- Related Stories
-
Red Hat: Fedora will engage customers
February 18, 2005 -
Red Hat updates premium Linux
February 15, 2005 -
Linux leaders offer education discounts
November 15, 2003 -
Red Hat aggressive with premium Linux
February 5, 2003
(continued from previous page)
server per year donation to defray download costs, though few beyond some companies pay, Kurtzer said.
The support questionAfter Red Hat launched RHEL, it also began a project called Fedora. That version of Linux is available for free, but it's a fast-changing and unsupported product geared for hobbyists and programmers who can help work the kinks out of the latest software packages.
RHEL, in contrast, changes slowly, with updates released roughly every 18 months so hardware and software companies have time to certify that their products work with the operating system. Support of a particular Red Hat version lasts for seven years for those who pay an annual support subscription.
"Enterprises may have been disabused of the notion that Linux is free, but that doesn't mean they want to pay through the nose for it just because it has (software partner) support," said RedMonk analyst James Governor.
There are risks to leaving the official Red Hat fold, though. A customer isn't going to get much hand-holding, for example.
"We support three forms of Linux: Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Novell's Suse Linux Enterprise Server and Asianux," said Anne Pace, a spokeswoman for storage specialist EMC. "We chose those three because when we scan our customers, those seem to be the versions of Linux that our customers seem to be going with."
EMC will try to help customers using other versions, Pace said. But if they're using a Linux version EMC doesn't support, "we can only go so far, so they'll probably need to be diverted back to the Linux company to try to figure it," she said.
Oracle, a major software power and Linux backer, supports the same three Linux versions as EMC, but it has a stricter policy because it wants to keep the number of varying Linux versions to a minimum.
"Oracle wants to prevent fragmentation in the Linux distribution space," Monica Kumar, senior manager of Oracle's Linux product marketing, said in a statement. "Because of the indeterminate number of possible distributions and Oracle's desire to see customers succeed, it is necessary to confine enterprise-class support to those distributions that Oracle believes can be successfully deployed and supported in enterprise-class environments."
Do it yourself
Many who opt for Red Hat rebuilds are confident of their own expertise, though.
"I've had years' worth of support from Red Hat and have never called them once," said Jacob Leaver, a senior systems administrator who
See more CNET content tagged:
Red Hat Inc., clone, Red Hat Linux, programmer, Linux






LoL.... Fragmentation and splintering were things that the GPL people claimed would not be a problem in the future. Looks like now it is cutting into the profits of the largest Linux company. You have to wonder if the GPL authors didn't know and anticipate this.... after all, they generally have a very anti-capitalistic attitude. OTOH, RedHat should have seen this coming a mile away.
"Hey, I have an idea! Lets charge large sums of money for a product that can be obtained freely!"
Red Hat reminds me of Eric Cartman when he was trying to represent Token in the music industry... "We need to convince him that he needs us, when really, he doesn't."
So yes, there ARE very important differences.
LoL.... Fragmentation and splintering were things that the GPL people claimed would not be a problem in the future. Looks like now it is cutting into the profits of the largest Linux company. You have to wonder if the GPL authors didn't know and anticipate this.... after all, they generally have a very anti-capitalistic attitude. OTOH, RedHat should have seen this coming a mile away.
"Hey, I have an idea! Lets charge large sums of money for a product that can be obtained freely!"
Red Hat reminds me of Eric Cartman when he was trying to represent Token in the music industry... "We need to convince him that he needs us, when really, he doesn't."
So yes, there ARE very important differences.
And far more important, a customer that bought software that turns out to be buggy or difficult to use isn't likely to be a repeat customer. Auto dealerships make lots of money off service, but nobody likes buying a lemon.
And far more important, a customer that bought software that turns out to be buggy or difficult to use isn't likely to be a repeat customer. Auto dealerships make lots of money off service, but nobody likes buying a lemon.
They've developed a very nice system for desktop with lots of applications.
I haven't tried using it as a server, but that isn't the market they are specifically going after either. They are pursuing the desktop market, and therefore adding all the value that Red Hat doesn't have in that market for a typical user.
Plus it's price is comparible to MacOS or Windows XP.
As far as splintering goes. I have to agree that one of the major downfalls to Linux at the moment is the many variations. Without some kind of unification I fear that linux is always going to have problems growing in the desktop market. It can be to costly for developers to try and make their software work with 100 different version of linux. I know this goes against the idea of linux, but they really need to make a core linux that all distro's use that allows a programmer to create one version of a program that doesn't require multiple builds.
They've developed a very nice system for desktop with lots of applications.
I haven't tried using it as a server, but that isn't the market they are specifically going after either. They are pursuing the desktop market, and therefore adding all the value that Red Hat doesn't have in that market for a typical user.
Plus it's price is comparible to MacOS or Windows XP.
As far as splintering goes. I have to agree that one of the major downfalls to Linux at the moment is the many variations. Without some kind of unification I fear that linux is always going to have problems growing in the desktop market. It can be to costly for developers to try and make their software work with 100 different version of linux. I know this goes against the idea of linux, but they really need to make a core linux that all distro's use that allows a programmer to create one version of a program that doesn't require multiple builds.
Red Hat could have released their own "trial" version if they wanted too. This will hurt Red Hat, but they have it coming to them anyway. Red Hat wants to monopolize on Linux services.
Red Hat could have released their own "trial" version if they wanted too. This will hurt Red Hat, but they have it coming to them anyway. Red Hat wants to monopolize on Linux services.
Existing binary incompatibilities are between different library or kernel *versions*. Linus is against keeping backwards compatibility with old kernel versions if it makes things easier. Binary incompatibility is irrelevant for open source apps, because you can just recompile your app. Linux is POSIX, so any app targetted at that will compile, on any Linux version or platform. The problem only exists for closed source apps. Like Oracle.
Thye won't even know what the term 'Recompile' means, much less on how to do it.
Existing binary incompatibilities are between different library or kernel *versions*. Linus is against keeping backwards compatibility with old kernel versions if it makes things easier. Binary incompatibility is irrelevant for open source apps, because you can just recompile your app. Linux is POSIX, so any app targetted at that will compile, on any Linux version or platform. The problem only exists for closed source apps. Like Oracle.
Thye won't even know what the term 'Recompile' means, much less on how to do it.
We all win here.. in the end.. Its Linux..
We all win here.. in the end.. Its Linux..
I'm not sure why this article was even written -- Linux has always had many distributions. I guess tech journalists don't have much "tech" background. If they did, they would realize this kind of thing has been going to for what, a decade now? In fact, isn't this basically the same story of how Mandrake came into existence? They took other existing distributions, added a nice installation front-end, and released it as their own. This CentOS doesn't appear any different.
- What about Fedora Core
- by March 24, 2005 7:24 PM PST
- is it not true that Fedora core is part of Red Hat? Last i checked they just released FC4 test 1, i am downloading it as we speak by torrent. Core 3 was great very clean.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- Yep -- FC3 is 99% RHELinux
- by Richard G. March 25, 2005 8:49 AM PST
- I also am a Fedora Core 3 user. I like it a lot. It's very developer friendly, and Red Hat did a good job providing tools to easily update all the install packages.
- Like this
-
Showing 1 of 2 pages (77 Comments)I'm not sure why this article was even written -- Linux has always had many distributions. I guess tech journalists don't have much "tech" background. If they did, they would realize this kind of thing has been going to for what, a decade now? In fact, isn't this basically the same story of how Mandrake came into existence? They took other existing distributions, added a nice installation front-end, and released it as their own. This CentOS doesn't appear any different.