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FAQs |
Question and Answer abut The Navy Linux project.
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20 |
Currently, our Slack Channel has 80+ members who contribute to various aspects of the development process. The core team is managed by a team of 4.
True to the open-source ethos, the people contributing to NavyLinux come from different specialties and disciplines. What unites us is the focus on community-driven development and upkeep, forever.
All of us use CentOS in our real life. Some, because their company relies on it, others use it for their study use cases. But, the majority of us use CentOS for our personal projects and labs.
Today we have three sponsors who offer their services. * Mozemo is supplying us with VPS servers for our different type of software, they also help us with implementation, setup, configuration regarding our infrastructure and they also contribute to our marketing with ideas, future plans, and ads. * Siteage is also a provider of VPS services and helps with the configuration of software. * Hackernoon, a tech publication, helps us with free advertising on their website
CentOS's sudden shift of direction made us realize that such pivots and shifts will continue to affect vast numbers of people unless somebody stepped up and made us less reliant on outside forces. This was the foundational basis of NavyLinux.
Navy Linux will be 100% RHEL. Except, we're focussing on a minimalistic installation-type build and that the community voted to build a CentOS like experience for the users.
We will see. Right now, the first goal is to openly develop a CentOS-like server-side operating system before December 31, 2021.
CentOS's shift, as discussed above, affected a vast number of people. This naturally led to several members of its erstwhile community to attempt to build a suitable replacement. We're doing the same. This is the beauty of open source.
At what level of development is Navy Linux? When do you estimate to be able to launch a stable version?
We are just getting started. The team is not huge and there is no ETA yet, but we want to make an official release of NavyLinux before the CentOS EOL.