On Sat, 20 Apr 2013, Craig White wrote:


Scientific Linux takes all sorts of liberties with build options and
even their build system doesn't attempt to produce compatible binary
packages - not that I am suggesting that it's a bad thing - just a
completely different philosophy than CentOS.
Craig


My impression was that Scientific Linux was essentially an "in-house" 
enterprise linux derived from Red Hat that was built to fit the needs of a consortium of 
universities that collaborated a lot -- and thus needed a consistent infrastructure.  
While the community at large was welcome to use it, it wasn't built with the general 
linux community in mind, nor was it built for our convenience.  CentOS *is* developed 
with the general linux community as the target customer.  But I could be wrong.


But that leads to an interesting question, since both of these are done by 
compiling the RHEL SRPMs.  Has anybody actually tried compiling RHEL from the 
source on their boxes?  Is it hard, or just tedious?  I tried doing the linux 
from scratch thing a couple of years ago just for giggles.  I got it up and 
running, but decided the hassle wasn't worth it, and it didn't really run 
noticeably faster.  All this stuff I had read about how a distro compiled and 
tailored to the box it was to run on would be blindingly faster didn't seem to 
pan out.  It might have been a *little* faster, but not so's I noticed when it 
came to subjective interaction.  I guess when you are running KDE with all the 
eyecandy, blinding speed isn't first priority anyway.  I'll sacrifice a 
millisecond here or there for the cool rotating cube and wobbly windows.

billo
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