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Red Hat Announces Enterprise Linux

OldBen writes "RedHat has announced the product stable to replace the mainstream releases for enterprise use. RedHat Enterprise Linux AS replaces Advanced Server (with quite a price hike to go along), ES is targeted at "entry-level" servers, and WS is for workstations. See the details at RedHat's website."

433 comments

  1. What's this? by B3ryllium · · Score: 3, Funny

    The linux distro they run on Star Trek?

    Does it include Majel Barrett-Rodenbery's voice?

    1. Re:What's this? by Hott+of+the+World · · Score: 0

      This is Microsoft. You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile. Competition is irrelevant.
      --
      Screw posting anon, cause I care.

      --
      | - | - |
    2. Re:What's this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHAHA! It's funny cuz Microsoft is like the Borg and they "assimilate" smaller companies and they're scary and stuff! You get two thumbs up from the REALLY REALLY FUCKING OLD JOKE CREW!

    3. Re:What's this? by wideBlueSkies · · Score: 1

      You know what happens when the guy in the red hat beams down to the planet right?

      --
      Huh?
  2. Neato by blitzoid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Perhaps all these fancy titles with words like "Enterprise" in them will make large corporations see Linux as a solution for their projects. That's the main thing stopping linux... recognition.

    --
    I am a filthy pirate.
    1. Re:Neato by Ed+Avis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I've usually found the word 'Enterprise' in the title to be a sure indication of a crap product. It sounds so 1999.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    2. Re:Neato by B3ryllium · · Score: 1, Funny

      Now it reminds me of Rod Stewart. Eww.

    3. Re:Neato by Telastyn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wait, I thought what was stopping Linux was the lack of a proper email/calendaring/contacts solution (server and client side, nicely integrated) that actually works. Every IT director and their dog knows about Linux given all the business magazine press it's gotten over the past few years.

    4. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Silly me. I thought the main thing stopping Linux is the fact that is simply isn't as good as other operating systems. If you want a desktop OS, run Windows XP or Mac OS X because that's where the applications are. If you want a small server, run Windows 2000 Server or Mac OS X Server because it's easy to use. If you want a big server, run Solaris or AIX because Sun's and IBM's hardware is reliable.

      There's simply no place in the mainstream for Linux.

    5. Re:Neato by ekephart · · Score: 1

      This may be true. Redhat or whatever other distro needs to start naming their software by the year. For instance, Redhat 2003 Enterprise is more recognizable to users and managers than Redhat 11.1 Enterprise or whatever. Using years and releasing updates or patches (like MS) gives people a sense of how "current" they are regardless of whether being "current" is functionally necessary.

      --
      sig
    6. Re:Neato by vidnet · · Score: 1

      I think it sounds more like 2151

    7. Re:Neato by NitroPye · · Score: 1

      Redhat is doing a good job at getting recocgnistion though

    8. Re:Neato by JediTrainer · · Score: 1
      Heh. So what's better?

      RedHat Linux ME

      RedHat Linux XP

      RedHat Linux 200x Professional

      RedHat Linux .NET

      I see lots more possible indications of crap products besides the word 'Enterprise'.

      --

      You can accomplish anything you set your mind to. The impossible just takes a little longer.
    9. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember, kids. On Slashdot, any post you disagree with is a troll!

    10. Re:Neato by j_kenpo · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sure, and with my handy-dandy corporate buzz word generater, I came up with this description for it.
      After all, if you cant dazzle them with briliance, baffle them with bullshit.

      "Red Hat Enterprise Server

      Through a top-down, proactive approach we can remain customer focused and goal-directed, innovate and be an inside-out organization which facilitates sticky web-readiness transforming turnkey eyeballs to brand 24/365 paradigms with benchmark turnkey channels implementing viral e-services and dot-com action-items while we take that action item off-line and raise a red flag and remember touch base as you think about the red tape outside of the box and seize B2B e-tailers and re-envisioneer innovative partnerships that evolve dot-com initiatives delivering synergistic earballs."

    11. Re:Neato by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      You just need Faith of the Heart

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    12. Re:Neato by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      I shall have to hurt you now. lol :)

    13. Re:Neato by AlabamaMike · · Score: 0

      Actually, the term "Enterprise" when attached to a software package usually indicates a 150% markup with an insanely expensive *mandatory* "support contract." At least in my experience that's how it seems to play out. But hey, hats off to Red Hat (no pun intended.) I hope they're wildly successful pushing an "Enterprise" version of Linux (which according to SCO we all have their IP to thank!)

      --
      Pimpin' all the Karma Hoes!
    14. Re:Neato by belloc · · Score: 4, Informative

      Wait, I thought what was stopping Linux was the lack of a proper email/calendaring/contacts solution (server and client side, nicely integrated) that actually works.

      Samsung Contact. It works. Server runs on Unix variants or Linux (currently RH and SuSE). You can use their PC client, their Linux client, their web client, or Outlook 98/2k/XP (with the Samsung MAPI drivers). I've been using it on linux since it was HP Openmail. Back then, there were some issues with MAPI driver functionality, but it worked pretty well. Since Samsung has gotten their hands on it, it is fantastic, no reservations whatsoever.

      No, it's not free (beer/speech). Until someone is able to do this under some sort of OSS license, I'll gladly pay for Samsung Contact.

      --
      I got more rhymes than Jamaica got Mangoes.
    15. Re:Neato by hackstraw · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nah, thats not what is stopping Linux. What is stopping Linux is: "It will just fucking work". Only now are companies like IBM, HP, Oracle, and RedHat are putting their rep where their mouth is. One would have to live in the middle of the desert not to recognise Linux now.

      An example of "It will just fucking work" in action. I just paid NetApp something like $1,300 dollars for a GigE card in a NAS box, and then paid some guy $375 to put the card in the box. Now the NetApp is going fine at GigE. (Btw, the $1,300 card is an Intel e1000 card that you can get for under $200). Where did all that $$ go to? In making sure that "It will just fucking work". That is where, although it could have been much cheaper IMHO.

      An example of "It will eventually work after I dink around with it Linux style". I bought a Linux server for $5,000. I specified that I wanted a GigE card, RedHat 7.1, and the hardisk partitioned according to a dump of fdisk -l on another machine. The machine did not come with a power cord. The machine came with RH 7.2, and partitioned incorrectly. The machine also came with the wrong GigE card. I contacted the company, and for $145 they sent me the "right" GigE card. The only problem, is that the driver for the card is only ported to kernel 2.4.20 and I have to run 2.4.9, so I must now contact either the people that sold me the card and/or the card people for some kind of backport of the driver to kernel 2.4.9. The machine is still not in production because of the GigE card.

      Announcements like RH's Enterprise Linux and the previous Advanced Server are welcome to me. I hope that soon I can pay someone for a real Linux solution, not parts of one. One that will "just fucking work!"

    16. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats me, we are holding onto the microsoft structure to keep up with our use of Exchange.

      If you actually unleash the features it has it is a pretty decent product. Now the interaction between the server and the clients can suck a nut some days but the server itself it rock solid and has a ton of 3rd party add ons which allow it to intergrate in really nicely.

    17. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever here of Domino? All the IT directors I know need their hand held clicking on a start button, let alone knowing shit about linux.

