RedHat has been using IRC a long time.
ignore my above comment, I've jumped to premature conclusions.
Thank you for clarification and for all your hard work. I'm looking forward to OKD4 and I will be checking out Fedora CoreOS soon.
I don't have any experience with Harbor so can't comment on its architecture, my argument was purely about there being an existing, highly popular, open source solution backed by CNCF. Can you share more details about…
> Openshift 4.x is open-source. That's great to hear. My mistake then, last time I've opened http://github.com/openshift/origin, I saw OpenShift 3.11 even though latest release was 4.2 at the time. From that, and given…
> Red Hat is very committed to putting the necessary infrastructure and organization in place around projects before they open source to make sure that the code isn't just available but can actually use community…
A competing product (Harbor) is already open-source and part of CNCF. Quay wouldn't have had any future if it was to stay proprietary. Regarding RedHat (or IBM) truly committing to open-source, I'll believe when…
RedHat has been using IRC a long time.
ignore my above comment, I've jumped to premature conclusions.
Thank you for clarification and for all your hard work. I'm looking forward to OKD4 and I will be checking out Fedora CoreOS soon.
I don't have any experience with Harbor so can't comment on its architecture, my argument was purely about there being an existing, highly popular, open source solution backed by CNCF. Can you share more details about…
> Openshift 4.x is open-source. That's great to hear. My mistake then, last time I've opened http://github.com/openshift/origin, I saw OpenShift 3.11 even though latest release was 4.2 at the time. From that, and given…
> Red Hat is very committed to putting the necessary infrastructure and organization in place around projects before they open source to make sure that the code isn't just available but can actually use community…
A competing product (Harbor) is already open-source and part of CNCF. Quay wouldn't have had any future if it was to stay proprietary. Regarding RedHat (or IBM) truly committing to open-source, I'll believe when…