Filed under: OS Updates, Linux, Red Hat, Open Source
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As
announced on Friday by David Eisenstein, the
Fedora Legacy project is shutting down. As of his announcement (or maybe even earlier) Fedora Core 4 and earlier distributions are no longer being maintained or supported. He said that their current model of maintaining older distributions of Fedora Core are being examined, but right now everything is on (seemingly indefinite) hold. Jesse Keating
later followed up and put it on record that the lack of contributors, and zero response to their call for help with the project, lead to the demise. I can't imagine anyone who would be absolutely dependent on Fedora Core 4, except maybe for older servers. If you're a dedicated Desktop Linux user, you're likely running
Fedora Core 6, or another distribution like
Ubuntu or
SuSE.
The real question this leaves in my mind (an no doubtedly others) - is this just another case, in what has seemed like a recurring theme, of a concerted group of people being unable to provide support for Linux over the long term? Will
Ubuntu LTS succeed where Fedora Legacy could not? With the rapid pace of Linux development, is long term support just a pipe dream, or a realistic goal?
[Via
OSnews via
CNet]
Fedora Legacy closing it's doors originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 03 Jan 2007 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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