▲ | carlwgeorge 2 days ago | |||||||
> Around the same time, Red Hat discontinued its free Red Hat Linux and replaced it with the paid-for Red Hat Enterprise Linux and the free, unsupported Fedora Core. This is a common misconception. RHEL and RHL co-existed for a bit. The first two releases of RHEL (2.1 and 3) were based on RHL releases (7.2 and 9). What was going to be RHL 10 was rebranded and released as Fedora Core 1. Subsequent RHEL releases were then based on Fedora Core, and later Fedora. https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/quick-docs/fedora-and-r... | ||||||||
▲ | lproven 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
IMHO a summary a few paragraphs long of a decade of events in a complex industry must simplify matters. Sure, there was overlap. Lots of overlap. You highlight one. Novell bought SUSE, but that was after Cambridge Technology Partners (IIRC) bought Novell, and after that, then Attachmate bought the result... But you skip over that. I think as a compressed timeline summary, mine was fair enough. It is really important historical contact that KDE is the reason that both Mandrake and GNOME exist, and it's rarely mentioned now. Mandrake became Mandriva then died, but the distros live on and PC LinuxOS in particular shows how things should have gone if there was less Not-Invented-Here Syndrome. I don't think "well, actually, this happened before that" is as important, TBH. No? | ||||||||
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