6 votes

New Year, new Red Hat Enterprise Linux programs: Easier ways to access RHEL

Tags: linux, red hat

4 comments

  1. Micycle_the_Bichael
    Link
    We'll see what comes from this. I forwarded the blog post along to my team members and the best word I could use to describe it is "unimpressed". I'm far from the OS/distro expert for the team,...

    We'll see what comes from this. I forwarded the blog post along to my team members and the best word I could use to describe it is "unimpressed". I'm far from the OS/distro expert for the team, but all the team meetings I've been in where we discussed the future have pretty much exclusively been discussions about what OS to move to and what we will need to migrate. And we LOVE to not change or upgrade our OS (there's still some centos5 servers kicking around our data centers somewhere...), so I don't think these moves are going to be nearly enough to make the community happy. Then again, I'm young and don't know a lot of things, and RHEL claims they did something similar 20 years ago and survived so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    2 votes
  2. [3]
    Tum
    Link
    The best part:

    The best part:

    We’re making CentOS Stream the collaboration hub for RHEL, with the landscape looking like this:

    • Fedora Linux is the place for major new operating system innovations, thoughts, and ideas - essentially, this is where the next major version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux is born.

    • CentOS Stream is the continuously delivered platform that becomes the next minor version of RHEL.

    • RHEL is the intelligent operating system for production workloads, used in nearly every industry in the world, from cloud-scale deployments in mission-critical data centers and localized server rooms to public clouds and out to far-flung edges of enterprise networks.

    1. [2]
      lionirdeadman
      Link Parent
      Why do you think this is the best part of the announcement?

      Why do you think this is the best part of the announcement?

      1 vote
      1. Tum
        Link Parent
        Because it lines up the roles for the different operating systems and the relationship they have between them and RHEL. The text before it is kind of a 'how we got here', while that section at the...

        Because it lines up the roles for the different operating systems and the relationship they have between them and RHEL. The text before it is kind of a 'how we got here', while that section at the end is all you need to know if you want to use fedora, centos or RHEL.

        1 vote