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February 2017

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From:
Wenji Wu <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Sat, 25 Feb 2017 03:00:02 +0000
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Hi, Connie,



ALL the best to you and your family.



wenji



On 2/24/17, 5:55 PM, "[log in to unmask] on behalf of Oleg Sadov" <[log in to unmask] on behalf of [log in to unmask]> wrote:



    Connie, good luck in new stage of your life! I hope for your help to

    further development of Scientific Linux.

    

    Sincerely,

    --Oleg

    

    2017-02-25 0:52 GMT+03:00 Bonnie King <[log in to unmask]>:

    > Friends,

    >

    > The Scientific Linux team is at once happy and sad to announce Connie Sieh's

    > retirement after 23 years. Today is her last full-time day at Fermilab.

    >

    > Connie Sieh founded the Fermi Linux and Scientific Linux projects and has

    > worked on them continuously. She has sometimes preferred to toil behind the

    > scenes and leave public announcements to others, but has always been a

    > driving force behind the projects.

    >

    > The Scientific Linux story started in the late 1990s when Connie's group

    > explored using commodity PC hardware and Linux as an alternative to

    > commercial servers with proprietary UNIX operating systems. From the

    > distributions available at the time, Red Hat Linux was chosen.

    >

    > In 1998, Connie announced Fermi Linux at HEPiX, a semi-annual meeting of

    > High Energy Physics IT staff. Fermi Linux was a customized and re-branded

    > version of Red Hat Linux with some tweaks for integration with the Fermilab

    > environment. It also introduced an installer modification called Workgroups,

    > a framework to customize package sets for use at different sites and for

    > different purposes. The Workgroups concept lives on today in the form of

    > Contexts for SL7.

    >

    > In October 2003 TUV changed their product model and introduced Red Hat

    > Enterprise Linux. Enterprise Linux was no longer freely distributed in

    > binary form, but sources remained available.

    >

    > Connie and her colleagues started building from these sources, creating one

    > of the first Enterprise Linux rebuilds. A preview, dubbed HEPL, was

    > presented at spring HEPiX 2004. In May 2004, the rebuild was released as

    > Scientific Linux. The name was chosen to reflect the goals and user base of

    > the product.

    >

    > Our colleagues at CERN collaborated, customizing and using Scientific Linux

    > as Scientific Linux CERN (SLC). SL became a standard OS for Scientific

    > Computing in High Energy Physics at Fermilab, CERN and beyond.

    >

    > SL is freely available to the general public, and is a popular Enterprise

    > Linux rebuild. As a result, it has built a community outside of Fermilab and

    > HEP.

    >

    > With gratitude, the Scientific Linux team would like to recognize Connie's

    > many years of service and her immense contribution to the project she

    > founded.

    >

    > Connie's outstanding technical and non-technical judgement are the

    > foundation of Scientific Linux. Her legacy will continue to inform the way

    > we run SL and we hope she'll remain as a collaborator.

    >

    > All the best to Connie in her well-earned retirement. She will be dearly

    > missed!

    >

    > --

    > Bonnie King

    > Group Leader

    > Scientific Linux & Architecture Management

    >

    > Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

    > www.fnal.gov

    




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