I have been using ubuntu for a number of years, and in general have been very happy with it. I like that when I need to do anything, I just search 'how to do xyz ubuntu' and I will find an answer that is either current or from an older version that pretty much works. Also, I find 'apt-cache search' is generally sufficient to find any program I want to install, and only if tabbing to completion doesn't do the trick. Otherwise, I can almost always find a repo to add, or a .deb file.
What I am hoping to find here is the equivalent in CentOS. Is there a 'partner' repo like Canonical provides for the kitchen sink of most everything out there? How can you tell if an rpm will work on centos if it works with RHEL(version)? How does CentOS versions follow RHEL? i.e. Ubuntu has much more releases than Debian proper, is it similar with Centos?
I have looked around the centos site and some others, but I am just not finding the things that give me the warm and fuzzies that Ubuntu has. And I know that I have been culling this info for 4-5 years... so I am obviously not going to find it all in one place.
What can you tell me as a CentOS advocate to draw me to your camp? In the end, I want reliability and sustainability.
Thanks.