------------- The CentOS Development Team The group of people who build CentOS are known as the CentOS Development Team. The team includes: CentOS-2 - John Newbigin CentOS-3 - Tru Huynh, Pasi Pirhonen CentOS-4 - Johnny Hughes, Karanbir Singh, Pasi Pirhonen, Jim Perrin, Ralph Angenendt CentOS-5 - Johnny Hughes, Karanbir Singh, Jim Perrin, Ralph Angenendt, Patrice Guay Security, Web, Infrastructure - Donavan Nelson, Russ Herrold Forum Administrators - Fabian Arrotin (arrfab), Akemi Yagi (toracat), Phil Perry (NedSlider), Phil Schaffner (pschaff), Alan Bartlett (burakkucat). Mirror Administration - Tru Huynh QA Team Leader - Tim Verhoeven CentOS Blogs Planet CentOS developer blogs. CentOS Users CentOS users as a group are a community of open source contributors and users. Typical CentOS users are organizations and individuals that do not need strong commercial support in order to achieve successful operation. CentOS : Community ENTerprise Operating System CentOS 2, 3, 4 and 5 are built from publicly available open source SRPMS provided by a prominent North American Enterprise Linux vendor. CentOS conforms fully with the upstream vendors redistribution policies and aims to be 100% binary compatible. (CentOS mainly changes packages to remove upstream vendor branding and artwork). CentOS-5 CentOS-5 is a freely distributable OS built from the source at: ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/enterprise/5Client/en/os/SRPMS ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/enterprise/5Server/en/os/SRPMS Before building the OS, non-free packages are altered. Non-free packages would include those encumbered with a non-redistributable copyright or trademark. CentOS-5 supports the x86 and x86_64 (AMD64 and Intel EMT64) architectures. Support for the ia64, ppc, and sparc architectures is in progress. Updates are distributed via YUM repositories. CentOS-4 CentOS-4 is a freely distributable OS built from the source at: ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/enterprise/4/en/os/i386/SRPMS Before building the OS, non-free packages are altered. Non-free packages would include those encumbered with a non-redistributable copyright or trademark. CentOS-4 supports x86 (i586 and i686), x86_64 (AMD64 and Intel EMT64), ia64, ppc, alpha, sparc, s390, and s390x architectures (The ppc and sparc architectures are currently BETA). Updates are distributed via YUM repositories (i386 only updates are also available via apt). CentOS-3 CentOS-3 is a freely distributable OS built from the source at: ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/enterprise/3/en/os/i386/SRPMS Before building the OS, non-free packages are altered. Non-free packages would include those encumbered with a non-redistributable copyright or trademark. CentOS-3 supports x86 (i586 and i686), x86_64 (AMD64 and Intel EMT64), ia64, s390 and s390x architectures. Updates are distributed via YUM repositories. CentOS-2 CentOS-2 is a freely distributable OS built from the source at: ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/enterprise/2.1AS/en/os/i386/SRPMS/ Before building the OS, non-free packages are altered. Non-free packages would include those encumbered with a non-redistributable copyright or trademark. CentOS-2 supports x86 CPUs. Updates are distributed via yum repositories.