We use Scientific Linux a lot at work.  It's a recompiled RHEL, similar to 
CentOS.  We use it mostly for servers and have been happy with it.  It has very 
good community support via their mailing lists, and the people that build it 
(at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and CERN) are very responsive.

Note that Scientific Linux, as with other "enterprise" distributions, typically 
does NOT include bleeding-edge applications.  It places where we need those, we 
use Fedora.  The trade-off here is that a given version of Scientific Linux 
will typically be supported for three years or more, while Fedora needs to be 
updated about once a year.

Another thing to note is that Scientific Linux does not meet the same 
purity-of-essence standard as Fedora: the distribution contains software that 
is free and useful but not GPL'ed.  The University of Washington pine email 
client used to be the canonical example of this.  I guess that "alpine" has now 
made that particular package moot, but the principle still applies.

-- Mike

----- Original Message ----
From: g <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: For users of Fedora <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, June 22, 2008 8:20:30 AM
Subject: linux - scientific

anyone using scientificlinux and comments about experience? (other than it
is 'enterprise')


-- 

tc,hago.

g
.

in a free world without fences, who needs gates.

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