If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!
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@glasswireken said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
I just joined a few minutes ago from Austin, Texas. Is this site custom or does it use turn-key forum type software? It's really nice. I look forward to participating.
On our site we use Discourse for our forum, but this site is really impressive.
It is currently NodeBB on CentOS 7. Although I'd recommend Fedora these days. We are using MongoDB on the back end.
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@scottalanmiller Cool. I go to Dallas every once in awhile. There is a lot of stuff going on up there lately.
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@glasswireken said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller Cool. I go to Dallas every once in awhile. There is a lot of stuff going on up there lately.
Yeah, I like Dallas. It's definitely a booming place, much like Austin.
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@scottalanmiller thanks. Hi, from Jakarta
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@scottalanmiller may i know why u recommed fedora more compared to centos 7? Im using centos 7 so far.
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@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller may i know why u recommed fedora more compared to centos 7? Im using centos 7 so far.
Fedora is updated more frequently compared to Centos. Centos is their Long-term-support solution, so updates comes out less frequently.
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@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller may i know why u recommed fedora more compared to centos 7? Im using centos 7 so far.
You don't have to worry that much with installing repos because of how old the packages are in CentOS.
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@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller thanks. Hi, from Jakarta
The real Jakarta? Very cool. Welcome.
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@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller may i know why u recommed fedora more compared to centos 7? Im using centos 7 so far.
I have an article on why...
http://www.smbitjournal.com/2017/04/rethinking-long-term-support-releases/
Basically when using CentOS, you have one of two choices...
- Use old packages that get many years out of date and make you run much slower and with fewer features most or all of the time. Or...
- Don't use CentOS as intended and defeat the reason that you chose it (long term support with unchanging packages.)
So for things like app deployments, it rarely makes sense IMHO.
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@scottalanmiller said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller thanks. Hi, from Jakarta
The real Jakarta? Very cool. Welcome.
Where is the impostor Jakarta?
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@rojoloco said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller thanks. Hi, from Jakarta
The real Jakarta? Very cool. Welcome.
Where is the impostor Jakarta?
Not sure. But Jakarta used to be Batavia and Batavia, NY is named after it.
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@scottalanmiller will u recommend fedora for enterprise production server compared to Centos?
As i know, centos is more superior in term of stability for enterprise grade.I used to be brainwashed that way
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@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller will u recommend fedora for enterprise production server compared to Centos?
Yes, that's what I moved to myself.
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@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
As i know, centos is more superior in term of stability for enterprise grade.
This is not at all true. CentOS, for all intents and purposes, is just "old Fedora." So any instability issues of Fedora would still be there in CentOS, plus any problems from not being kept up to date, which in this day and age are pretty significant. I've found, due to being so out of date, that CentOS is not as reliable as Fedora, nor as powerful.
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@scottalanmiller said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
As i know, centos is more superior in term of stability for enterprise grade.
This is not at all true. CentOS, for all intents and purposes, is just "old Fedora." So any instability issues of Fedora would still be there in CentOS, plus any problems from not being kept up to date, which in this day and age are pretty significant. I've found, due to being so out of date, that CentOS is not as reliable as Fedora, nor as powerful.
That's two of us at least.
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@scottalanmiller said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
As i know, centos is more superior in term of stability for enterprise grade.
This is not at all true. CentOS, for all intents and purposes, is just "old Fedora." So any instability issues of Fedora would still be there in CentOS, plus any problems from not being kept up to date, which in this day and age are pretty significant. I've found, due to being so out of date, that CentOS is not as reliable as Fedora, nor as powerful.
It is not "old Fedora" exactly. CentOS is more like Fedora branched off and then continually updated along a different update track. Kernel updates happen, package updates happen. It is not inherently less secure or less powerful.
It can certainly be less powerful if you want something like PHP 7 because you cannot have it. That package update is not going to happen. But security updates and fixes to PHP 5.4 continue to be applied to it.
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@jaredbusch said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@scottalanmiller said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
@kuyaz said in If you are new drop in say hello and introduce yourself please!:
As i know, centos is more superior in term of stability for enterprise grade.
This is not at all true. CentOS, for all intents and purposes, is just "old Fedora." So any instability issues of Fedora would still be there in CentOS, plus any problems from not being kept up to date, which in this day and age are pretty significant. I've found, due to being so out of date, that CentOS is not as reliable as Fedora, nor as powerful.
It is not "old Fedora" exactly. CentOS is more like Fedora branched off and then continually updated along a different update track. Kernel updates happen, package updates happen. It is not inherently less secure or less powerful.
It's definitely old. Both Fedora and CentOS are kept up to date. With Fedora the time frame in which that is done is more limited and you are expected to keep the macro updates done to keep updating. CentOS keeps getting patches for that old code base longer. But it is essentially just a single Fedora release that keeps getting patched. So old is the best way to describe it. CentOS 7 is, for all intents and purposes, Fedora 19 with patches still coming out.
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Welcome @fredtx
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Welcome @techincolor
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Lots of new people. Welcome @techincolor @Fredtx @kuyaz