Future of Centos and Enterprise Linux

The Red Hat changes in how they publish the source code for CentOS sent a stream specifically, but unlike all the other conversations that I’ve heard, we dive into how enterprises can inoculate themselves from this type of disruptive change. We also address what it means for the ecosystem of vendors and how we can build better software in response to the potential fragmentation of Red Hat, Linux Enterprise Linux or Enterprise Linux distros.

This was a surprising conversation, because we addressed a lot of important trends in how companies depend on Linux stability, and what they could do. If you are in this boat with all of us looking at how to have stable long term secure infrastructure using Linux, you will love this podcast.

Sources:
www.theregister.com/2023/07/10/orac…_ibm_rhel_code/
www.zdnet.com/article/oracle-tak…-linux-code-fight/
www.suse.com/news/SUSE-Preserve…-Enterprise-Linux/
www.zdnet.com/article/why-snap-a…-the-average-user/

Transcript: otter.ai/u/dmrcCulS0X1CC4YGHO…?utm_source=copy_url
Image: www.pexels.com/photo/photo-of-pe…de-table-3182755/

Can Machines Update Themselves?

We know that humans have trouble keeping systems updated, but… how can we address the challenge of knowing which updates are required and, critically, if the updates with break other systems? Even knowing if they worked is a really thorny problem!

In this episode, we focus on actions about what’s going on and why this problem has persisted in industry for so long. Starting from the news of the day about CentOS 8 mirrors being taken down. That’s exactly the type of challenge we are facing when we think about where updates and repos are coming from.

Transcript: otter.ai/u/rRMIT6kkTTtyWrzdBnuq63nvKuE
Photo: www.pexels.com/photo/a-man-using…quipment-5996696/

Rob’s Hot Take:

Rob Hirschfeld, CEO and co-founder of RackN, discusses the challenges of system maintenance and lifecycle in the Cloud 2030 podcast. He emphasizes the difficulty of keeping systems up to date and understanding dependencies, leading to a lack of confidence in system updates due to the fear of breaking or degrading them. Hirschfeld advocates for a change in the industry to prioritize test and verification practices, enabling more effective and confident system updates.