    18. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aww, look! Gay cuddle-fight! Cute.

    19. Re:Neato by LogicFlow · · Score: 1

      *cringe*
      Sadly, I have to listen to these sort of buzzword parades often. Can I get a copy of that corporate buzz word generater? Mabey I can rig it to translate wtf they're saying, or use it to get a promotion to somewhere I don't have to hear it...

    20. Re:Neato by Telastyn · · Score: 1

      Hey cool. Thanks for the point, last I saw of Openmail it was... quite poor.

    21. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point! I'd mod you up if I had the power.

    22. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why you're not a CEO/CTO...

    23. Re:Neato by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "The machine did not come with a power cord. The machine came with RH 7.2, and partitioned incorrectly. The machine also came with the wrong GigE card. I contacted the company, and for $145 they sent me the "right" GigE card. The only problem, is that the driver for the card is only ported to kernel 2.4.20 and I have to run 2.4.9, so I must now contact either the people that sold me the card and/or the card people for some kind of backport of the driver to kernel 2.4.9."

      I'm sorry, but this is just plain crappy service that you can get anywhere. Take your business to a better company, there are actually plenty of companies professional enough to actually supply what the customer asks for even if they are Linux-based.

      I seriously doubt that there is anything about Linux itself that makes sure the power cords are not shipped with the server.

    24. Re:Neato by lspd · · Score: 1

      RedHat's terms of service states "Red Hat will provide Support Services for Supported Hardware and Platforms only."

      They're not going to backport drivers for you. I don't see that card listed on their HCL, so they're not even required to help you set it up. How exactly is RedHat Advanced Server any help at all to you?

    25. Re:Neato by fishbowl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I thought the main thing stopping Linux is the fact that is simply isn't as good as other operating systems."

      It's fabulously superior in some aspects, and wholly inadequate in others. There's no "simply" to it. It depends on your application.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    26. Re:Neato by attobyte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well I have a MS "It will just fucking work", NOT. We hired a developer to write a web page for us and he happened to write it in .net. Well now our company has to upgrade to IE 6 to get it to work. So needing a newer version of software for something to "just fucking work" is no different in Linux, MS, Sun, HP.

      Also I had to buy a V480 for work. They don't sell the E450 anymore :) buy any ways I have to run at least Solaris 8 02/02. I was on 8 10/00 well I had to test 02/02 to see if it "just fucking worked"

      You have to do homework up front if you dont then you are just fucked when it doesn't work. But this is not a problem of Linux it is a industry problem its your fucking job to make sure it __will__ work.

      --
      I didn't use the preview button, so get over it!!!!

      Mike

    27. Re:Neato by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of Nutscrape Enterprise Edition. Oh well. If Red Hat can dupe idiots into paying $2500 for free software then more power to them. Hell, Sun still thinks it can charge $15,000 for a high end desktop system that's slower than a low end Intel based desktop system. Whatever floats their boat. I think I'll just keep using Debian. :-)

    28. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's fabulously superior in some aspects...

      In what way is Linux fabulously superior to a currently shipping mainstream operating system? In what way is Linux fabulously superior to Windows XP, or example? Or to Mac OS X? Or to Solaris, or AIX, or IRIX?

    29. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um...licensing costs?

    30. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do your homework next time. You, my friend, are the one just NOT fucking working.

    31. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So something that's free but not as good is better than something that is good but not free?

      Don't know about you, but to me that seems wrong.

    32. Re:Neato by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

      Nice - no sugar coating goin' on here baby! (sorry, too many Terry Tate videos) :)

      Can't argue with the plain truth.

    33. Re:Neato by quintessent · · Score: 1

      I've usually found the word 'Enterprise' in the title to be a sure indication of a crap product.

      Yeah, The Next Generation (and even its two successors) was much better. I'm not sure going back to the 21st century was such a good idea.

    34. Re:Neato by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      }I seriously doubt that there is anything about Linux itself that makes sure the power cords are not shipped with the server.{

      It's a well known fact that several linux variants do, in fact, dissolve the power cords on lower end machines. It's some sort of resonance thing... the kernel gets vibrating... takes the power cord right out. {It's been known to change the partition record on some drives as well.

      You gotta' watch them vibrations.

  3. Price Hike? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does somebody actually pay money for Red Hat. I thought everybody downloaded for free from their web site.

    1. Re:Price Hike? by -Surak- · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Large companies buy it - it helps them get past the idea of using "free software". Other users buy it to get installation support, which is worth it if you've never touched *nix before.

      Personally, I download the free version and subscribe systems I manage to the RHN service, which makes updates simple, and is well worth the $60/year.

    2. Re:Price Hike? by FrostedWheat · · Score: 2, Informative

      Does somebody actually pay money for Red Hat. I thought everybody downloaded for free from their web site.

      We do both!

      Normally download the .0 or .1 releases, and buying the boxed .2 (normally stable) version. You get a lot more CD's with it plus a really handy 'survival CD' that contains some very useful tools if your having a non-boot day ;)

      Oh, and my computer now has a nice "Powered by RedHat" sticker now! Worth the price alone!

    3. Re:Price Hike? by 42forty-two42 · · Score: 1
      plus a really handy 'survival CD' that contains some very useful tools if your having a non-boot day ;)
      What, like this?
    4. Re:Price Hike? by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

      What, like this?

      Very similar, only on a credit-card shaped CD. Tho I'm sure you could do the same with Knopper - except finding CD-R's that shape is a pain in the butt here.

  4. Why the cost? by stephenry · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't understand why companies are willing to splash out on such products whilst the software being sold is essentially free.

    Maybe its the old theory: businesses think that they are getting a better product if it costs more than the alternatives. Hey, maybe thats why MS is doing so well!

    1. Re:Why the cost? by bmetzler · · Score: 1
      I don't understand why companies are willing to splash out on such products whilst the software being sold is essentially free.

      You don't really believe that support is free, do you?

      -Brent
    2. Re:Why the cost? by ShwAsasin · · Score: 2, Informative

      A company who purchases these expensive versions of Red Hat are getting support. When you download a distro off the net you don't get good support from the company. In a corporate world you can't dick around with things if a critical server is not running. It's better to have the support in the event something happens, then not have it at all...

    3. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      it's because of the packaged support, just like all redhat products.

    4. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      really -- what does redhat do for support of enterprise?

      tell you how to read the docs and get patches?

    5. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's better to have the support in the event something happens

      Typical dot-gone style cover-your-ass thinking.

      What exactly would redhat do if something happens to your production server? That's something that you need to have in house expert support to fix.

      support from redhat won't make it work again, but you will be able to download the new version really fast to reinstall

    6. Re:Why the cost? by stephenry · · Score: 1

      No, i just think that the cost of support with free software is less important than it is when using proprietary. In proprietary software, anything that makes the software work, or not work in the case of support, is hidden from the purchaser. They therefore depend on the supplier providing advice, which the purchaser cannot get elsewhere.

      With free software on the other hand, all the source is freely available. The company would already have techs. available able to find out what has gone wrong -alternatively, usenet is always a goldmine.

      Steve

    7. Re:Why the cost? by 1984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The last 5%. Hell, perhaps even the last 1%.

