Yes, but this is not still (very) big change as redhat partner companies
get rhel linsences for developer / internal use for free.

--
Eero

2016-04-04 16:55 GMT+03:00 Johnny Hughes <joh...@centos.org>:

> On 04/04/2016 08:53 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> > On 04/04/2016 08:39 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> >> I read that Redhat was offering their Linux free,
> >> and downloaded the ISO, though I haven't run it.
> >>
> >> What do CentOS users think of Redhat's offer?
> >>
> >> The registration with Redhat seemed very bureaucratic to me,
> >> and I'm not sure if I have carried it out properly.
> >> Also, I didn't see if it was possible to get updates,
> >> either with dnf or some other way.
> >>
> >> I've been (and am) very pleased with CentOS,
> >> which I've been running for several years,
> >> and I don't particularly want to change.
> >>
> >> Any views on this?
> >>
> >
> > You need read the usage license.
> >
> > That subscription can only be used in development and not in a
> > production environment.
> >
> > If that works for want you want to use it for then it is an awesome move
> > by Red Hat.
>
>
> Here is the link for the download:
>
> http://developers.redhat.com/products/rhel/get-started/
>
>
>
>
>
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