> Thanks for the information. I will look at other distributions to if there > is a stabl ones that I don not to change every 6 month to year (fedora). >
Those are opposite goals and not really something that'll be easy to find. The whole point of enterprise grade OS's like RHEL/CentOS is that they are stable and provide a known, consistent platform over their whole life - and that means that the software supplied does not change major version. Keeping up with bleeding edge versions requires a rapidly changing distro - and that will inevitably lead to instabilities and frequent releases. Life is full of compromises. I have no desire for this to become a distro wars thread - each distro has its positive and negatives, they have their fans and their critics - that's the glory of open source software. I personally use Fedora for my own desktops and CentOS for my servers - my users also get CentOS because they need stability and I really can't deal with upgrading a hundred or so desktops every few months. Some suggestions for you: if you have CentOS 7 as your base distro, then it would be fairly trivial to run Fedora (Or. Any. Other. Distro.) in a virtual machine. You might also want to try a rolling release distro, so you don't get the hit of having to do a monolithic upgrade every so often. There are lots of options, but what you aren't going to get is the most recent versions of software if you use CentOS. P. _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list [email protected] To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
