CentOS Administrator Reappears
str8edge sends word that Lance Davis, the CentOS project administrator who had mysteriously gone absent, has now returned and is working with the development team to get things back on track. From their announcement:
"The CentOS Development team had a routine meeting today with Lance Davis in attendance. During the meeting a majority of issues were resolved immediately and a working agreement was reached with deadlines for remaining unresolved issues. There should be no impact to any CentOS users going forward. The CentOS project is now in control of the CentOS.org and CentOS.info domains and owns all trademarks, materials, and artwork in the CentOS distributions. We look forward to working with Lance to quickly complete all the agreed upon issues. More information will follow soon."
and i was about to fork CentOS into PennyOS
Hiking that Appalachian trail can be tricky. I hear it goes all the way to Argentina.
Yoghurt
Lance realized this very public oops wasn't going to do anything for his future employment prospects. A shame it had to come to that, but sometimes you need to upgrade from a feather to a cattle prod to get results.
I make my living off the Evening News
Just give me something-something I can use
People love it when you lose,
They love dirty laundry
Well, I coulda been an actor, but I wound up here
I just have to look good, I don't have to be clear
Come and whisper in my ear
Give us dirty laundry
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em when they're down
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em when they're down
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em when they're down
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em all around
We got the bubble-headed-bleach-blonde who
comes on at five
She can tell you 'bout the plane crash with a gleam
in her eye
It's interesting when people die-
Give us dirty laundry
Can we film the operation?
Is the head dead yet?
You know, the boys in the newsroom got a
running bet
Get the widow on the set!
We need dirty laundry
You don't really need to find out what's going on
You don't really want to know just how far it's gone
Just leave well enough alone
Eat your dirty laundry
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em when they're down
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em when they're down
Kick 'em when they're up
Kick 'em when they're down
Kick 'em when they're stiff
Kick 'em all around
Dirty little secrets
Dirty little lies
We got our dirty little fingers in everybody's pie
We love to cut you down to size
We love dirty laundry
We can do "The Innuendo"
We can dance and sing
When it's said and done we haven't told you a thing
We all know that Crap is King
Give us dirty laundry!
reappear in front of the team one day, with bloodstain and mud all over his body, and yelled "I'm single, AGAIN!".
I could just disappear for awhile and come back acting like nothing happened.
am an outlaw, I was born an outlaw's son
The highway is my legacy
On the highway I will run
In one hand I've a Bible
In the other I've got a gun
Well, don' you know me
I'm the man who won
Woman don't try to love me
Don't try to understand
A life upon the road is the life of an outlaw man
First left my woman, it was down in Santa Fe
Headed for Oklahoma, I was ridin' night and day
All of my friends are strangers,
They quickly come and go
And all my love's in danger,
Cause I steal hearts and souls
Woman, don't try to love me
Don't try to understand A life upon the road is the life of an outlaw man
oo....
Woman, don't try to love me
Don't try to understand
A life upon the road is the life of an outlaw man
Some men call me Abel,
Some men call me Cain,
Some men call me sinner, Lord
Some men call me saint
Some say there's a Jesus
Some men say there ain't
When you got no life to lose
Then there's nothin' left to gain
Outlaw man
Outlaw man
As a long-time CentOS user, I'm really glad to hear this. I've been a bit worried about CentOS (indeed, I recently muttered darkly about maybe moving to Scientific Linux), but it looks like CentOS is working on decentralizing their leadership so we don't get issues like this and the delayed 5.3 release because a key member was getting married.
If people are having problems with yum update, this should fix the issue I saw the other day: yum clean metadata
I would like to use 64-bit CentOS 5 as the primary OS on my 1997 Dell 1420 laptop, but there are a couple of hardware compatibility issues:
Not a big deal; right now I'm using 32-bit Windows XP Home edition as my primary OS and 32-bit CentOS 5 is in a virtual machine for Linux open-source software development (My DNS server).
