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Not sure if this is really adding to the thread, but I'm curious what other people think:
My situation with RHEL/Fedora is that my company (a large department in an .edu) doesn't need the commercial support of RHEL, we need the release cycle. The fact of the matter is that while we want to go with RHEL department wide, we can't afford it. So, we're being forced into giving Fedora a shot on our workstations, and RHEL ES on our critical servers.
The problem comes in with the fact that no one in our department is going to stand for a Fedora rollout/reinstall every 8 or so months.... to say nothing of the fact that this schedule is going to put our 2 man IT team into a permanent "get ready for the new release" mode. While I realize that the Fedora Legacy project has been created to address these sorts of needs, I guess I'm a little skeptical.
I sincerely apologize for asking this because I mean no offense... but is the Fedora Legacy Project going to be something that people like me can truly depend on?
Thanks so much!
- -Matt - -- Matthew Walburn, RHCE, CCNA MIT Department of Mathematics