      Ever notice the difference in working with software that nearly works, and software that does work? It's a lot easier if you buy something that end-to-end works out of the box. Not remembering a lot of custom compile options, specific setup preferences. Pissing about in meetings deciding whether to use /usr/local/etc/ssh or /etc/ssh for SSH configs? And then making all those little tweaks work together. All that stuff costs staff time, which is really, really expensive, requires more knowledge management in house, and means you may or may not be in the mainstream -- and the closer you are to the mainstream, the easier it is to find cheap support.

      And it's a familiar Linux environment for your admins.

      (Of course, this all assumes that the new Red Hat stuff actually satisfies all that.)

    8. Re:Why the cost? by tremor_tj · · Score: 1

      You're actually paying for a year of support with the purchase of one of the Advanced Server (and derivative) products. As a matter of fact, prices have been lowered in the new pricing structure, but limitations have been placed on number of processors and amount of memory that may be used.

    9. Re:Why the cost? by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      I don't understand why companies are willing to splash out on such products whilst the software being sold is essentially free.

      Its all about the support. Even the "Pro" editions, which do include support, have only minimal support, you out of luck if you need to configure even included sodtware, such as INN.

      With "Enterprise" edition, I assume you get support on a broader range of implemntations, as well as support beyond 30 days. I just wonder if their staff is up to it :^).

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    10. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You actually believe they have techs that can figure out how to fix the problems. Many techs are free software leeches that leech OSS stuff off the internet and give nothing back. They can not fix hte problems nor can they tweak the software to make it work for their environment. There are too many bad techs out there today.

    11. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      usenet is always a goldmine.

      Yup. I'll be mirroring RedHat AS patchsets on alt.binaries.warez.linux

    12. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that every company has a Linux guru onhand to go through line after line of source code to fix something?!?

      Why not shell out $2500 and have Red Hat's crew help. But then again, I'm sure you'd rather they just hire you for $40k+/yr to do it for them.

    13. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't think you understand what _real_ paid support is. You have a problem, you call them and they fix it.

      Having access to source is well and good, but it's not a magical solution and it's certainly not remotely a substitute for good support.

    14. Re:Why the cost? by tekBuddha · · Score: 5, Insightful
      As more and more vendors begin to port their applications to Linux, there's more interest from the shirt and tie folks in our companies that say, "Well, maybe we can give Linux a try. But, how do I know it will work?"

      The way the vendors of these large products (let's use Oracle as an example) cover their asses in "product reliability" is to "certify" specific versions of Linux that they've tested and feel pretty confident about saying, "Yes, this will run stable and we believe we can recommend it."

      So we end up with products like RHAS (and now RHES) and SLES 7/8 from the major Linux players. This helps make sure that -everyone- has covered their asses.

      See, you and I know that we can take a copy of Oracle 9i and put it on a copy of RedHat 7.3 and expect it to perform rather reliably, right? We've worked with both the products enough to understand their quirks and how to support them. But if something does go wrong along the way your boss wants to hear something more than, "I've done this before and it worked! I have faith in the setup I've recommended." Your boss wants someone he can point a finger at and expect that they're going to provide a solution.

      I've had a very hard time in the past few months bowing down to the concept of paying $799 for a copy of something I can pretty much download and patch-up myself. But the guys with the shirts and ties still think it's cheaper than a Sun/Veritas licensing solution, and it definately is cheaper than a Win32 alternative, so they're willing to shell out the cash. Why should I argue with them when after it's all paid for, it's still Linux. ;)

      Bottom line? All of these certifications and extra costs for support we'll probably never use is a way to generate revenue while everyone is covering their ass and their product.

      My $.02 anyway...

    15. Re:Why the cost? by zaphod110676 · · Score: 1

      Do those of you out there who've had experience with Red Hat's support find it worth paying for? My experience with other companies has been that support does little more than make the high up muckety-mucks think that their asses are covered. How does Red Hat stack up?

      --
      To Do: 1. Take over world 2. Pick up Milk and Bread on the way home
    16. Re:Why the cost? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      well i guess that one thing in the price tag is for all the support red hat is providing. for the most expensive enterprise edition you get support 24/7.
      and the the litel cheaper edition you get support 12 hours a day evry buissnis day. i think that no oficiall support is somthing that scares peopel.
      BIG boss: why isnt the server working
      tech : ehh we dont know we are loking in to some mailinglists asking quiestions on irc hopfoly wil get it working in a coupel of days
      BIG boss : i told u not to buy crap you are fired
      or
      BIG boss : why is our server down
      tech : we ar talking with redhats support we should get it working real soon
      BIG boss : great

      ok pherhaps you wont get the answer faster from tehier support but you have someone to blame except your self when somthing goes wrong.
      and that seems important

    17. Re:Why the cost? by los+furtive · · Score: 1

      Oracle support has pulled our asses out of the fire a few times. OTOH, a coworker was telling me how once he worked with Oracle consultants that were still using the PL/SQL Vol1 book.

      --

      I'm a writer, a poet, a genius, I know it. I don't buy software, I grow it.

    18. Re:Why the cost? by good+soldier+svejk · · Score: 1
      See, you and I know that we can take a copy of Oracle 9i and put it on a copy of RedHat 7.3 and expect it to perform rather reliably, right?
      So long as you install the 6.2 compatibility libraries. Or is that Oracle 8? Whatever, I can't say the same for ChiliASP. That you can only run on 7.3 if you never update glibc. IIRC, that glibc version is a moderate security problem. If Sun were only willing to recompile the damn app...but as you say, they don't want to validate it. So I have to convert all that ASP to PHP (via asp3php I suppose). This is why proprietary software sucks.
      --
      It is cowardly, and a betrayal of whatever it means to be a Jew, to act as a white man

      -James Baldwin
  5. Just wondering.... by johny_qst · · Score: 1

    I know its redhat but isn't this more public relations material than news for nerds? What's new to Advanced Server that good administration didn't give you before... anyone?

    --
    Fnord.sig
    1. Re:Just wondering.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uhhh, probably that it's certified to run Oracle Apps.

  6. Corporate by jmays · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Maybe THIS will convince my boss to move to Linux (RHWS) on our desktop systems.

    --
    KARMA TAG! You're it.
  7. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do we really want to start the free as in beer/free as in speech explanation yet once over another time again de nouveau?

  8. Enterprise AS by Visaris · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The price hike sounds entirely reasonable because of the increased support responsibilities involved. I'm actually kind of supprised they didn't raise the prices more.. Just my 2 cents.

    --

    I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
    1. Re:Enterprise AS by xybe · · Score: 1

      The price hike sounds entirely reasonable because of the increased support responsibilities involved. I'm actually kind of supprised they didn't raise the prices more.. Just my 2 cents.

