> On Dec 19, 2020, at 8:38 AM, edward <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> On 2020-12-19 19:05, Valeri Galtsev wrote:
>> 
>>> On Dec 19, 2020, at 7:10 AM, edward via CentOS <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 2020-12-19 14:33, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>>>>  In what moment "user" and "community" were replaced by "customers" in
>>>> CentOS?
>>> 
>>> probably they want more of a  overall professional ecosystem for both  rhel 
>>> and centos
>>> 
>>> since it appears ubuntu has quite  a lead  server marketshare compared to 
>>> centos and rhel
>>> 
>>> ubuntu 47%
>>> 
>>> centos 18%
>>> 
>>> redhat 1.8%
>>> 
>>> https://w3techs.com/technologies/history_details/os-linux
>>> 
>> It was interesting to look at all UNIXes:
>> 
>> https://w3techs.com/technologies/details/os-unix
>> 
>> (they apparently put into that category Linuxes, BSD descendants, etc.). Of 
>> all UNIXes Linux covers 38.8%, whereas BSD only 0.5%. There, however, is 
>> 60.7 % of unknown UNIXes. I wonder whether my FreeBSD servers are counted as 
>> UNIXes at all, I did run OS fingerprinting against some randomly chosen, and 
>> they don’t disclose OS ;-)
>> 
>> Valeri
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>>> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
> 
>   with great features like bootable environments, zfs, dtrace,etc  feel kinda 
> bad for solaris OS got less than 0.1%
> 

What I was trying to say is: there are some UNIX-like systems which are used by 
really cautious sysadmins who set things up so that even system fingerprinting 
can not discover what system the server is running.

Which covers over 60% of UNIX like systems mentioned on that website. I can not 
call them UNIXes, as many of them do not pay loyalties to be called UNIX. 
Incidentally, zfs and dtrace are available on FreeBSD… Just mentioning.

Valeri

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