Thanks a lot to everybody who responded my question.
I got the impression that for production better use non-Fedora (Centos, RH) so 
as to minimize the frequent-updates work. For development stage it seems that 
using Fedora would not be a big issue. I will consult my programmer about this 
advice, since he usually works with Fedora.

Just interesting fact: my colleague has run an apps with MySQL DB, on Fedora 6 
from 2008 in desktop-configured as server, found no issue until now and never 
upgrade the Fedora.

Regards,
Rachma

This conversation has piqued my curiosity.
Fedora becomes end of life. I'm guessing that means the kernel and associated components go EOL. What would be the difference between an EOL well serviced and managed Fedora 19 and newly installed CentOS6.5 as far as internet safety and security goes?

I'm guessing that EAL Fedora apps like apache or nginx, php, perl, python, Ruby, c, mariadb, OpenSSL, firewall and the other security apps as well as Inkscape, Blender, LibreOffice Firefox, Thunderbird and others would keep on updating as they do in CentOS until the updates did not fit with installed kernel requirements which could conceivably be quite some time down the track. Pardon my terminology, I'm out of depth here.

I don't remember any conversations for years about attacks on Fedora system it'self, so what parts of Fedora are or could become dangerous after EOL down the track? What would one have to look out for if one does keep an EOL Fedora for a number of years?
Roger
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