If this is what constitutes a "routine meeting" for them, I'd shudder to think what an extraordinary meeting would be like.
He'd been invisible for more than two weeks. Once you're in a position of responsibility like that the longest you can disappear without making prior plans is maybe a long weekend. Which sucks because sometimes you're going to want to crawl into a hole and ignore what has gone wrong with the world but you don't have that freedom when people are counting on you.
Good news.
Here I am in my sickbed writing rsync scripts for cross-site backups between CentOS-based servers, and seeing the headline made me smile, in-between fits of coughing.
If by some amazing chance Karanbir Singh see this - I promise to rack up the dual Itanium server for IA64 testing and dev as soon as I get back to work and clean up a few other outstanding issues.
AT&ROFLMAO
This here's a story about Billy Joe and Bobbie Sue
Two young lovers with nothin' better to do
Than sit around the house, get high, and watch the tube
And here is what happened when they decided to cut loose
They headed down to, ooh, old El Paso
That's where they ran into a great big hassle
Billy Joe shot a man while robbing his castle
Bobbie Sue took the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Billy Mack is a detective down in Texas
You know he knows just exactly what the facts is
He ain't gonna let those two escape justice
He makes his livin' off of the people's taxes
Bobbie Sue, whoa, whoa, she slipped away
Billy Joe caught up to her the very next day
They got the money, hey
You know they got away
They headed down south and they're still running today
Singin' go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
Go on take the money and run
"As if by magic, the Cent OS Admin appeared."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr_Benn
THE HONOUR OF THE KNIGHTS - CC Licensed Sci-Fi Novel
This whole story is unnerving.
CentOS is widely used in datacenters due to it's red-hattyness, it's Long Term Support, and conservative adoption of whizbang.
It's by far my favorite distrobution for important servers.
I have already had two meetings over this and had my team start their proposals for alternate LTS distros and a migration plan. I am sure I am not the only one.
If the CentOS project manages to remove this single point of failure I think confidence will return. But I think I'll keep my projects going for a while just in case.
He could have been replaced with a robot completely powered by C#, just like they did with Reagan in '81.
Everyone will jump on this as proof that open source projects can not be trusted or relied on. Now, that may or may not be true. This instance really is not a poster child for problems with FOSS projects. We are talking about a project based on repackaging and rebranding a commercial distro. The heavy lifting is done by RH and other projects.
This should be food for thought however about other projects, which there are many many instances of FOSS project management issues leaving users high and dry because of political issues.
We really need some better organizational standards for FOSS project management, not just high quality code. Remember the segment of society we are talking about. They might be great at programing or whatever, but they rarely have the leadership and organization skills to handle a project once it reaches a critical mass of popularity or use.
One of the first things I have to do, after years of using FOSS, is look at the project and see how healthy it is before deciding to implement it in my biz. I have to do things like look at how many projects have derived work from it, who is contributing to it, how alive is the forum community both for developers and users, development cycles, and so on.
What we really need is some sort of organizational certification. Something that an end user of FOSS or other FOSS project can with one glance determine what is the status of the organization and the project. Especially the large important ones. Are there for example policies in place to handle the death of the head of the project? Is there a formal system for order of succession? Is there policy for archiving legacy code and related information?
The worse thing that can happen to a FOSS project is a cult of personality forming around just one person ( that is more than just PR).
Living in Chile
.. but the Appalachain trail jokes arent funny. The first one wasn't even remotely funny, and the two dozen that followed it in the last post about this guy were annoyingly lame. This one is just way past the line. If I see the word Appalachian in this thread I'm going to stab my face with an icepick.
1. If the health of the company and their product is absolutely dependent on the well being of Lance, then they should have done everything they could to keep this story quiet, as it is embarrassing.
Substitute OSX or Win 7.
Watch from some safe distance the purple-faced geek shifting into high gear, frothing at the mouth and about to burst an artery.
Note the double standard and profit from the experience.
If you have something that's actually important, you should be using Red Hat. You know, the people who actually made the distribution that CentOS is giving away for free.
