Hi, I am the author of said blog article. FIRST: It was never my intention to criticize the CentOS team. I appreciate the hard work you are doing. If my blog text (which is in German langugage) gave a wrong impression, I apologize. SECOND: I LOVE CentOS. Otherwise it would not matter to me. I use CentOS to teach Linux administration at university, I promote CentOS in my books and I use it personally on some servers. THIRD: It is a fact that the update gaps for CentOS 8 are currently too long for productive use. Basically, that's why I now warn against using CentOS 8 on live systems. --- One might argue, CentOS was never intended for productive use. Perhaps I misunderstood this. And with me all administrators of some million web servers running on CentOS. Hm. Time to rethink? The way I see it, there is a need for free Linux systems. No support, sure, but updates. In the past (and for CentOS 7, still), I considered CentOS as 'good enough' for many purposes. Not for the Bank of England, they can affort whatever they like. But for a school. For a small company needing a plain web and mail server. Etc. The CentOS webpage says: 'CentOS Linux ... suits a wide variety of deployments.' Currently, I really fail to see a wide range of possible deployments. Sure, there are other options. Out of my point of view, Ubuntu LTS is one. Debian is. Oracle Linux (free without support) is, too. I am not entirely in love with this company -- but if I had the need to deploy a RHEL 8 compatible system right now, and no budget to pay for RHEL, I would prefer it to CentOS. Sorry about this. --- I truly believe, Red Hat has the means to make live for the CentOS team easier. Either by simply increasing the team, the infrastructure to build packages faster, whatever. Or by making the clone process easier. My guess is, they don't want. And this is OK -- who am I be to advice a multi billion dollar company? The question is, what does this mean for the future of CentOS? Is CentOS to become an open development platform for Red Hat, but no more? These are my thoughts. Best wishes, Michael