Consider this as a new year gifts from Father Frost, or Dad Moroz, or Santa Clous, or me, if you so prefer.
First gift is a new fresh set of precreated templates, which spent quite some time in beta before. Those are the same templates, but updated couple of days ago, plus there is Ubuntu-8.10 added. I hope I will update those monthly or so, since now I have some automation in place. A 'date' column was added to list of template files on wiki so you can easily see how old are those.
Second one is new shiny SSL certificates for https://wiki.openvz.org/ and https://bugzilla.openvz.org/. I call it shiny because they are neither self-signed nor bough from a commercial certificate authority. As you can see they are CAcert.org certificates. CAcert is an organisation which is building so-called web of trust, and acts as a certificate authority for its members. If you need free certificates, you are welcome to join. And, if you decide to trust CAcert as a certificate authority and your browser isn't configured for it yet, you have to import their root certificate.
Finally, a new 2.6.24 kernel is coming out later today. Others will follow. Update: here it is, 2.6.24-ovz007.1.
First gift is a new fresh set of precreated templates, which spent quite some time in beta before. Those are the same templates, but updated couple of days ago, plus there is Ubuntu-8.10 added. I hope I will update those monthly or so, since now I have some automation in place. A 'date' column was added to list of template files on wiki so you can easily see how old are those.
Second one is new shiny SSL certificates for https://wiki.openvz.org/ and https://bugzilla.openvz.org/. I call it shiny because they are neither self-signed nor bough from a commercial certificate authority. As you can see they are CAcert.org certificates. CAcert is an organisation which is building so-called web of trust, and acts as a certificate authority for its members. If you need free certificates, you are welcome to join. And, if you decide to trust CAcert as a certificate authority and your browser isn't configured for it yet, you have to import their root certificate.
Finally, a new 2.6.24 kernel is coming out later today. Others will follow. Update: here it is, 2.6.24-ovz007.1.


Comments
And yes, maintaining is a good thing, while there's a development process but what I see: 2.6.18-rhel5 is slowly gaining new patches from RHEL5 (they have released 92.1.22.el5 while latest RHEL5-based OVZ still be using 92.1.13.el5). So I can NOT say OVZ is actively maintaining 2.6.18-RHEL5-OVZ.
So what are you *actively* doing, guys? Seems that joke q-n someone asked you really have sense.
P. S. I know you badly stand any critics.
What was the purpose of pointing it out? Looks very much like trolling to me. And yes, unfortunately I am susceptible to trolling. So here's my answer.
I do like constructive criticism, yet more some actual work, some contribution of any kind -- be it patches or wiki edits. Non-constructive critics are, well, non-constructive -- it just distracts the developers from doing the actual work. It also irritates and demotivates developers. This is why I don't like it.