I use CentOS for most of my servers (except 2 nameservers), and was really hoping for a fork... mainly so that they rename it to something that doesn't suck, and so that they get a better logo and icon. Seriously... the CentOS logo and icon suck...
it looks like CentOS is working on decentralizing their leadership so we don't get issues like this and the delayed 5.3 release because a key member was getting married.
I am not convinced that decentralized leadership is leadership.
You need someone strong enough and knowledgeable enough to hold all the pieces together no matter what. You need a clear line of succession.
I bought an RHEL license yesterday. I'll probably keep using CentOS on the less important machines I have, but I'm likely going to switch to Ubuntu LTS where possible and RHEL where I need the RH layout for existing scripts, etc.
Hope they get a stable leadership organized.
Lance Davis is AWOL for almost a year
You punch up 911 when you first smell the smoke - not when your house has burnt down to ashes.
In a way, this gives me some more confidence in CentOS, insofar as the rest of the admins were willing to "break glass in case of emergency" and deal with Davis' erratic leadership
Confidence? Confidence?
To me this story reads more like a Chinese Fire Drill
Finally, someone found a use for the new Slashdot comment system: a replacement for Basecamp! Shall I assign this 'Disappear from world for a year while running 'round Manchester with a shotgun killing zombies' to-do to kbsingh?
Should've used Debian. As Eddie Izzard says 'Debian or death'. ;)
Machts es la fresh !!
... Using Google Earth ! See ? Told you you could find people using Google Earth! Now, off to find Bin Laden...
I get tense whenever I come across this kind of CYA posturing which tends to invoke more double standards than a house of mirrors.
More charges may be filed in HP case
Ousted Chairwoman Patricia Dunn and former ethics chief Kevin Hunsaker surrendered, were booked and released Thursday, a day after being charged -- along with three private investigators -- with felonies for their roles in HP's spying scandal.
Ethics officer dragged off in handcuffs, did it really hurt HP's business? What was it all about? It was about keeping their dirty laundry behind closed doors, no matter how appalling or borderline illegal.
I'm more of a KTB than a CYA. KTB = kill the bastards
CentOS is an example of "life happens". Interesting how many uninformed people who just caught their first whiff of this immediately chime in to explain that they should have tried harder to keep a lid on this, without even checking that maybe this box already had a tick mark.
The underlying assumption is that making an effort to keep a scandal behind closed doors will always work if the people involved warrant respect. Similar to the belief system of the HP executives. In their quest not to be damned by their knee-jerk shareholders for not trying hard enough to bung the leak, they went all the way to extra-legal.
I'm tremendously unimpressed by people who maintain their social standing by undermining the credibility of our public institutions.
Fundamentally, most support contracts are a tax on social insecurity. Am I the only person on slashdot with a vastly better track record at debugging failed software on my own steam than getting assistance over a telephone support hot-line?
I've had a few excellent external support experiences. On the other hand, in the time it takes to fight through the telephone support system of a typical company to a person who actually knows something I could have reversed engineered the antikythera.
Or in the case of HP, when one of their printer drivers made a friend's Windows 2000 machine unbootable, and their driver uninstaller refused to run under safe mode because it demanded a higher screen resolution that safe-mode VGA, and then my note about this on their support website (which took me 15 minutes to compose) returned "404 not found" after I pressed submit. So much for big, redundant iron. The dudes can't even keep their customer-support web server running (for customer_type==peon). Nothing screams "we care" like "404 not found".
That incident with HP cost me half a day of my life. End result of my support escalation: "404 corporation doesn't give a damn".
I once spent half a day debugging an obscure failure of EAccelerator in which tried dozens of Apache settings, ended up hand compiling, and then ended up running the whole thing under strace, finally filing a bug report which was incorporated upstream.
Which of those two experiences do you think I'm willing to repeat? Which of those experiences made me feel lower than an earth-worm? Which of those experiences made me feel like a useful member of the human race?
