CIQ (Rocky Linux), Oracle, and SUSE announce a new trade association dedicated to providing source code for building RHEL compatible distributions.

The formation of OpenELA arises from Red Hat’s recent changes to RHEL source code availability.

  • nixx
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    11 months ago

    Remember why CentOS (and WhiteBox) came to exist?

    This is not the first time RedHat pulls that stunt, this is the reason I stick to pure Debian.

    I like SUSE, but I’m hesitant of relying on another commercial entity although business requires it.

    For now Deb and Ian are the safest bet and my daily driver since 2002, they have not let me down.

      • nixx
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        11 months ago

        RedHat originally had one distribution called “RedHat Linux”, not to be confused with RedHat Enterprise Linux (RHEL).

        RedHat Linux was free, you can buy support if you want, and there was also RedHat Advanced Server, which was a paid subscription.

        In 2002, the company rebranded Advanced Sever to RHEL and discontinued RedHat Linux, pissing off a lot of people off.

        This started people working on multiple binary compatible distributions, the one that dominated the market was CentOS.

        20 years later, the cycle is repeating.