      Mhhh not sure about how much support is included, look at these ADDITIONAL packages:

      Additional Service Options Enhance your Red Hat Enterprise Linux subscription with the following add-on subscription services and products: :: Developer Support Developer Support includes unlimited support for: * Hardware and software engineering companies developing on or porting to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux platform. * IT departments creating Red Hat Enterprise Linux production environments. :: Technical Account Management (TAM) Technical Account Management includes a dedicated team of senior Red Hat Engineers that provide in-depth understanding of your ongoing technology challenges, proactive issue resolution, and centralized management of your Red Hat Enterprise Linux support. Emergency 24x7 TAM service is available when purchased with a subscription to Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS Premium Edition. :: Red Hat Enterprise Network Red Hat Enterprise Network Service includes advanced features that enable simplified management of multiple systems. Large organizations can exercise even more control of their IT infrastructure with the addition of custom-built Red Hat Enterprise Network Proxy and Satellite Server systems. :: Stronghold Enterprise Stronghold Enterprise is the most mature, enterprise-class Apache-based web server available today. It features the tools to quickly install and configure the popular Apache Web Server, with the security features customers expect when they interact with your site.
    2. Re:Enterprise AS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Argh! Why do people always say "just my two cents"!?! Obviously it's you opinion. Just fucking stop it!!

    3. Re:Enterprise AS by Visaris · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Woah! Chill out man. I have no real desire to emphasise the fact that the post is my opinion. Then why do I do it you ask? Simple. Statistically posts which include the phrase "Just my two cents" don't get modded down as often. Just looking after my karma.

      --

      I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
    4. Re:Enterprise AS by verch · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually I see this announcement as a huge price drop. We've been paying $1200 per machine for 2 CPU machines. Now that goes down to $350 or $800. I suspect 99% of the licenses they sell in the near future will be for the lower end line. Most of the linux in corporate america right now is on 2 CPU pizza boxes. Anyone using these is getting a discount from the original (ridiculous.. $1200 os license for a $2000 machine) Advanced Server pricing.

    5. Re:Enterprise AS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How'bout - Just my 3 cents ? :)

  9. Entry level supports 2 cpus only by JohnZed · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What about hyperthreading?

  10. Wrong incentive by drummerboy714 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Great! Now the higher price will make Microsoft think twice about making their product less expensive due to Linux competition!

  11. Obviously not Free Enterprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stick it to the Man, Red Hat! Just keep my downloads free.

  12. Pricing themselves out of the market? by afidel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ES server is $800 ???? I know that most of that is for the support, but on the face of it that is a lot more expensive then MS server would be for a similar sized box (2000 server with 5 CAL's is considerably less). Of course once CAL's are calculated in it might be slightly cheaper, but large server software costs + large workstation costs($300) = too expensive. One of the big advantages of linux is the cost, if it is only going to save you a small % vs. windows I doubt many organizations will bother to switch.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    1. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by dissy · · Score: 4, Informative

      > One of the big advantages of linux is the cost

      But one of the big advantages of Windows is support.

      Now in the linux camp you can get free and supportless, or pricy and supported.
      In the windows camp you only have pricy and supported.

      Two vs One is still a win for linux over windows at that game.

    2. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by dr-suess-fan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The 800$ is only for the product, If you want support, that is 1500US/year for a 'silver' contract.

      The product placement for AS is for Enterprise applications i.e. Oracle. For those of us considering moving Oracle from Sun to Redhat, this is a sweet deal.

      Your comments about Microsoft pricing are valid, and I believe RedHat thinks so too. The new offering of ES, is I think 800$/yr for support.

      And I don't work for RedHat. ;)

    3. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Telastyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Remember too that with Linux you're not just getting the OS. You'll also get all of your office tools and apps you'll ever need for $800 too.

    4. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Chewie · · Score: 3, Informative

      Um, last I checked, Win2K server (with 5 CALs) lists for $999, and you're not going to find it for $800 or less from many people (I am talking retail version, not academic or OEM, and this is the price point that RH's website is addressing: retail). Another poster has noted that there are also many server programs and utilities included that you would have to pay extra for with Windows. Finally, CIOs who don't know much don't like stuff that's dirt cheap. They seem to associate it with bad or unprofessional. Dumb, but true.

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    5. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Not to mention you can take that $800 CD and install it on as many computers as you'd like.

    6. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by warpSpeed · · Score: 1
      Remember too that with Linux you're not just getting the OS. You'll also get all of your office tools and apps you'll ever need for $800 too.

      The source code too... that is where the real power is at.

    7. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by puddpunk · · Score: 0
      Linux is only free if you don't value your time. Personally, I make a hobby out of it, but Corporations have to think (and do think) what linux is going to cost them in resources, not just money.

      When you said "Now in the linux camp you can get free and supportless", Thats not quite true, you can get support from people, it's just a lower level of support. The people that support you for free software normally write the stuff, so their sole pupose in life probably isn't helping people.

      Most distro's do have support in the form of a mailing list, or a forum or a bug database or something, it just isn't as convienient as the Redhat "Call us and we make it all better" support desk.

    8. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Telastyn · · Score: 1

      Indeed, though finance guys don't really understand that. They understand that $800 for an OS/web server/mail clients/office clients/dsn server/mail server/kitchen sink is more cost effective than $100 for each with windows.

    9. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Chewie · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, if you want to pay $800 for each installation. Take a look at the license agreements for the relevant software. Lots of talk of subscriptions and audits.

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    10. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by secolactico · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But one of the big advantages of Windows is support.

      Where? The only good thing about MS' support is the knowledge base. And ever since google has newsgroup support, I find it just as easy to find answers for my Linux/FreeBSD problems.

      Windowsupdate? "apt-get dist-upgrade"

      I *do* like Windows, but support is definitely not Microsoft's forte.

      --
      No sig
    11. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by intermodal · · Score: 1

      free and supportless? not with Red Hat Advanced Server. It's apparently not available free and supportless. That's my big problem with it. It's no better than windows in that aspect...the only reason I like it better than a windows server is that it is more stable by being built upon linux.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    12. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      But one of the big advantages of Windows is support.

      Adding to your comment, another factor is that Linux can GENERALLY run a bit faster on the same hardware, assuming you run a server at init 3 (who wouldnt?) This gives you a little more horsepower per server.

      Also, a company MAY pay the $800 for a few boxes, but install a free version of Linux for other boxes. Maybe their dedicated DNS boxes don't need the support, or their POP boxes. As you stated, they don't have this option with windows. They can PAY for support on the ones they need, get the other free, and run the same basic OS on all of them.

      Personally, I have a few servers, all running Linux, and I pay $60 from Redhat for up2date priority access (a freaking bargain). It also keeps with with ALL my servers, telling me what servers need what patches, i just have to download and install the other servers manually, which is no biggie. I gladly have the $60 annual on autorenew, because I have the choice to run one for pay, the others for free. From my experience, RedHat offers good value.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    13. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Sabalon · · Score: 1

      While I agree in principal, how often does your server need an office app on it? :)

    14. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Sabalon · · Score: 1

      If RH is smarth, they will also market this as much better support than calling MS on something - less wait, no pay per support.

      For someone just goofing around it's expensive.
      For someone like me who is too bullheaded to ask for directions - er - support it's expensive.

      For corporate, etc...what a bargin.

    15. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Blimey85 · · Score: 1

      I have all of my servers running up2date on a schedule. I just setup a quickie cron job for up2date to run once per day and that seems to take care of things very nicely, and I'm not paying anything for the service. I do get emails telling me when updates come out and I check periodically to make sure that my systems are staying updated but I haven't had any problems so far. Only been running it on auto-pilot for about 3 months though so YMMV.

      --
      How is it that one careless match can start a forest fire, but it takes a whole box to start a campfire?
    16. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Ewan · · Score: 1

      windows 2000 server with 10 cals is about 800 uk pounds, 1200 us dollars.

      Ewan

    17. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by JourneymanMereel · · Score: 1

      I personally think the $60/yr/machine is a bit pricey... I'd like to have both my machines on one account (instead of having to create a new e-mail address for the second) but $120/yr seems a little steep. If it was $60/yr for 1-5 machines I'd jump in a heartbeat. I'd still only need to download the ISO once so the bandwidth there wouldn't be any more... and I really wouldn't be using any more bandwidth it'd just be on a different machine.

      --
      Life has many choices. Eternity has two. What's yours?
    18. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by borroff · · Score: 1

      Where are you buying software? CNET's shopper.com lists Windows 2000 Server w/ 5 CALs for $700-$900. That's why they picked this price point.

    19. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I have all of my servers running up2date on a schedule. I just setup a quickie cron job for up2date to run once per day and that seems to take care of things very nicely, and I'm not paying anything for the service. I do get emails telling me when updates come out and I check periodically to make sure that my systems are staying updated but I haven't had any problems so far. Only been running it on auto-pilot for about 3 months though so YMMV.

      I assume you are using registered product, which comes with free up2date service for 90 days. However, if you don't pay for it after that, it wont update your system. you should go to rhn.redhat.com to check your profile. you can even schedule updates from there, but like you, i use cron. Run up2date -p once a week and up2date -u once per day.

      in a nutshell, you are not getting the updates this way ;) do a 'up2date -u' from a shell and you will see. It will tell you that you are not entitled. (unless you registered that package, on that box, from a purchased copy). It will run in cron just fine, and not produce an error, it just wont do anything.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    20. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you actually ever priced MSFT products? I can assure you that $800 is a STEAL compared to 2k Server/Advanced Server (let alone datacenter), not even counting the CALs, which are incredibly expensive in their own right.

    21. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by wawannem · · Score: 1

      This is just about the dumbest post I have seen in let's see... hmm... EVER!!!!
      Comparing ES server at $800 to a 5 CAL copy of Win2k Server is like saying the following:
      So what about that $500 Mercedes, my schwinn only cost me $400.
      I am sure that any idiot making the above remark would be teased for the rest of his life about his stupidity for passing up such a good deal to get sodomized on another.

    22. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I personally think the $60/yr/machine is a bit pricey... I'd like to have both my machines on one account (instead of having to create a new e-mail address for the second) but $120/yr seems a little steep. If it was $60/yr for 1-5 machines I'd jump in a heartbeat. I'd still only need to download the ISO once so the bandwidth there wouldn't be any more... and I really wouldn't be using any more bandwidth it'd just be on a different machine.

      Maybe i didnt make myself clear. You pay 60 for one machine to use up2date, but you can register ALL your machines, and you get email updates, etc for ALL of them. you just can update with up2date. when machine #2 needs a SENDMAIL update, you dont use up2date, you go download the correct packages manually and rpm -Fvh them on the box.

      They USED to have $240 a year for 'enterprise' updating, where all patches were uploaded to your one server, and all your machines could access them, but it was too good a value, so they quit it.

      To be honest, when you use up2date, it does download the packages to /var/spool/up2date/??? and you can probably make a hack to let your other boxes use it. but as long as you get the email for the unsupported boxes, its not hard to manually install the fixes anyway.

      Also, if you have ONE machine 'entitled' as they call it, you can log onto rhn.redhat.com and see ALL your machines. You just need to run "up2date -p" on the unentitled machines periodically to keep the profiles updated. Its really not very hard to do.

      Another trick (shh! don't tell anyone!) if you are a really really cheap bastard:

      1. Register both your machines using up2date on the boxes. This will create a profile for each box. Make sure you use the same login name and password for each box so they are listed on the same account (go to rhn.redhat.com FIRST if you don't already have a free account)

      2. Go to rhn.redhat.com and pay for ONE entitlement. Pick one of your registered boxes
      to entitle.

      3. Go to that entitled box, and run up2date -u

      4. Go to rhn.redhat.com and CHANGE your entitlement from box 1, to box 2.

      5. Go to box 2 (now entitled) and run up2date -u.

      6. Once a week, goto 1 and start over.

      This is a chicken shit way to actually get full entitlement on ALL your boxes for $60. This is NOT practical for an enterprise, but it DOES work for someone like you (or me;).

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    23. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Tony-A · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Finally, CIOs who don't know much don't like stuff that's dirt cheap. They seem to associate it with bad or unprofessional. Dumb, but true.
      Not that dumb.
      They have a problem. They want it fixed. Fast. They want it fixed because they have a problem and do not want to have to research it themselves.
      This takes resources, and the resources take money. To be able to supply the required support, Red Hat needs to be profitable, even lucratively profitable.

      What Red Hat is doing is offering a wide array of different price points from very cheap to very expensive. (I suppose you could get IBM to support it for even more;)

      The "dumb" CIO can target the price, and the support will fall nicely into line with what is reasonable at that price level.

    24. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its only a "win" if you are a pear shaped, no life looser geek.

    25. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Chewie · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. I will agree that you have the basic process down, but when RH was providing support for relatively cheap, there weren't too many people interested because, "there's no way it can be any good at those prices." Now, I'm not trying to say that good support doesn't cost money--it does. However, some CIOs have a tendency to oversimplify to inexpensive="must be bad", expensive="must be good".

      And yes, I'm sure IBM will be willing to support you for more money. :)

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    26. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by lspd · · Score: 1

      A quick look at pricewatch shows several companies selling Win2K with 5 CAL's for $600 or less.

      The comparison is wrong though. With RedHat you're buying a software subscription, it's $800 annually. With Win2K it's $600 for the life of the product.

      Spin it however you like, but if we were talking about Lindows Advanced Server nobody would be defending these prices. It's comical how many people are claiming these prices are reasonable, that the support terms are acceptable, that per-server licensing is ok. I feel quite confident that the next quarterly report from RedHat will show just how little enthusiasm RHAS has generated from those who can actually afford to pay for it. 12500 RHAS/ES installs at $800 a pop represents $10 million in sales for a company that had only $25 million in sales for it's last quarter. 31000 RHAS/ES installs would DOUBLE their sales. If you really think that's likely, you should be buying up their stock.

      Why are people soo willing to put a good spin on a company that's jerking around it's massive installed base for the sake of a few thousand commercial licenses?

    27. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Kamikazigb · · Score: 1

      Don't think that windows support is included. Purchasing the Server software simply allows you the opportunity to call Microsoft and pay them to tell you if it's a bug with their software or you configuration.

    28. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux, even this Red Hat stuff, still ships with an infinite number of seat licenses.

      Whilst you probably have to pay per server for support, there is nothing from stopping a smart company from buying 1 set of Enterprise Server and installing it on all their server boxes in the server room. I know I would. Funny, all my problems would be happening to the same server every time...

    29. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Beatbyte · · Score: 1

      Yes but for 3 easy payments of $19.95 you can get a Microsoft Certified specialist to your door to troubleshoot all your blue screen needs!

