Bob Hoffman wrote: > This is a continuation of the thread about redhat vs centos and the > thought of moving from centos due to redhats new business model. > Forgive the length, but I had to share. > Thank you, very much, for the details (not that I was planning on going to ubuntu...) Two things: <snip> > 2- uses a really lame 1980 DOS version of a text installer. It does not > and will not use a basic vid driver install > which means your setting up of lvms and such during the install is > really fun. What's wrong with text mode? I certainly prefer it. Oh, and those menus came along 2-3 years later.... <g> <snip> > 6- uses upstart and init, mixed up a bit. Upstart, BY DESIGN AND > ACCORDING TO DOCUMENTATION is new and > still being built so they do not want to put any documentation out on it > yet. This makes chkconfig and things like > that useless. Hence, if you want to know what is running, set to run, > etc, you need to dig in multiple folders and > read the scripts. There is no other way. What a horror. Yes. Just like the grub ubuntu uses, that is a bloody script, and a .d directory *full* of files, rather than the clean, simple menu with RHEL/CentOS. <snip> I don't want to have to read scripts to find out how to configure something, or make it do something. A README, at the very least, should have that (not "here's the license, go figure out everything else). >From what I've been reading on /., along with gnome 3 and "unity", that wing of the F/OSS movement, presumably in an effort to go head-to-head with M$ and Apple, are going the same way they are: here's how you do it, don't try to do it any other way, and we'll make it *REALLY* hard to do it any other way. mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos