On 01/09/2014 12:38 PM, Karanbir Singh wrote: > hi, > > On 01/08/2014 02:47 PM, Yves Bellefeuille wrote: >> One thing that struck me in Karanbir's message was the marketing >> mumbo-jumbo such as "the next generation of emerging technologies" and >> "a platform that is easily consumed". >> >> Karanbir usually writes better than that, so I suppose that someone >> else had a important role in drafting the message. > i am sorry about that - some of those things came through in my attempt > to reduce the post from just over 2400 words to under 1000. I didnt make > it, it was still over a 1k words. But i do mean that, lots of really > cool stuff was bootstrapped on CentOS, but not here - and in many cases, > so far away from the project that people had to do it again and again. > > the voip setup for home/small users is the best example. if > asterisk at home were done as a part of the centos community, how cool > would that have been? > > the next generation of cool stuff is all also happening out there, and I > really do want to bring as much of that into the centos community as > possible - after all, we are a user and problem lead community, not a > developer led one where someone is just churning out new code to see > what works and what does not. > > its been hard to do in the past, mostly down to the constraints - Red > Hat TM issues, protect the buildservice, handle 100+ sponsors, work on > community issues, get that update out in the 45 min between dinner time > and kid's bedtime etc. > > And remember, a critical artifact of this group : we are a user led > community, not a developer led one. Massive win, in my opinion. But the > lack of developer density has been a problem. And I dont know how much > of that we will get access to, but at >0 we are already winning. right ? > > Now 'easily consumed'... becuase we can start opening up the > buildsystem, publish all the scripts we write, post instance and image > specs - and anyone/everyone is welcome to join the effort since the > needs of privacy and secrecy are dramatically reduced ( i assure you, > this is one of the top wins in my books ). Is this for real? Oracle are apparently a thorn in the side to RH and thus all the changes to C6 that caused lots of delays ...... if this changes as indicated, doesn't that negate all those changes and give Oracle a leg up to getting their clone to market sooner? I guess I'm missing something > > Come join me in an officehours meetup ( > http://wiki.centos.org/OfficeHours ) - lets talk about these things :) > > - KB >