      Also sold in stores (look for red and grey box with a hat on it) ;)

    30. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by heh2k · · Score: 1
      Adding to your comment, another factor is that Linux can GENERALLY run a bit faster on the same hardware, assuming you run a server at init 3 (who wouldnt?) This gives you a little more horsepower per server.

      what are you talking about? init levels have nothing to do w/ performance, unless you have 30 daemons setup for other levels and little swap space.

    31. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      "there's no way it can be any good at those prices."

      There's more to price than (just) money.
      There is excellent support to be had for no money. Oversimplifying, the price is to understand the problem (from the developer's viewpoint) and to Read The Fine Manual (whether or not it's been written). If you have the right problem at the right time, you get superior support for free, but this is because it fits the developer's agenda, not because you have a problem. The CIO cannot afford to only have problems that are currently interesting to developers.

      Expensive is no guarantee of being good, Enron and Authur Anderson attest to that. Expensive does buy one thing. A phone number and the moral right to complain until things get fixed. Even better is not having to complain ;-)

    32. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by mrpull · · Score: 1
      Another trick (shh! don't tell anyone!) if you are a really really cheap bastard:

      Grrrr... My first impulse was to mod the parent down, but I figured I'd reply.

      First, if you like RedHat -- use it. It's free.

      Second, if you like up2date -- pay for it. It's not free.

      Third, http://apt4rpm.sourceforge.net/ will allow you to have the advantages of debian's apt for free. (also check apt.freshrpms.net for packages that RedHat doesn't offer)

      I can understand all the arguments about up2date being expensive, but it isn't the only choice. I don't think dicking around with "entitlements" is worth anyone's time.

      If you don't like to pay, use something else.
    33. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by D'Arque+Bishop · · Score: 1

      Also, a company MAY pay the $800 for a few boxes, but install a free version of Linux for other boxes. Maybe their dedicated DNS boxes don't need the support, or their POP boxes. As you stated, they don't have this option with windows. They can PAY for support on the ones they need, get the other free, and run the same basic OS on all of them.

      That's exactly what we're doing at where I work. Those servers that run Oracle that we will need support on will be running RHAS or RHEL AS/ES. The other Linux servers (such as proxy or file storage servers) will be running RH 8.0. It's all about the support in this case... not just from Red Hat, but from Oracle as well. (RH Advanced Server is a supported Oracle platform, after all...)

      Just my $.02...

    34. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1
      I *do* like Windows, but support is definitely not Microsoft's forte.

      Maybe not for the individual user, but big corporations who run Microsoft software on an enterprise level can purchase fantastic support from Microsoft. The kind where people come out to your business and fix things for you. Where you can get patches and fixes in a few days. Sure, it's expensive, but support from Microsoft is not all that bad if you have the cash. :-)

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    35. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Chewie · · Score: 1

      I'd be willing to bet that those $600 Win2K CDs are OEM/academic versions. Trust me, there are virtually no legit mainstream companies that are going to do much better than $850 for Win2K Server retail version.

      Also, since we're talking about support, let's examine the support contracts side-by-side. ES at $800: 9x5 4-hour phone support for 1 year. Win2K Server at $999: $245 per incident. Hmm.

      Now, I'm not saying that Red Hat is all that is good and right in the world. I'm just saying that their pricing is quite reasonable.

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    36. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're missing something. You already get a free demo account which covers one system - everyone does. When you buy a basic slot, that's in addition to your free demo slot. So you can update two systems for $60/yr.

    37. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 1
      free and supportless

      Since when have the free (as in beer) download versions of Linux (any GNU/Linux distribution) been "supportless?"

      What do you call all of the documentation projects and forums and mailing lists available out there?

      Those distributions may come without phone technical support, but most paid-for phone technical support in this industry has become a matter of brushing off users with real problems. You end up resorting to forums and e-mail to solve problems anyway. The other kind of OS support you might reasonably expect to pay for is on-site consultant support (like IBM), but you don't get that with Windows either.

    38. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Bake · · Score: 1

      I think the parent of your post meant to say that it's wiser to run at init 3 as opposed to running at init 5 with an XDM and X session running for no other purpose than to munch on cpu and ram.

    39. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by lspd · · Score: 1

      They're full versions. OEM and Academic versions are cheaper. Take a look if you don't believe me. Pricewatch tends to be a bit expensive these days though.

      I think the big problem with the support RedHat is giving is that it's all or nothing. If you had 500 boxes and a tech staff to run them you don't need support on each machine, but RedHat requires you to buy support for all of them if you want any support at all. By comparison, $245 per incident works out to only $0.50 per machine. You could have an incident every day and still come out ahead using Microsoft. Not that I'm saying Windows is the way to go. Linux is easier to configure and maintain, at least as far as I'm concerned. I just don't see how these prices provide value to either end of the spectrum. If you have only one or two machines and no tech staff, you probably don't have the time to be dealing with Linux in the first place. If you have many machines and a tech staff to go with it, why don't you save money and hire folks to support a free distro in house?

    40. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Grrrr... My first impulse was to mod the parent down, but I figured I'd reply.

      Wow. The exact reason you should not moderate a comment.

      But look, READ my post before commenting. I said doing it was chicken shit. I just told you how to. I HAVE done it on newly installed systems, to quickly get them up to speed. But jeez, I AM paying them. They get my money every year. Is this an abuse of the system? Yes. Have they insured it is very easy to do? Yes. Do I do this all the time or even frequently? No. Does it matter? Not really. They STILL are getting my money. There is NO FAQ saying you can't do that, although its not really how the system is supposed to work.

      I just told the guy about a 'bug' in the way their system works. Thats all. Qualified it as chickenshit up front and at the close. Oh yea, and I PAY for every version of RedHat. I bought 8.0 the other day. I could have downloaded it, but I don't mind paying for a nice shiney copy. I bought 6.1 and 6.2, 7.1 and 7.2. I never 'register' each copy (which entitles me to updates). I even bought their server edition. They are coming out just fine with my business.

      Don't shoot me for being the messenger. I don't claim its too expensive. As a matter of fact, I said it was CHEAP. The fact is, 3 of 4 boxes I install are for test purposes, and get wiped after a week or two anyway. Part of the reason i have the account is to get these test servers 'up to speed' to keep from getting hacked while i am testing. So dicking with entitlements is actually easier, and faster for me. and for a regular joe who dicks with Linux on a couple of home computers, for him too.

      I respect your opinion, but I think you have missed the entire conversation and the full meaning. I'm the guy who talks good about Redhat and gives them lots of money, this one little exploit aside.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    41. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work at a University CS department. We pay around a million dollars a year for the right to slap MS ware on any computer. Now somehow by some contract this cool one million bucks gets us exactly 0 support from MS, they wouldn't tell me the time of the day if I rang their support line. I've also worked in an IT department of a F500 company, google is the problem solver at every level of the corporation, even for things that by all logic should be labeled Mission Critical. Why? Because trying to get someone to approve spending money on extra support contracts from MS is like pressing water out of a stone in a corporation.

      Bottom line, MS products come with no support whatsoever unless you're explicitly buying support for megabux.

    42. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You already get a free demo account which covers one system - everyone does.

      Actually, demo accounts are no longer perpetual.

