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On 10 September 2019 CentOS deferred CentOS 8.1 work for CentOS 7.7 since CentOS 7.x was in production and CentOS 8.x was not in production. Once CentOS 7.7 was released resources moved back to CentOS 8.0. On 24 September 2019 CentOS officially released CentOS version 8.0. Since CentOS was discontinued at the end of 2021, its final release was ...
CentOS Stream 9 was released on 3 December 2021, [9] with support of IBM Z architecture. In 2023, Red Hat announced that CentOS 7 and CentOS Stream 8 will be discontinued in 2024 in order to focus on Red Hat Enterprise Linux development. CentOS Stream 9 was given as one possible migration path. [10] CentOS Stream 10 was released on 12 December ...
In April 2019, it was announced that feature development for Scientific Linux would be discontinued, but that maintenance will continue to be provided for the 6.x and 7.x releases through the end of their life cycles. Fermilab and CERN will utilize CentOS Stream [4] and AlmaLinux [5] for their deployment of 8.x release instead.
The second release candidate, of version 8.4, the last before the stable release, was released on June 4, 2021. [21] The high version number is based on the designation of RHEL. Rocky Linux is a clone of RHEL, which is also binary-compatible and is already supported by numerous large, financially strong sponsors. [ 22 ]
Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) is a commercial open-source [6] [7] [8] Linux distribution [9] [10] developed by Red Hat for the commercial market. Red Hat Enterprise Linux is released in server versions for x86-64, Power ISA, ARM64, and IBM Z and a desktop version for x86-64.
End of life RHEL based on Based on 7.1 December 31, 2006 February 29, 2012 4.7 CentOS 4.x 8.0 May 25, 2012 March 31, 2017 5 CentOS 5.x 9.0 May 12, 2014 November 30, 2020 6 CentOS 6.x 10 June 6, 2021 June 30, 2024 7 CentOS 7.x 11 [to be determined] May 2029 8 Rocky Linux 8.x
Business Insider spoke with eight former Google employees who were laid off in 2023 and 2024 about their journeys post-Google. Aaron Neyer; Sylvia Duran; Camila Ferraz; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BI
On December 8, 2020, Red Hat announced that development of CentOS, a free-of-cost downstream fork of the commercial Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), would be discontinued and its official support would be cut short to focus on CentOS Stream, a stable LTS release without minor releases officially used by Red Hat to preview what is intended for inclusion in updates to RHEL.