On Sat, 2006-03-18 at 22:29 -0500, fredex wrote: > Or if, like me, you don't want to have to update/reinstall every > six months when the new release comes out, and you also don't want > to spend a bundle for a RHEL license, you can do Whitebox, or Tao, > or Centos and get pretty much the same product without the licensing > fees. You're not required to upgrade your Fedora Core installation if you don't want the latest "cool gizmo" technologies. The Fedora Legacy project[1] provides security updates and critical bugfixes for a very long period of time after it's official end-of-life as much as the community can support such. Red Hat Linux releases 7.3, 9, and Fedora Core releases 1, 2, and 3 are all currently supported by Fedora Legacy. [1] http://www.fedoralegacy.org/ -- Peter Gordon (codergeek42) GnuPG Public Key ID: 0xFFC19479 / Fingerprint: DD68 A414 56BD 6368 D957 9666 4268 CB7A FFC1 9479
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