December 16th, 2020 at 1:17 AM
Yep. They're still salty about all the backlash. They can't just nix 10-year support for one of the world's most popular server OS's and expect people to be happy.
What gets me is that they are still trying to pass CentOS Stream as a bleeding edge RHEL, but it's quite literally a rolling-release, Debian-unstable type distro. It's simply not suitable for any sort of live environment, and they cannot possibly be unaware of that. Nobody using RHEL is EVER going to use a rolling release distribution on enterprise hardware.
So it's just a bit dishonest and I think people can see through that. Either way, RHEL will live on, and other CentOS-style distros are popping up quickly. We will wait to see what happens I suppose.
What gets me is that they are still trying to pass CentOS Stream as a bleeding edge RHEL, but it's quite literally a rolling-release, Debian-unstable type distro. It's simply not suitable for any sort of live environment, and they cannot possibly be unaware of that. Nobody using RHEL is EVER going to use a rolling release distribution on enterprise hardware.
So it's just a bit dishonest and I think people can see through that. Either way, RHEL will live on, and other CentOS-style distros are popping up quickly. We will wait to see what happens I suppose.