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LWN.net comments

tcmalloc's weird hack [LWN.net] Fixed? [LWN.net] mpd [LWN.net] Userspace AX.25 [LWN.net] RIP [LWN.net] My two cents... [LWN.net] pipx [LWN.net] Tragedy [LWN.net] A young man destined for glory [LWN.net] And 'less' won't let you search [LWN.net] A great loss [LWN.net] Sad and shocking news [LWN.net] Easy migration from Clementine [LWN.net] Sad coincidence [LWN.net] GNOME is actually usable thanks to Seth et al [LWN.net] Sad news :( [LWN.net] armhf supports preempt_rt [LWN.net] MusicBrainz accurracy [LWN.net] On open source maintainership [LWN.net] Let's stop here [LWN.net] Not a new thing [LWN.net] uv is indeed great pgmoneta Some comments on this on a Postgres blog feed [LWN.net] uv [LWN.net] going to Debian [LWN.net] Upgrading 64-bit-capable systems to 64-bit kernels? [LWN.net] Free Software foundations Maintainers can wait for code review but not for publish review? A reasonably extreme point of view [LWN.net] Maintaining old code Varieties of filesystems and schedulers, so why not for IPC mechanisms too? [LWN.net] AI and documentation [LWN.net] Delegating the work to a subsidiary [LWN.net] Maybe they should provide their reviews to the world [LWN.net] Something can be a bug but not a vulnerability [LWN.net] History is a little backwards ... [LWN.net] A reasonably extreme point of view [LWN.net] Let’s stop here [LWN.net] authd [LWN.net] Suggestion for bug report [LWN.net] Software pain points for long-term equipment [LWN.net] Wrong direction [LWN.net] mjg59 has lost the plot there [LWN.net] Role of German law in this? [LWN.net] Without beer? [LWN.net] Feels soul destroying [LWN.net] No zswap in Debian cloud kernel [LWN.net] No Beer?!? [LWN.net] The other fam [LWN.net] Thank you Andrew [LWN.net] Brave! [LWN.net] I second the cost factor [LWN.net] cassandra [LWN.net] Proprietary tools [LWN.net] familiar [LWN.net] ... is also staging. [LWN.net] Python package managers [LWN.net] Pour one out for AX.25... [LWN.net] tun/tap? [LWN.net] Another article at gnulinux.ch [LWN.net] Transitive checks [LWN.net] Just execute from stdin [LWN.net] Cross-compile Vacation [LWN.net] Concrete steps toward RFC 3550 (new Range types) You can rip with Windows apps too! Have the tempfile issues raised in the release notes been fixed? onlyoffice tried to add stuff in the fine print, and failed Work w/o publication is not science Removing art like offensive fortunes is a mistake. [LWN.net] De-googling (was Wtf) [LWN.net] I liked pdfmark [LWN.net] Juice then tag [LWN.net] why did PREEMPT_LAZY caused more preemptions than PREEMPT_NONE with THP disabled? [LWN.net] x86-64 was first introduced in 2003 [LWN.net] no memory safety? [LWN.net] False positive identification rate [LWN.net] "Defensive" AI use [LWN.net] LTS release? [LWN.net] ironic (ugly, good) [LWN.net] Moving away from LLVM [LWN.net] ironic (ugly, good) [LWN.net] Abandoning vim(1) ASAP [LWN.net] "Picard" naming [LWN.net] circular reasoning is a potential source of unsoundness [LWN.net] Nice to see an update [LWN.net] Writable THPs [LWN.net] Whole network messages [LWN.net] I'll fix my code ... [LWN.net] Can also recommend beets [LWN.net] Jack the CD ripper [LWN.net] How about the bad CDs? [LWN.net] systemd-boot [LWN.net] Significant raise of reports [LWN.net] IMO, it's appropriate [LWN.net] How about the bad CDs? [LWN.net] Update to include Part 4? [LWN.net] Pandoc also is invauable for a cheap-and-dirty retrieval augmented generation. [LWN.net] Whole network messages [LWN.net]
Downstream [LWN.net]
marcH · 2026-06-18 · via LWN.net comments

> High time for Fedora to remember that its value proposition is packages produced by packagers and not all the other stuff that takes the limelight and silently depends on the packages that are publicly and continuously disparaged. Fedora leaders did not manage to replace packages but they did manage to discourage packagers.

I feel like Ubuntu approaches this issue the other way round, which seems to work much better. That is: add all the proprietary software, drivers, fads, filesystems, AI and everything else you think your customers want _on top_ of the community core (Debian). Do contribute to the community core but keep hot-button "interferences" to a minimum. Fork some components when needed. Don't when you can upstream changes.

I'm not saying everything is perfect in Ubuntu-land, far from it. But that basic approach/angle looks much more sound. In fact, this "downstream" approach is is how the vast majority of commercial products use open-source in general, not just Linux distributions.

When Ubuntu needs to experiment with something new, they don't need to design a "new innovation cycle" or some fancy new "sandbox process". They just go and do it - like any company using open-source does. Zero "bikeshedding" getting in the way. Then, if and only if the experiment was successful, they can consider submitting parts of it upstream and let the bikeshedding start. But now the proposition has been battle-hardened first.

I realize this downstream approach does not apply well to infrastructure changes like Forgejo but it does seem to apply to pretty much everything else. Even with Forgejo: has IBM already been using it in anger internally?

The puzzling thing is: Fedora seems to already supports all kinds of spins, variants and what not. So why can't IBM just leverage that existing "downstream" infrastructure instead of upsetting non-IBM contributors and driving some to leave?

Pretending I'm an IBM customer, where can I download the IBM-stamped Fedora spin with all the AI and proprietary goodies that IBM believes I want? Does IBM not want my money? I'm aware RedHat is also a distro that I can buy but I'm not a datacenter sysadmin. I'm a software developer who wants the cutting edge stuff. I like Ubuntu but I find them a bit slow with AI and what not.