On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 7:58 AM, Eero Volotinen <eero.volotinen@xxxxxx> wrote: > 2011/11/1 Dennis Jacobfeuerborn <dennisml@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: >> On 11/01/2011 06:53 AM, Eero Volotinen wrote: >>> 2011/11/1 Bob Hoffman<bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: >>>> I have been reading the threads on here with great ernest about redhat >>>> making a move to throw off centos compilations. >>>> I read some stories about microsoft wanting to work closer with centos >>>> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/05/17/microsoft_and_centos/ >>>> >>>> I have to update to centos 6 due to some needs of clients who need newer >>>> mysql and php (and installing them on centos5 >>>> was too hard for me). >>> >>> You can get updated php and mysql from ius community repo. >>> >>> http://iuscommunity.org/ >> >> I don't think the real question here is whether you can get updated >> packages from somewhere but if it's worthwhile to build upon centos when >> it's becoming increasingly difficult for centos to make releases. > > Well, I mainly use RHEL on production systems - for many reasons. You > can also try use scientific linux.. > > br, > Eero When Redhat announced the changes they made it very clear they were trying to prevent other companies (like Oracle and Novell) who were providing support to RHEL customers at reduced rates. They have never said they were concerned with the free clones and in fact have helped CentOS many times in the past (according to statements from the core developers). Redhat knows that the free distros help them maintain market share, and gain customers who need full support eventually. The issues CentOS are seeing are simply collateral damage to the larger war against the other big companies who are trying to provide services by cheating. -☙ Brian Mathis ❧- _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos