Redhat Spins Off Fedora Project 300
Blahbooboo3 writes "In a bid to attract a larger following among developers, Red Hat has spun off its Fedora open source project into a more independent foundation. As part of the transition, the Fedora open source project will transfer development work and copyright ownership of contributed code to the foundation but Red Hat will continue to provide substantial financial and engineering support." From the article: "The proposed patents common, which mimics the Creative Commons licensing scheme for creative works including art and music, is designed to enable developers to exchange ideas with fewer concerns about patent infringement. and Red Hat's efforts to lobby for patent reform in the U.S. and Europe."
As of yet... (Score:4, Interesting)
Wouldn't that be the first place I should be looking?
Re:As of yet... (Score:3, Informative)
At the Red Hat Summit, Mark Webbink, Deputy General Counsel at Red Hat, is expected to announce the creation of the Fedora Foundation and the Software Patent Commons.
That is why there isn't anything on the websites yet, it hasn't been "officially" announced.
Re:As of yet... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:As of yet... (Score:4, Informative)
CRN [crn.com], GeekCoffee [geekcoffee.net], Business Wire [businesswire.com], and eWeek [eweek.com]
Ubuntu ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Your numbers talk about servers for Fedora, Debian, SuSE and RedHat; but my experience is that Ubuntu & Gentoo is mostly used for workstations (including individual development servers), RHEL & Debian is mostly production & shared development servers, Fedora & SuSE are popular in both places-- so you're almost comparing apples to oranges to bananas.
Most of the Ubuntu users are previous Debian testing and unstable users and previous G
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:2, Interesting)
If A grows faster than B, it will eventually over take it (given this faster growth is sustained), while B can still grow by a greater absolute amount than A.
Also, do you have a source for those numbers?
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:5, Funny)
There would be a load more than that, but we're all still waiting for it to finish compiling.
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:2)
How did they abandon anyone? By no longer putting a RH desktop distro on store shelves? It wasn't profitable. They still have a free distro (fedora) that they put lots of R&D into.
What's the problem?
RedHate Abandonment (Score:3, Insightful)
We can argue about the profitablility aspect. I don't think it costs a lot to press a CD and print a box, though. If you're saying that they thought they could make more money focusing on the "enterprise" market, you're right.
About the abandonment aspect, most Linux geeks were very much put out by Red Hat's decision to discontinue the non-enterprise product and to de-support it. They left everyo
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:2)
burnin
Re:Ubuntu ? (Score:2)
Giving more control to an external foundation is a good thing. I hope the developers run with it.
what about KDE? (Score:4, Interesting)
Right now KDE suffers a big disadvantage vs GNOME. It is held crippled by "desktop" rules but not in the same way as GNOME. The GNOME desktop is seeing development, but the KDE desktop in Fedora is stagnating because it is not seeing any new development and it is even not taking new stuff from the KDE upstream like PlastiK defaults.
So, I say again, will this be an opportunity for true improvement of KDE in Fedora? And if not, why not?
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
I have no idea what you're talking about. Fedora Core always includes an updated version of KDE. FC4 has KDE 3.4.0, for instance.
-Erwos
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
It's not like you can't use Plastik, either. I mean, listen to yourself: you're whining they didn't use your favorite theme. Get over it.
-Erwos
Re:what about KDE? (Score:3, Informative)
Get it, now?
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
To be fair, gtk-qt is still quite buggy, and I don't blame distros for not touching it yet. Besides the graphical glitches, it segfaults on FreeBSD when running a GTK app over remote X.
If you like KDE, you're probably better off with SuSE, or better yet a distro like Gentoo where the maintainers don't pick a default desktop for you.
Re:what about KDE? (Score:2)
Re:what about KDE? (Score:5, Insightful)
My guess is that Red Hat will primarily be paying Red Hat engineers to work on Gnome, and I would also bet that the folks that work on FC will continue to work on making the Gnome and KDE stuff look similar. In other words the KDE stuff will continue to look like the Gnome stuff.
For this to change then the KDE community would have to get a lot more involved with the FC community. In fact, they would have to get enough involved that they could change the course of the distribution. I am not part of the FC community, but I have watched enough Free Software projects that I would be very surprised if this signalled a big change. Red Hat is doing all it can to make Fedora as independent as possible, but it still is going to be providing the bulk of the actual development time.
Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:5, Interesting)
Cheers,
_GP_
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think so. The people who go for Ubuntu seem to be in large part the same people who went for Gentoo a year ago (and were making these sorts of comments then as well) - and they'll go for the next du jour in 2006. They're a very vocal group - especially in places like
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
It's also worth noting that people use Ubuntu because it beats the pants off Fedora for ease of use. Gentoo or any other distro-of-the-month never did that, they only offered gimmicks. Simple Debian isn't a gimmick.
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
Re:How are you measuring this success? (Score:2)
_GP_
Re:How are you measuring this success? (Score:2)
But beyond that, I'll throw in purely anecdotal agreement with the others. I can't recall commercial distributions ever having such a low profile in the overall distro picture.
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:3, Informative)
Also, I read an interview somewhere with the very rich guy who sponsors the whole thing where he said that he hopes he can eventually make money of it this way, but if not, he doesn't mind spending some of his mone
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
This sort of model always confused me. Shouldn't software developers be attempting to reduce support calls by making things "Just Work(TM)"? In theory, any company who follows this business model will either:
a) Obfuscate their software (see: JBoss)
b) Work themselves out of profits
It's just weird.
Also, I read an interview somewhere with the very rich guy who sponsors the whole th
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:3, Insightful)
For instance, you could very well charge money for developing certain, possibly quite specialized, features for the distribution that is otherwise lower on the general priorities list. Or for helping to migrate to it from ot
Re:Reaction to Ubuntu success? (Score:2)
Change of Direction (Score:4, Interesting)
What if Fedora begins to look, over time, more like Debian? Would they continue to provide engineering and financial support for that?
An earlier article [slashdot.org] about Redhat developers wanting to dump old platforms may indicate how tolerant they are in supporting ideals that do not fit into their business model.
Re:Change of Direction (Score:2, Informative)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Change of Direction (Score:3, Interesting)
The folks at Red Hat have been doing this for a while. They know that when push comes to shove the folks doing the development control the direction of the project, and since Red Hat is going to be paying for piles of engineering time then they will have most of the control. It's possible that a few highly motivated outsiders might make a splash, but that's what Red Hat is *trying* to accomplish by opening up the process. Don't be surprised if Red Hat makes a habit of hiring (or "sponsoring") prominent n
Thats good (Score:4, Interesting)
From the article:
"Red Hat also promises to bolster its work on patent reform. After his discussion on open source licensing on Thursday, Webbink told CRN that many vendors including Red Hat and Nokia are pushing for is patent and copyright reforms because current laws presents obstacles to the open source movement. For its part, Red Hat is working with the European Parliament to modify the Computer-Implemented Inventions directive, Red Hat said. In the U.S., Red Hat has called for reform of the patent system to ensure better patent quality."
It looks to me linke Europs really doing better on patent reform than the US. I'm really hoping that we can get our stuff together here stateside before its too late.
So we're coming full circle now... (Score:2)
Re:So we're coming full circle now... (Score:3, Interesting)
Red Hat pissed a lot of people off by killing off their "junior" releases (Red Hat 8.0, 9.0, etc.) and I know a lot of businesses that dumped them in favor of other distros.
I like Fedora, but what I am wondering is if they would have gone about killing off the other versions like they did the same way, or would they have gently migrated people over to Fedora.
Just curious...that's all.
Re:So we're coming full circle now... (Score:2)
I've heard this argument over and over, and I still don't understand it. I went straight from RH9 to FC1, as an upgrade, with almost no problems. If you look at the version numbers of the included software, FC1 barely qualifies as a point release of RH9.
Of course, 7.x -> RH8 -> RH9 had it's own problems, which I'm sure was a primary motivator for the creation of Fedora as a RedHat s
Re:So we're coming full circle now... (Score:2)
This is a "I'm just wondering" type of question. I use both RH EL 4 and Fedora Core (one at work, one at home).
Need of full democracy (Score:2)
Re:Need of full democracy (Score:4, Insightful)
IMHO, well-managed projects need a benevolent dictator at the top to keep things moving.
Re:Need of full democracy (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Need of full democracy (Score:2)
question about ago old redhat peeve.... (Score:2)
Re:question about ago old redhat peeve.... (Score:2)
It's called "yum". It works pretty well now - the speed issues have been solved, and it's on more or less equal footing with apt, at least in my experience. Dependency issues are more or less dead, and have been since FC1.
-Erwos
Re:question about ago old redhat peeve.... (Score:2)
Re:question about ago old redhat peeve.... (Score:2)
Re:question about ago old redhat peeve.... (Score:2)
Let me 'splain it... (Score:2)
Re:Let me 'splain it... (Score:3, Insightful)
When they first announced Fedora, that was sort of my take on it. I was unhappy about it, but willing to give them the benefit of the doubt. In my opinion time has shown that they have done exactly what they said, and not screwed anyone. The Fedore Core distributions have had the same degree of quality I had come to expect of the RHL d
Re:Let me 'splain it... (Score:2)
They're just greedy that's all. Right, jav1231? Not like us, who are demanding free shit! We're not greedy!
Re:Let me 'splain it... (Score:2)
Users: "Ummm...we paid for RDL, moron. Furthermore, there were those who paid for it mere weeks before it was dropped and therefore LOST paid support!"
Fedora Legacy (Score:2)
I wonder what will happen to Fedora legacy support with RH out of the picture?
Re:Fedora Legacy (Score:3, Informative)
And it's inaccurate to claim that RH will be out of the picture.
once again how is this news? (Score:2)
Re:once again how is this news? (Score:2)
What on earth are you talking about? The free support for RHL was mailing lists and Bugzilla, with no service level agreement for either. The free support for Fedora is exactly the same.
The only thing that went away was PAID support. When you PURCHASED an official RHL box, you got 30 days of PAID installation support with it, and you could BUY additional support.
Oh irony (Score:2)
For all this good talk about respecting people's creative energy and IP reform, they are at present trampling on the real Fedora [fedora.info] project's rights.
Re:Oh irony (Score:2)
Interesting. Have you got any more details of what the restrictions they're concerned about are?
Re:
What about a Kedora? (Score:2)
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:2)
(*shrug* I dunno, that's only a guess. I use Debian Sarge)
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:3, Insightful)
Red Hat and IBM own this space. (Of co
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:3, Insightful)
Example: Production/Development/Test
You want the same look and feel/packages installed the same way on ALL servers, but you only want to pay for premium support for the prod servers. So use RHEL on those, and Fedora on Dev/Test to save money on licensing.
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:2, Interesting)
Thats a really bad reason. Run Whitebox/ in you Dev environment, but run RHEL in your Test environment. What kind of QA environment runs a different OS than the Production Environment?
Fedora is QUITE different from RHEL.
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:2)
On one hand the Fedora is nothing more than a beta version of an upcomming commercial version from Redhat. You do all the testing, but on the other hand you get to download it for free. On the gripping hand you may use other BSD/distros that name a beta version a beta version and a release version a release version.
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:2)
Why use XXXX? (Score:3, Interesting)
btw what's with all the Ubuntu posts claiming that it somehow has something to do with this decision. How arrogant can you get?
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:2)
I can say that I use fedora extensively and find it to be very leading edge and yet functional. I use it in many incarnations from very minimal installs for firewalls, web servers, file servers, diskless cluster images, etc. all the way to my dual head desktop which I use for playing games, coding, image editing,
Re:Why use fedora? (Score:3, Insightful)
Contrary to popular opinion, Debian Unstable is very, very stable. I'd like stable to release more often, but look at what we get in return: more packages, more architectures, and more freedom.
-- John.
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2, Insightful)
Google
Toyota
Sony
Ameritrade
Re:how do they make money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Oracle (Score:2)
So, most of these burgeoning Linux Oracle installs are on RedHat.
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Now you tell me.... why should the average user run Redhat Fedora if it's not the best version the company has to offer?
Last good version of Redhat is Redhat 9. Good enough for corporations to run production, free enough for everyone.
Re:how do they make money? (Score:2)
Re:Tin Foil Hat, not Red Hat. (Score:2, Interesting)
I think they are gearing up to become a fully supportive company for businesses - where you can't afford to produce mainline code that isn't up to scratch - and let the Fedora code (their off-spring) take it's first tentative steps away from the nest.
Re:Tin Foil Hat, not Red Hat. (Score:5, Insightful)
Your conspiracy theory is contradicted by, well, everything.
Red Hat bought Netscape Directory Server. They promptly released it as Free software.
They had the cluster file system. They released it as Free software.
RHEL3 and RHEL4 are _all_ Free software. Not some - all.
Sorry, but there is still a very strong Free software sentiment going on over there, and you only need to read the blogs of the employees to find it out. They don't sell anything proprietary, unless you count RHN (which isn't distributed per se anyways).
If you want to convince people, try presenting, I don't know, a coherent argument with some sort of evidence. "I think" is pretty crappy proof.
-Erwos
Maybe, Maybe Not (Score:2, Interesting)
Redhat's developers see Fedora and Redhat as the same OS. They've been open and direct with the community, even when parts of their company h
Re:Maybe, Maybe Not (Score:2)
Re:Tin Foil Hat, not Red Hat. (Score:2)
So What.
If they are still abiding by the law, let them sell whatever they want. Hipsters may not like Red Hat simply because it has the most mindshare (and market share?) but who cares. If you don't like Red Hat proprietary software, just don't buy it, the same as you do for any other
Re:Tin Foil Hat, not Red Hat. (Score:3, Informative)
> Enterprise version of Linux into closed source, proprietary software,
> in the same style as most of the UNIX OSes out there.
Common conspiracy theory, but almost certainly wrong. Where do you think they GET their Enterprise distro? Fedora. RHEL4 is basically FC3 cleaned up and polished a bit more. They know they lack the resources to fully test enterprise software inhouse so they depend on Fedora for wide testing of all new tech
Re:Just join Debian already (Score:2)
Re:umbilical (Score:2, Informative)
Regards,
Steve
Re:I wish RedHat would just die (Score:2, Funny)
With sparkling wit like that I cannot believe you are posting anonymously.
Shout your name from the rooftops. Fame awaits !
Re:Wasn't there an article (Score:3, Interesting)
But, even if you're not, I wouldn't be suprised. RedHat is the most schizophrenic company ever to have existed. Look at their various experimental offerings in Linux support over the past ten years. Just as one of them starts gaining traction, it's killed off and replaced with a completely different business model.
I
Re:Translation (Score:3, Informative)