On Mon, Sep 22, 2003 at 01:35:11PM -0400, MJang wrote: > If I'm hearing you correctly, Red Hat is no longer going to release a Linux distribution every (approx) 6 months. Red Hat will be a > part of the Fedora project that will take over this function. And the Fedora project is sponsored as a separate organization under > the Red Hat umbrella. Well, I would word it differently, for what I think would be a more accurate connotation. Red Hat will, instead of releasing a Linux distribution approximately every 6 months essentially on its own, release a Linux distribution approximately 2-3 times each year as part of its contribution to and participation in a larger Fedora Project. This new distribution will be called "Fedora Core" to denote its position as part of this new, larger Fedora Project, of which Red Hat is a major component. The difference between the two connotations is the strong, active role that Red Hat will be taking here. The name change is not intended to disassociate Red Hat from the project; instead it is to allow different trademark rules and to acknowledge the work of the larger community -- this is more than just Red Hat. It's expressing the larger participation of the community, and is not intended to imply a smaller participation from Red Hat. FWIW, the default way of getting a package into Fedora Core will almost certainly include initially maintaining it as a part of Fedora Extras. Talking about this idea with Warren was part of what lead to the great merger... michaelkjohnson "He that composes himself is wiser than he that composes a book." Linux Application Development -- Ben Franklin http://people.redhat.com/johnsonm/lad/