The most interesting property of the CYA reflex is how quickly and thoroughly it vaporises irrelevant considerations such as life quality.
The human brain was designed with a kill-switch on life quality. That's an amazing artifact from six million years of evolution under the parameters of nasty, brutish, and short. And still we marvel at the human capacity for genocide. Our CYA reflex is not the main player in this, but if you follow the wiring, I'm sure it's highly interconnected with the culpable wetware.
People have been donating money to centos.org, presumably wishing to further the goals of the project. Is this money (plus the advertising revenue) still available for its intended purpose?
Not accusing anyone of anything, but this question is quite important and doesn't seem to be addressed in the update.
Don't read your own post.
Slackware has a huge installed base and is maintained by one man - the founder Patrick Volkerding. When his health failed several years ago, there was a lot of concern but things seem to have been pretty good since then.
. waterwingz
In some contexts, you need an actual answer to this question. Not such a bad thing.
--
olderphart
Can someone please clue me in about these Argentina jokes?
This FAQ http://www.centos.org/modules/smartfaq/faq.php?faqid=5 is very incompletion. I want to add next sentence on this webpage. "But this project is roled by a few people who are unbalance. So it's dangerous to use this distribution on your enterprise class computing platform."
U remember the Mono fanboys trying to "prove" RMS is lunatic using his valid idea of 1980s where there will be absolutely no "single admin,password" rather than a shared password known by trustable and ethical people.
When I heard about admin going AWOL and they live problems, I just ask "What if 4-5 people knew the password?"
So it is better to think a second before joking with old school people's "lunatic" ideas, they eventually turn out to be right.
Weekend in Vegas? :)
Oh my god, have you never worked in a company?
Companies have vastly greater leadership problems every single minute of every single day. It is simply not news, it happens so prodigiously, so continuously. Because FOSS works so damn well, it shocks us when a project has a tiny glimmer of strife.
FOSS is a meritocracy. It's a popularity contest. By comparison, companies are based on money and the absolute, legal powers of those who posses it. You can, and do, have CEOs who make money every day at the expense of their customers/users. Corporate customer? You get fucked. You can, and do, have CEOs who are simply stupid or arrogant, and just fail to make money period. Corporate customer? You get fucked. Compare to FOSS, where no single asshole, no matter how powerful, can hold that power without others agreeing there is merit in it. Work can never be lost. Users can never be stranded. In fact, if some people like a leader and others dont, then you will have a split, two or more people in power, all without loss of work or disruption to customers. Then they may even cooperate sometimes, even if they hate each other. What parallels this, in the industry?
Torvalds has no power to take away the Linux software you use, or even control its future. All he can do is either lead effectively, or embarrass himself in public and watch the meritocracy pass the torch to another. Bill Gates can decide to take your platform (Windows XP), or your language (VB today, C# tomorrow) on a nose dive - even discontinue it - at any moment. You just get fucked. You have no recourse.
We go to the corporate marketplace for software because although the FOSS world is great, it will not naturally produce all the goods and services we need. It's just another set of trade-offs. It so happens that for software, they are particularly tricky. Would the market in cars be so efficient if it cost you x million dollars to change from being a Ford to a Honda customer? And where once you are locked in, Ford can charge you 10,000x cost for repairs? And then simply refuse to perform them when they feel the time is right for you to buy a new car? And they get away with it simply because (outside of FOSS) they make cars where opening the hood to fix it yourself is as hard as cracking a safe, and almost as dangerous.
This is the position software customers find themselves in. So you can start to see the appeal of FOSS, whose "leadership problems" are to being a corporate customer what a fucking afternoon spa treatment is to being Bubba's cellmate.
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Oh, men! Lance was just hanging out. Sometimes people are in need of disappearing, getting drunk, having sex and a lot of other things just for fun. Two weeks is nothing, why there are some much talks about that? Lance now is like a Sarah Palin in IT world :) Just relax... do the same.