On 1/7/20 10:28 AM, Matthew Miller wrote:
On Tue, Jan 07, 2020 at 03:22:45PM +0100, Iñaki Ucar wrote:
> For me, the main challenge Fedora faces is **positioning**.
>
> Let me explain: (I don't have numbers but) in my (limited) experience,
> when seasoned sysadmins need to launch a new system, they usually
> think "Debian" as something reliable; when seasoned as well as
> not-very-seasoned-in-Linux research engineers (I know better this
> category, since I'm a researcher) need to setup a system for some demo
> or experiment, they mostly think "Ubuntu" (yes, I know...); when we
> see a new exciting service (such as Travis CI and the like) coming
> out, they usually support Ubuntu; and so on and so forth, and I'm not
> even talking about the desktop use case.
>
> So I think there's the challenge for Fedora, for all those people to
> consider Fedora as a first option for their use cases.
I agree that's a challenge. Any ideas for how to address it and change these
perceptions?
Here's one that should be easy, though it probably won't have the
desired impact, but we should practice what we preach, at minimum: make
Fedora a selection for the OS in oVirt. I wind up choosing the latest
RHEL for all my Fedora VMs but I always have to wonder if that's optimal
-- and I've lived in the shade of RH since the RHL4.0 days. Why do we
have to guess at this? I know oVirt isn't a Fedora project, it's a RH
one, but this should be one upstream that's the easiest of all to
convince. I mean Ubuntu is a choice here! What kind of message does
this project to you?