><vent>

></vent>
>
><smirk>
>Long live the kings
></smirk>
>
>-Ray

I must admit, may be I missed something here, but there seems to be quite a bit 
of outpouring of appreciation on this thread. I am sure that all that give up 
their time and effort to make CentOS happen really deserve all the thanks and 
appreciation they get. I don't think anybody on this list would deny that, 
certainly not me. On the contrary, my concern is that some guys are potentially 
overworked or over stressed by the demands of the project. The slowing of the 
dot releases suggest to me that either the releases are getting technically 
harder or ppl are less able to give time  time to them. Either way, with more 
releases and the long maintenance period that the CentOS team have committed to 
things are only going to get harder. According to Karanbir's comments in 
response to an  article 
(http://broadcast.oreilly.com/2009/08/the-future-of-centos-and-crite.html), 
CentOS developers are easy to replace. I am not so sure if that really is true 
if the
 process isn't documented and there is some kind of induction to get guys 
on-board before a developer leaves. This represents a risk to the project. One 
which I am not comfortable with. Part of my professional work is risk assessing 
system upgrades. I have been doing so long now that everything I professionally 
do is considered from a risk perspective. Maybe those of us that have to assess 
risk on a daily basis understand what I am on about and the ones that don't.... 
don't.

For the record, I don't care whether dictatorship, oligarchy or what ever. Just 
please don't spread yourselves too thin to a point where walking away is the 
only  option to keep you sane.

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