On Wed, Jan 08, 2014 at 09:44:50AM -0600, Lirodon wrote: > Now, what I was thinking about was trying to see if we could unify as many > of these EL spins as possible to produce a sort of "unified", independent > distribution. [...] It's pretty interesting to see how open source people (I'm one of them) in a lot of cases tend to fight with each other instead of fight against "the enemy" (TBD, but I'm talking about the non-open world, the "pseudo" open source companies, etc.). Unless proven otherwise, I would give Red Hat the benefit of the doubt (which they deserve, given their history). If CentOS provides an open RHEL clone (more open than they did in the past), then we should accept this and be (very) happy with it. Everyone is free to start their own pet projects, but as long as there is no need for it (and again, given the history of CentOS and their lack of transparency there was a need for it in the past), any effort to start a "competitive" project is IMHO a complete waste of effort. And about the reasons behind this: I do not know them, but maybe one of the considerations is that an "official" clone is better than having a company like Oracle gaining market share with their clone. -- -- Jos Vos <[log in to unmask]> -- X/OS Experts in Open Systems BV | Phone: +31 20 6938364 -- Amsterdam, The Netherlands | Fax: +31 20 6948204