Delay? Looks bad for Fedora
seth vidal
skvidal at phy.duke.edu
Wed Nov 5 04:05:33 UTC 2003
> The problem comes in with the fact that no one in our department is
> going to stand for a Fedora rollout/reinstall every 8 or so months....
> to say nothing of the fact that this schedule is going to put our 2 man
> IT team into a permanent "get ready for the new release" mode. While I
> realize that the Fedora Legacy project has been created to address
> these sorts of needs, I guess I'm a little skeptical.
>
> I sincerely apologize for asking this because I mean no offense... but
> is the Fedora Legacy Project going to be something that people like me
> can truly depend on?
Honestly, I think it will be.
But as a counter point:
Have you ever really been able to count on a company? I haven't.
If red hat gets bought up and decides to change directions for some
reason guess where you might be with RHEL? Screwed. That's where. You
might have a contract that says they have to support you - but they can
offer the minimum possible resources to do that and still be w/i the
contract rules.
NEVER trust a vendor b/c they are a vendor - I'd much rather trust other
opensource developers to do the 'right thing' than I would to trust ANY
company to do the 'right thing'. After all, the 'right thing' for a
publicly held company is to make the most money for their shareholders.
-sv
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