Calš¦
I am an open source nerd who likes old computers š„ļø, cool watches ā and college football š!
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Calš¦@lemmy.mlBto
Linux@lemmy.mlā¢Red Hat strikes a crushing blow against RHEL downstreams
4Ā·3 years agoI hope you can correct me here, but I donāt believe Debian offers any commercial support. Thatās what people are paying for. It is kind of amazing to be able to call a reliable OS vendor when your hardware vendor is blaming the OS and you need a third party to get involved.
I completely understand your perspective. I also made the decision to migrate from Fedora, a move that was echoed by several of my colleagues. This shift wasnāt widely reported in the usual tech podcasts and media outlets I follow, which surprised me, considering my coworkers had already made the switch. It might be a coincidence, but I canāt help but wonder if thereās an under-the-radar trend taking place.
Recent experiences with corporate mergers and acquisitions have left me cautious, so when I heard about Red Hatās decision to part ways with long-standing Fedora contributors, I began contemplating alternatives. Given IBMās involvement, I had a gut feeling that the situation might deteriorate over time. I didnāt realize Red Hat had some of these FOSS issues well before the buy out.
I decided to test a transition to Debian 12. Iāve been using it for a few weeks now, and I must say, if things continue on this positive trajectory, I see myself sticking with it for the long haul. Iāve always appreciated Fedoraās blend of stability and cutting-edge features. Debian 12, on the other hand, has proven to be incredibly reliable. Despite my risky decision to install the latest experimental GNOME packages, it has held up well and is up-to-date - though I understand Debianās release schedule might not provide the same consistent flow of new packages that Fedora does. That said, Iām comfortable with a setup that prioritizes stability and adherence to free and open-source software principles.
Iām going to throw my support behind this one as well. Iām circling back to Debian after a long stint on Fedora on my primary machine. Iāve been running Debian 12 on my desktop for several weeks now and itās been pretty great.
it is one version behind fedora in gnome releases, so I installed the latest gnome from the experimental repos and that worked pretty well. I donāt know if I would recommend that for anyone else, but it worked for me.
I have a few personal servers still running CentOS 7, but I will be migrating them to Debian slowly over the next few months. I suspect I will go fine. Debian organization to maintain FOSS ideals over the next 5 to 10 years, so it seems like a good default for me.
I have read about Vanilla OS. It is Debian based with some neat features stacked on top that might be fun for a desktop OS. I can see myself switching to that on the desktop if they deliver on all their promises.
Every time I see a moon phase I think about how much I want it despite having no need for the complication⦠I realize thatās a silly thought because I donāt need anything since I have the time on my cell phone and a clock in basically every room I spend time in.



Thanks for the feedback. I think youāre saying that it would be good to see an example not just in the spec files, but right in the readme that GitHub displays when you visit the repo. Thatās a good idea. Iāll do that. Iāll also make it more clear that the primary work is in that spec file.
The design was inspired mostly by markdown. I initially mentioned that in the readme but I guess it was lost in my edits. I will add that back. Thanks again.