Today Red Hat announces the availability of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.2, the latest iteration of their flagship Linux distribution. I don't usually cover every point release of every Linux distribution, but since I've covered recent releases from
Canonical and
SUSE I thought I'd give Red Hat some coverage, too. RHEL 6.2 is in some ways a remarkable release, and in other ways completely uninteresting. It's uninteresting in that there are no real surprises: this is a regularly scheduled update to the RHEL 6 product line, and it was released right on time. Red Hat customers have driven most of what's included in this release, in the form of bug reports and feature requests. RHEL 6.2 is uninteresting, too, because Red Hat's promise to their enterprise customers is API and ABI compatibility for the life of the product. But this is also a reason why this release is so interesting.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/BjLDfQmlehA/
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