On 01/11/2015 06:22 PM, Always Learning wrote: > Disruption = BAD Gentle change / gradual change = GOOD Generalizations are always bad. Some changes work best as a disruption; some changes work best as a gradual thing. It really depends upon the change. I experienced one of the nicer things about CentOS 7 in the desktop setting today, as I hotplugged a DisplayPort to HDMI adapter connected to a projector system into my Dell Precision M6500 laptop and watched it automatically configure the resolution and extend the desktop to the projector. I experienced a similar nicety when I docked the laptop that has two DisplayPort outputs connected to two Dell 24 inch displays and automatically got three-head operation (ATI/AMD Firepro 7820 here). And when a power glitch took the dock out for 5 seconds, the laptop didn't go crazy, and everything came back up in a reasonable and elegant manner, including the network, the two external monitors, the external HD, and the external trackball. I had that happen on CentOS 6 once, and had to reboot to get the external monitor (only one at that time) back up. Enterprise != server-exclusive. We have several EL workstations here, running a mix of EL5 through EL7, in addition to our almost-exclusively-CentOS server farm running a mix of EL5 through EL7. The user experience of EL7 has thus far been very positive on the desktop side, but I'm still gathering data on the server side. Admin on the server side has been pretty seamless, which relatively minimal retraining required. Systemd is just not that much different from upstart, really; just a couple of different paradigms to deal with and relatively minor syntax differences. It is some different from shell-script-assisted SysV init, but not in a negative way, just a neutral 'different' for the most part. It does seem to be more robust in error conditions (like the admin shut down one of a cluster for removal from the rack for cleaning or and upgrade or whatnot, and either plugged the ethernet into the wrong port or didn't plug it in at all; the EL7 box dealt with that quite elegantly, where an EL5 box had to have all services restarted.