    43. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by attobyte · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I bet you could pay Linus or Alan Cox or who ever the same amount of money and get them to come out and fix your problems too. ( I don't think Alan will come to the US thou :) )

      Mike

      --
      I didn't use the preview button, so get over it!!!!

      Mike

    44. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by afidel · · Score: 1

      actually This says that you only need on cotract per X machines and that you must purchase one subscription per machine that you wish to have on the RHEN, it does not say that you have to have every machine which is running RHAS on the RHEN. So unless I am seriously misreading something here you have basically a more solid server product with an up2date like feature, and if you wish to use that up2date like feature you must have a subscription, in addition you must purchase a support contract for every X machines on which you are running RHAS if you wish to obtain support from Redhat.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    45. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by attobyte · · Score: 1

      Do you know how they do this? What is not GNU that would allow them to do this? Or can you do this with GNU and no one does...

      Mike

      --
      I didn't use the preview button, so get over it!!!!

      Mike

    46. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by Alex · · Score: 1

      > > One of the big advantages of linux is the cost
      >
      > But one of the big advantages of Windows is support.

      I take it you haven't ever rung Microsoft support?

      Alex

    47. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by PerryMason · · Score: 2, Informative

      Part of the reason i have the account is to get these test servers 'up to speed' to keep from getting hacked while i am testing.

      Hi,

      Really late come to the party so to speak, but you sound like you could use apt-rpm. I do a lot of building test servers and there is nothing that makes it easier than running your own local ftp/apt server.

      I mirror the RedHat 6.2, 7.1, 7.2 and 8.0 distros and update folders from my local redhat mirror. Keep it up to date with rsync and all you need to do to get an 'up to speed' server is throw in a floppy with the build requirements which includes a post install command to update via apt.

      I can get a server from nothing to fully installed and patched up in the space of 10-15 minutes without any intervention whatsoever. I've got kickstart floppies with comp files setup to install each of the basic type of servers that I test on and do ftp installs across the network.

      You get the advantage of speed, plus you only end up downloading the update packages once, instead of each time you update a new test box. Add to this that you can have cron jobs running on any of your permanent boxes to update themselves via apt instead of the RedHat network stuff. I personally package up anything I _would_ have installed as a tarball to an rpm and plonk it in my apt tree and can roll it out fromt there. It really does make life easier.

      Well just a few thoughts for you that you probably won't even read, but it needs to be said.

      --
      "I'm tired of all this 'Aren't humanity great' bullshit. We're a virus with shoes" - Bill Hicks
    48. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by christophersaul · · Score: 2, Insightful

      True, but for the vast majority of IT managers and staff too, the source code being available to them is utterly irrelevant. The fact it is avaialble is good for Red Hat, who will be supporting these 'products', but most sys admins/IT guys have no interest whatsoever in ploughing through source code to fix something they paid money for in the first place.

    49. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by minus9 · · Score: 1

      "Linux is only free if you don't value your time."

      Windows is only free if you value neither time nor money.

    50. Re:Pricing themselves out of the market? by warpSpeed · · Score: 1
      True, but for the vast majority of IT managers and staff too, the source code being available to them is utterly irrelevant.

      I agree, but _when_ they finaly realize that thier nuts are not being squeezed in a vice (in terms of licensing and vendor lock in) because RedHat _does_ deliver the source code, the light bulbs might light up over thier collective heads...

      The more savvy CIOs realize this already. They could care less about havivg the source code, but what it does is raise the bar for vendors in terms of empowering the client. They have the source, they could theoreticaly take thier buisness elsewhere, which means that the vendor has to keep doing a better job.

      It is free markets baby!

  13. Clarification requested by m_evanchik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Are Red Hat Enterprise Edition versions protected by any licensing requirements?

    What parts are not open-source?

    What's to stop someone from just posting ISO images online?

    I'm just a little fuzzy on what's being paid for.

    Thanks in advance for the answers

    1. Re:Clarification requested by afidel · · Score: 1

      mostly it's the 5 years service and support that is being paid for from what I can figure out. Also the vendor certification program for hardware is probably part of why enterprises would pay in.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    2. Re:Clarification requested by XaXXon · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm just a little fuzzy on what's being paid for.

      Support.

      Slightly on another topic -- you could be really rude in something like this and intermix different pieces and parts that are GPL and are not GPL (at the package level) to make it virtually impossible to figure out how to redistribute only the GPL parts. In fact, you could even group the packages so each package has both GPL and non-GPL pieces, so you couldn't break it up by packages and distribute some of them.

      That would be really rude.

    3. Re:Clarification requested by Koyaanisqatsi · · Score: 1

      Support. Don't pay, you don't get it. As simple as that.

    4. Re:Clarification requested by Beatbyte · · Score: 1

      can you add/modify GPL software with proprietary code and sell it?

    5. Re:Clarification requested by vondo · · Score: 1
      Not code, but you could do like RH has done with recent ISOs and include proprietary graphics that can't be redistributed. So, if you put such a graphic file (or a README, or anything else) in each RPM, you could stop the legal distribution of such RPMs. Of course, someone could do the work to sanitize the RPM, replace the files with free versions, and then redistribute.

      I'm guessing that's what the poster was thinking.

    6. Re:Clarification requested by m_evanchik · · Score: 1

      If it's just a matter of graphics, I'm surprised someone hasn't already done it.

      RH enterprise without support or proprietary graphics. Doesn't sound so bad if you are on a budget

    7. Re:Clarification requested by Tack · · Score: 3, Interesting
      From RedHat's licence agreement:

      • 4. REPORTING AND AUDIT. If Customer wishes to increase the number of Installed System, then Customer will purchase from Red Hat additional Services for each additional Installed System. During the term of this Agreement and for one (1) year thereafter, Customer expressly grants to Red Hat the right to audit Customer's facilities and records from time to time in order to verify Customer's compliance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.

      Can RedHat enforce this considering the software they're selling me is under open source licenses?

      If so, then it seems that the costs are per year, per server. For RHL ES, at $350/year/server, my modest 4 server shop would cost me $1400 USD/year, or over $2200 CAD/year. I just don't have the budget for this.

      Really, all I want is access to errata. I don't need phone support, or email support, or any fancy RHN monitoring. Just let me download errata binaries so I can upgrade my servers and I'm happy. I'm willing to pay for that, but not to the tune of $2200 a year. There doesn't seem to be such a solution offered by RedHat.

      Jason.

    8. Re:Clarification requested by m_evanchik · · Score: 1

      But does RH have any licensing requirements attached to their Enterprise editions?

      What I'm getting at is how they restrict the user from using, examining, changing, and redistributing the software.

      Anyone have any knowledge, or experience in this regard?

    9. Re:Clarification requested by jmu1 · · Score: 1

      If that's all you want, download the free stuff and purchase a yearly subscription to the RedHat Network. Or, you could pay the US$39.99 and do the same. You'll just have to update every year instead of every five unless you are going to get updated rpms from somwhere else(which since LSB is coming along... shouldn't be much of a problem anyway).

    10. Re:Clarification requested by negyvenot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If I pay for the support only, why aren't the ISO images publicly available? Why do I have to obtain a "warez" copy of it and not download it directly from RedHat, if it contains GPLed software anyway? Or did I miss something?

