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Is it ok if we use the Free or Developer version of RHEL for personal purposes, and use it as our main Computer OS?
linux rhel
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Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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add a comment |
Is it ok if we use the Free or Developer version of RHEL for personal purposes, and use it as our main Computer OS?
linux rhel
New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Yes you can do that.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
@Jesse_b thanks but do you know which one is the fastest one? Redhat, Fedora or Centos? I heard that "RHEL" is faster than all of them but I dont know if it's right or wrong.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
1
They are all virtually the same. I don't think one could objectively say one is faster than another.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
That's what I thought but once, I had some performance problems with CentOS.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
RHEL and CentOS are most likely to perform the same, since CentOS is built from RHEL sources. (Assuming you have it configured the same way). Fedora is the upstream for RHEL so it has newer kernels, gnome, libraries, etc. so it might have code that performs better on newer hardware. It might also perform worse, as has AMD recently.
– jsbillings
47 mins ago
add a comment |
Is it ok if we use the Free or Developer version of RHEL for personal purposes, and use it as our main Computer OS?
linux rhel
New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Is it ok if we use the Free or Developer version of RHEL for personal purposes, and use it as our main Computer OS?
linux rhel
linux rhel
New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 2 hours ago
CrackerCracker
1
1
New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor
Cracker is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Yes you can do that.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
@Jesse_b thanks but do you know which one is the fastest one? Redhat, Fedora or Centos? I heard that "RHEL" is faster than all of them but I dont know if it's right or wrong.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
1
They are all virtually the same. I don't think one could objectively say one is faster than another.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
That's what I thought but once, I had some performance problems with CentOS.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
RHEL and CentOS are most likely to perform the same, since CentOS is built from RHEL sources. (Assuming you have it configured the same way). Fedora is the upstream for RHEL so it has newer kernels, gnome, libraries, etc. so it might have code that performs better on newer hardware. It might also perform worse, as has AMD recently.
– jsbillings
47 mins ago
add a comment |
Yes you can do that.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
@Jesse_b thanks but do you know which one is the fastest one? Redhat, Fedora or Centos? I heard that "RHEL" is faster than all of them but I dont know if it's right or wrong.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
1
They are all virtually the same. I don't think one could objectively say one is faster than another.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
That's what I thought but once, I had some performance problems with CentOS.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
RHEL and CentOS are most likely to perform the same, since CentOS is built from RHEL sources. (Assuming you have it configured the same way). Fedora is the upstream for RHEL so it has newer kernels, gnome, libraries, etc. so it might have code that performs better on newer hardware. It might also perform worse, as has AMD recently.
– jsbillings
47 mins ago
Yes you can do that.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
Yes you can do that.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
@Jesse_b thanks but do you know which one is the fastest one? Redhat, Fedora or Centos? I heard that "RHEL" is faster than all of them but I dont know if it's right or wrong.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
@Jesse_b thanks but do you know which one is the fastest one? Redhat, Fedora or Centos? I heard that "RHEL" is faster than all of them but I dont know if it's right or wrong.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
1
1
They are all virtually the same. I don't think one could objectively say one is faster than another.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
They are all virtually the same. I don't think one could objectively say one is faster than another.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
That's what I thought but once, I had some performance problems with CentOS.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
That's what I thought but once, I had some performance problems with CentOS.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
RHEL and CentOS are most likely to perform the same, since CentOS is built from RHEL sources. (Assuming you have it configured the same way). Fedora is the upstream for RHEL so it has newer kernels, gnome, libraries, etc. so it might have code that performs better on newer hardware. It might also perform worse, as has AMD recently.
– jsbillings
47 mins ago
RHEL and CentOS are most likely to perform the same, since CentOS is built from RHEL sources. (Assuming you have it configured the same way). Fedora is the upstream for RHEL so it has newer kernels, gnome, libraries, etc. so it might have code that performs better on newer hardware. It might also perform worse, as has AMD recently.
– jsbillings
47 mins ago
add a comment |
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Yes you can do that.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
@Jesse_b thanks but do you know which one is the fastest one? Redhat, Fedora or Centos? I heard that "RHEL" is faster than all of them but I dont know if it's right or wrong.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
1
They are all virtually the same. I don't think one could objectively say one is faster than another.
– Jesse_b
2 hours ago
That's what I thought but once, I had some performance problems with CentOS.
– Cracker
2 hours ago
RHEL and CentOS are most likely to perform the same, since CentOS is built from RHEL sources. (Assuming you have it configured the same way). Fedora is the upstream for RHEL so it has newer kernels, gnome, libraries, etc. so it might have code that performs better on newer hardware. It might also perform worse, as has AMD recently.
– jsbillings
47 mins ago