On 1 April 2010 21:55, Marcel Rieux <m.z.rieux@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > As I already observed here, Ubuntu, Google, Intel/Nokia are newcomers > on the free/open source scene and if Red Hat is to keep up, even though > it's presently doing quite well, some important changes are needed. Red > Hat/Fedora will have to provide *very* stable final releases AND keep > developers happy. You keep saying this. I shall make only two points as I am bored of saying this time and time again. 1) The "Stable" offering is Red Hat Enterprise Linux. - If you lack the resources to afford this, take advantage of the CentOS project. It's really quite good. 2) The "Fast Moving" offering is Fedora Linux. - It's companion, Rawhide, offers even more chance to bleed. The only difference between Canonical and Red Hat I can see, it that all Ubuntu releases are under one brand (stable just appends the letters "LTS", whereas Red Hat chose a while ago to have two brands for two different products with two different names. -- Sam -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines