The best opportunity out of all this is we can all write our own operating systems and maintain our own Linux systems. That's the takeaway. You don't want to live on either extreme because you either, you know, just gluing together other people's code endlessly or you're writing your own firmware for your Asus. It could just be a stepping stone on our way to somewhere else. But I appreciate you coming on, sharing your thoughts and riffle me in Jared here on Change Looking Friends.
Red Hat’s decision to lock down RHEL sources behind a subscription paywall was met with much ire and opened opportunity for Oracle to get a smack in and SUSE to announce a fork with $10 million behind it.
Few RHEL community members have been as publicly irate as Jeff Geerling, so we invited him on the show to discuss.
Leave us a comment
Changelog++ members support our work, get closer to the metal, and make the ads disappear. Join today!
Sponsors:
- Fastly – Our bandwidth partner. Fastly powers fast, secure, and scalable digital experiences. Move beyond your content delivery network to their powerful edge cloud platform. Learn more at fastly.com
- Fly.io – The home of Changelog.com — Deploy your apps and databases close to your users. In minutes you can run your Ruby, Go, Node, Deno, Python, or Elixir app (and databases!) all over the world. No ops required. Learn more at fly.io/changelog and check out the speedrun in their docs.
- Typesense – Lightning fast, globally distributed Search-as-a-Service that runs in memory. You literally can’t get any faster!
Featuring:
- Jeff Geerling – Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn, Website
- Jerod Santo – Mastodon, Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn
- Adam Stacoviak – Mastodon, Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn, Website
Show Notes:
Something missing or broken? PRs welcome!