Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Newsletter | Subscribe | Contact |
Departments

Partner Links
Website builder
WinWeb OnlineOffice
Shopping and price comparison with product reviews at dooyoo.co.uk

user friendly

CeBIT 2010

High-class talks around the clock in the Forum, non-commercial projects presenting their work, new developments at the largest IT fair in the world, CeBIT Open Source 2010 in Hanover, Germany.

Visit them in hall 2, March 2-6 or here.

  linux-magazine.com » Online » News » FOSDEM: Enterprise Linux for all, thanks to Centos  

Print this page. Recommend
Slashdot it! Delicious Share on Facebook Tweet! Digg

FOSDEM: Enterprise Linux for all, thanks to Centos

Dag Wieers of Project Centos made a passionate plea for more private users to turn to the free Red Hat Enterprise clone, and stressed that commercial companies with non-critical machines could also benefit from Centos.

The foundation of his argument lies in the difference between a stable Enterprise Linux and a modifiable community version. "Everyone should use Enterprise Linux," said Wieers, "not just companies." The Centos project distribution stems from the GPL licensed source texts of Red Hat's Enterprise software.

Wieers explained that while private users who, for example, administer their friends and relatives PCs, are more interested in simple maintenance, this for Wieers does not require a constant updating of the distro. Further, other private users are not helped when a chic-looking distribution tempts them to take the Linux plunge, only to be overwhelmed by a complicated system and then return to Windows with technological tails between their legs. With, Centos, all would benefit from a stable RHEL package, said Wieers.

After his speech, Wieers went on to tell Linux Magazine Online that even commercial companies with non-critical machines do not necessarily need Red Hat support. He admitted that initially, relations with Red Hat were not the easiest. This has changed, he said, with Red Hat more laid back about users, both private and those with a limited corporate agenda, using Centos, with Red Hat concentrating on corporations and larger companies, and the Centos community providing support for their own users. Wieers added that in any case, firms running critical setups are better off with Red Hat support.

Dag Wieers is a consultant who, even before the creation of Fedora, developed Red Hat packages in his spare time. His reason for not joining Fedora, he told Linux Magazine, was a lack of enthusiasm for quick release cycles.

(Anika Kehrer)

Comments


Print this page. Recommend
Slashdot it! Delicious Share on Facebook Tweet! Digg
Related Articles
CentOS 5.3 Available
Fedora 10 with KVM, Xen and Faster Startup
OpenSUSE Henceforth Without EULA
FOSDEM Video: Micro Distro Summit
New address for Fedora mailing lists
RHEL 5.3 Brings Nehalem Support and OpenJDK
No More Downloads!

Save the download and take Linux Magazine DVDs instead.

Each DVD contains a full distro like Ubuntu, SUSE, Mandriva, Fedora, or Debian and comes with the corresponding issue of Linux Magazine.

Don't waste timedownloading Linux!

more...

 

In the US and Canada, Linux Magazine is known as Linux Pro Magazine.
Entire contents © 2010 [Linux New Media USA, LLC]
Linux New Media web sites:
North America: [Linux Pro Magazine]
UK/Worldwide: [Linux Magazine]
Germany: [Linux-Magazin] [LinuxUser] [EasyLinux] [Linux-Community] [Linux Technical Review]
Eastern Europe: [Linux Magazine Poland] [Linux Community Poland]
International: [Linux Magazine Brazil] [EasyLinux Brazil] [Linux Magazine Spanish]
Corporate: [Linux New Media AG]