Linux User Space

How did your favorite Linux distribution get its start? Join us and find out! Linux User Space is hosted by Leo and Dan, and every two weeks we deep dive into the history of Linux distributions and the things that matter to us. Episodes drop every other Monday.

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Episode 3:16: The Cent of a Distro


Coming up in this episode

  1. CentOS
  2. ...
  3. ...
  4. Just CentOS

316 Audio Timestamps
0:00 Cold Open
1:48 With a Little Help From Our Friends
9:42 CentOS History, 90's - 1996
11:46 96 - 2000
14:01 2000 - 2003
20:29 The Clone Wars
24:47 2004 - 2014
30:25 2014 - 2022
36:41 Our CentOS Experience
1:11:00 Next Time: Topics!
1:14:31 Stinger

Watch this episode on Youtube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52MnZVvVumc

Banter
  • Leo's font issue
  • The bug
  • HUGE Thanks to Carl George for technical help with this episode.
Announcements
  • Give us a sub on YouTube
  • You can watch us live on Twitch the day after an episode drops.
  • If you like what we're doing here, make sure to send us a buck over at https://patreon.com/linuxuserspace
CentOS Linux the History
  • July 1994 The "preview" release for Red Hat Linux is released internally
  • October 31 codenamed "Halloween" 0.9 is released.
  • May 1995 "Mother's Day" 1.0 is released and introduces some iconic branding.
  • March 1996 "Picasso" 3.0.3 is released. Version numbers might really matter, check out our Slackware episode to find out how Patrick Volkerding felt about them. TL;DW
  • September 2000 Red Hat Linux 7.0 has releases with [their renamed gcc version](features.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=00/10/12/163218&mode=thread)
  • May 2002 Enter Red Hat Enterprise Linux with version 2.1.
  • Sometime within 2002, Warren Togami starts the Fedora Linux Project.
    • It aimed to bring together additional packages for Red Hat Linux.
    • It wasn't a distribution on its own. It was Extras for the existing Red Hat Linuxes.
  • March 2003 Red Hat Linux 9.0, named Shrike, is released.
  • July 2003 Severn, the beta for what would be Red Hat Linux 10, changes to a more open and community focused development process.
  • September 2003, Red Hat Linux and the Fedora Linux Project, [merge into The Fedora Project].(https://web.archive.org/web/20031001204515/http://www.fedora.us/).
    • Mailing list announcement
    • Transition info
  • Also in September, enter cAos.
    • cAos1-base and cAos1-enhanced couldn't really exist without each other.
  • November 2003 Red Hat signals that it's getting out of the Boxed Linux business.
  • What was to be Red Hat Linux 10 instead released as Fedora Core 1 with Extras.
  • December 2003 the first alpha of cAos.
  • Three weeks later, CentOS 3.
  • Another week later, CentOS 2 beta.
  • Whitebox Linux first release candidate.
  • David Parsley registered taolinux.org, and in December, started getting the site together.
  • Why Tao Linux?
  • June 2006, David had to switch jobs.
  • Scientific Linux
  • Feburary 2004 the final release cAos-1, the proof of concept,made it to mirrors.
  • March 2004 CentOS 3.1 is released.
  • Karanbir Singh, or KB, noted that 3.3 was the first proper release.
  • February 2005 CentOS receieved a Cease and Desist letter from the lawyers over at Red Hat in regards to using the Red Hat Logos and name on the centos.org website. CentOS's response.
  • March 2005 CentOS 4 was released two weeks after its upstream RHEL 4. Coverage was picking up.
  • Lance Davis announces that CentOS is separating itself from the cAos project.
  • May 2005 cAos 2 is announced, also based on RHEL 3.
  • 2008 A new distribution, also called Caos.
  • July 2009 Lance Davis, one of the Founders and lead of the CentOS 2 release, had been missing for many months.
    • From the mailing list
    • From the Register
  • October 14 2009 Caos Linux 1.0.25 is released and is the last release of Caos, ever.
  • January of 2014, Red Hat acquires.
  • July 2014 CentOS 7.0 is released.
  • 2019 Red Hat leaves Shadowman behind.
  • September 2019 Red Hat announces CentOS Stream.
  • Also in in September 2019, CentOS Linux 8 and CentOS Stream are released.
  • January 2021; Red Hat changes the way their dev subscriptions work.
  • December 2021 CentOS 9 Stream is released.
CentOS links
  • Main Web Page
  • About
  • Blog
  • Wiki
  • Forums
  • Mailing Lists
  • Git Repositories
  • Bug reporting
  • IRC
  • Planet
  • List of CentOS releases
Other Links
  • AlmaLinux
  • Rocky Linux
  • Red Hat Linux family tree
More Announcements
  • Want to have a topic covered or have some feedback? - send us an email, contact@linuxuserspace.show
Housekeeping

Catch all the great topics as they unfold on our Subreddit or our News channel on Discord.

  • Linux User Space subreddit
  • Linux User Space Discord Server
  • Linux User Space Telegram
  • Linux User Space Matrix
  • Linux User Space Twitch
  • Linux User Space Mastodon
  • Linux User Space Twitter
  • Linux User Space TILVids
Next Time

We will discuss a couple of topics and some feedback. Our next distro is Endless OS

Come back in two weeks for more Linux User Space

Stay tuned and interact with us on Twitter, Mastodon, Telegram, Matrix, Discord whatever. Give us your suggestions on our subreddit r/LinuxUserSpace Join the conversation. Talk to us, and give us more ideas. All the links in the show notes and on linuxuserspace.show.

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 February 13, 2023  1h15m