Re: Mascot - Blue Arrara

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Rahul Sundaram escribió:
Why?

That has been the attitude from quite a bit of people, starting by the devs, Red Hat and others. I don't mean that Fedora is a bad system (by any means!! totally opposite!) it is an excellent home OS and home server where tasks are less critical, and due to the amount of updates released for it, it is a great Desktop system, but a lousy server for mission critical and key components on production servers (due to downtimes related to the amount of updates). I fought the idea of Fedora being relegated at first, but I've grown to understand why that is so... Maybe, and just maybe, we should market Fedora as an excellent home OS alternative (much more reliable than many others, and gives a LOT of home users a truly FREE [as in "gratis" and "liberty"] alternative platform). I'm sure Fedora would make also a GREAT corporate Workstation and Desktop OS, but due to its short life-cycle, it is kind of difficult keeping up, plus the overhead on IT staff for massive upgrades to the next version. Even with the extended life-expectancy of a Fedora system (IIRC it is now 13 months from release) it is still too short for a company with more than 50 desktops to maintain and migrate every 13 months, it'd add too much of an overhead for the IT staff.

Also there's the whole "community project" side of things, and how Fedora is slowly evolving into being "parent" to RHEL (more than a crash test dummy), this positions Fedora (and I really hate to say this, but I certainly don't know how else to word it) much like Debian (please don't hate me for this), in that of the role it is taking as a community project, philosophy, guidelines, etc. They're too much alike in this regard (the /implementation/ is different, yes, but the two projects share a lot of common grounds). However there are some key differences (as well) as there are different "branches" in Debian, to which Fedora resembles "sid" the most, i.e. an "unstable" tree (though Fedora is considered to be "stable", the unstable tree is "Rawhide") I don't want to take much deeper this comparison between the two, because as similar as they may be they're also fundamentally different, and it wouldn't be fair for either project to maintain the comparison. The point was in regards to the community and the branches, and how "stable" Debian remains, compared to Fedora (i.e. longer release cycle for the "stable" tree, which is why [amongst other things] it is so widely deployed in servers), which is the main argument for a lot of "production environments" to reject Fedora in favor for RHEL or CentOS or another more "stable" distro, in the understanding here that by "stable" I mean a slower paced evolution and longer product life. Fedora typically is supported for the lifespan of the "current" release (which ever it is) for the first ~6 months of its life, and as the immediately prior release, during the lifespan of the next release, before the cycle repeats itself, which gives roughly ~12 months of support for each individual release (rounded at |3, IIRC). Fedora Legacy (which if I'm mistaken is going to be withdrawn) was supposed to give further support for previous releases, but for a number of factors this apparently is not going to happen.

http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/08/17/177220

I don't think we need to be judgmental about the role Fedora plays in any end user system.

Rahul

Thanks for the link, much appreciated. I remember reading this interview back in the day, and I know that Max is working hard in trying to erase the "stigmas" of Fedora, and believe me, I *do* share his points... Until the real world steps in... But as he himself says, nothing is set in stone in Fedora, and it will evolve, maybe it will do so that it may even be embraced in production environments (and I do believe it has what it takes to do so)... the question is "Do the people responsible of decision making for such environments agree?" I hope that in time, they will... maybe deploying Fedora boxes for non-mission critical tasks, etc.

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