I'm getting a bit confused to the ultimate goal of combining Fedora with
Red Hat. I only used Fedora to get a decent DVD playing program and some
mp3 related programs.
I hope this project goes into a direction to expand on the usefulness
for the Red Hat / Fedora merging. There seems to be some great and
competent developers working for the project. I hope this move enhances
the people available to do the development and not cut out "redundant
employees" for similar program development.
Fedora as a standalone project was an asset to the Linux user. I hope
the merge is an asset for the Linux community.
Jim
---
Randall J. Parr wrote:
I received the email announcement.
I have read every page at
fedora.redhat.com
I have found no clarification about just what the implication is of the
following statement from fedora.us and similar statements at
fedoda.redhat.com
* This merger necessitates the removal of certain problematic packages
due to licensing issues.
Does this mean that we will no longer be able to go to Fedora to pickup
the MP3, mplayer, etc. packages which have not been included in recent
Red Hat releases because of potential licensing problems.
I am not one who complained or had a problem with Red Hat taking this
stand BUT I was very, very glad to able to go to Fedora and download
versions of these added packages that would work with a standard
install. I HAD high hopes the growth of Fedora would lead to a much,
much easier to use combination RH[L] + Fedora.
I am very concerned these vague statements mean that I will be forced,
once more, to get these added packages from special purpose, limited,
repositories which force me to particular non-standard configurations
(must have ALSA, etc.) and/or back to trying to figure out how to pull
together all the source, build it, etc.
I have only recently, through Fedora, been able to *easily* get various
sound and video apps working on my RH8 and RH9 workstations. In large
part because I could apt/yum apps built to work with my standard RH
installs.
I am also concerned that this "open" project has made only these vague
statements. This seems like a pretty major point and one which you'all
should be up front about.
R.Parr, RHCE
Temporal Arts
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