    11. Re:Clarification requested by Tack · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You'll just have to update every year instead of every five unless you are going to get updated rpms from somwhere else.

      So let me recap what you're saying:

      1. Pay $350 per year per server, which for my 4 RH server setup (and we're a small, poor university) will cost me $1400 USD or $2200 CAD per year. This is so that I can patch my servers with security and major bug fixes.
      2. Reinstall RHL's mainline distro every year on four servers.

      Are you serious? Is RedHat serious? I've got to be missing something.

    12. Re:Clarification requested by Outland+Traveller · · Score: 1

      I think that the choices are:

      350$/system one time cost for enterprise license, putting you on a platform with 5 yrs official support

      or

      0-60$/system one time cost for community license, putting you on a platform with 1 yr official support

      --

      After you make that decision, you can either download the official updates manually yourself, or pay for greater convenience:

      60$/yr per system for basic up2date service

      240$/yr per system for enterprise up2date service

    13. Re:Clarification requested by jmu1 · · Score: 1
      Cut the knee-jerk reactions man. Re-read what I posted, not what you posted. If you'd like someone else to say it to you, someone else has already replied to you.

      BTW, the flagship product is not the downloadable ISO versions, nor the $39.99 version. If it were, they'd most likely go out of business. You say you run a business? Then honestly you should know that you have to spend some money in order to get work done. It happens on both ends of the spectrum: you as a business must spend money to pay for the servers/software to get work done... RedHat has to pay for _everything_ they do to make that software that you don't want to pay for to get their work done. And what's funny is in the end, both of you expect to have made a profit! ;)

      Once you get past the spending and making of money and just work on making a good product/service... you have fun _and_ you make money in the end. Just try to keep that in mind.

      Cheers!

    14. Re:Clarification requested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the past, Red Hat has been very good at distributing the GNU stuff on ISOs (the two basic CDs), and isolating their value-added/commercial stuff on other CDs.

    15. Re:Clarification requested by Lumpy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      and you have just realized the reason that many of us are ROYALLY pissed at redhat now. We made them by reccomending, begging, and putting our asses on the line to get them installed in the back office and on the network now they up and pull this crap.

      Thankfully all upper management knows is "linux" and not redhat. so I can migrate to Slackware or Mandrake or Debian silently and avoid the redhat screwing.

      I personally reccomend to everyone NOT to use redhat ever cince the started this crap.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    16. Re:Clarification requested by Tack · · Score: 1
      After you make that decision, you can either download the official updates manually yourself, or pay for greater convenience:

      Are binary updates available for RHEL outside of RHN? I thougth only SRPMS were available without an RHN subscription. Still, $350 one time cost and $60 for each additional year per server is considerably more realistic. I'd be happy to pay that.

      Why is this so confusing? Am I am idiot or are RedHat's pages poorly laid out and their options poorly explained?

      Jason.

    17. Re:Clarification requested by Bishop · · Score: 1

      $2200/year compared to your time to reinstall is pretty cheap isn't it.

      I dont' know why people are getting all hot under the collar over this. Red Hat's bussiness model is to provide support for servers and workstations running Red Hat Linux. If you don't like this bussiness model switch to another distro like Debian and its years long distrobution cycle.

    18. Re:Clarification requested by ajs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I can migrate to Slackware or Mandrake or Debian silently and avoid the redhat screwing.

      How, exactly are you screwed? What did you lose?

      You still get source with Red Hat.

      You can still download and burn ISOs of their software.

      When I got started in the biz, I would have given an eye-tooth for a company that would provide an OS on just the above 2 terms, but there's more!

      You can still get access to security and bug-fix updates for free.

      You can pay a small fee to get automated access to the above updates, but there are also equivalent free services from third parties (see freshrpms' apt-rpm service). This is essentially a free service, which RH is covering network costs on. Everyone knows you don't *need* to sign up for RHN, it's basically there as a way to say thanks.

      You can pay increasingly larger fees to get increasingly larger services. This is a no brainer. Any company that doesn't give their customers the option of paying as much as they like should be taken out to the street and fed to the pigeons.

      This is a sound and reasonable model, and it does not take your shiny toys away or cause you to lose access to something you once had.

      Why is everyone flipping out because Red Hat has added a pricing structure for upper-teir enterprises that is on-par with every other vendor? Should we all act shocked that a company doing business in the U.S. is actually trying to make money? Should we run around pretending that they're now somehow "evil" because they are making money?

      At a higher level, why is there this slashdot knee-jerk reaction to any announcement concerning Red Hat? They come out with bluecurve and they're bad guys. They charge for automated access to RHN and they're bad guys. They announce an expensive product and they're bad guys. I swear sometimes I honestly think that if Red Hat donated a million dollars to fund cancer research the Slashdot headline would be "Red Hat Snubs Diabetes Research"!

    19. Re:Clarification requested by Tack · · Score: 1
      Cut the knee-jerk reactions man. Re-read what I posted, not what you posted. If you'd like someone else to say it to you, someone else has already replied to you.

      These aren't knee-jerk reactions. These are reactions after having read the various announcements and combing through RedHat's material. Yes it's possible I've misread or misinterpreted, but after inspecting RHES product matrix my conclusions were not unreasonable.

      BTW, the flagship product is not the downloadable ISO versions, nor the $39.99 version. If it were, they'd most likely go out of business.

      Completely not arguing with that.

      You say you run a business?

      No, I didn't say that.

      RedHat has to pay for _everything_ they do to make that software that you don't want to pay for to get their work done. And what's funny is in the end, both of you expect to have made a profit! ;)

      Again, not arguing. I'm not annoyed because RedHat is charging money. I'm happy to pay for the services I require, which, specifically is errata updates for the life cycle of the servers I have deployed. I am constrained by a budget however. $2200 CAD per year for 4 servers for what I need (security and major bug fixes) strikes me as over-priced. If, as another poster has said, I can get by on a basic RHN subscription of $60/year/server, then that's much more in line with my cost expectations and budget constraints.

      What I specifically am annoyed at RedHat for doing is releasing RedHat 8.0, giving just enough time for admins to deploy RH8 installations (whether or not these admins made bad decisions by deploying a point-Oh release is beside the point), and then announcing that they'll no longer be supporting the distribution past December 31, 2003 and instead encouraging these users to install their RHAS line. Now these admins (and me) have RH8 deployments that will no longer have errata updates. I'm happy to pay for RHLE ES, but boy do I really wish they'd have announced this before I went and deployed an RH 8.0 server.

      RedHat also doesn't seem to be offering SLAs for extended errata for their existing "community enthusiast" distributions. I also have some RHL 7.x servers that will be discontinued soon. I'd rather pay RedHat for extended errata support so that I can upgrade those servers when I want to, rather than when they tell me to.

      Jason.

    20. Re:Clarification requested by jmu1 · · Score: 1
      I can certainly agree with the aggrivation of the "release, update, release" quagmire that we all in the technology industry(most certainly in software) contend with daily.

      I can definatly see some companies sprining up on the horizon offering extended support for RH machines. This same thing goes on with IBM AS/400 customers. I work with a fellow that used to do training/support for a AS/400 VAR. It wouldn't be that much for a company to get the SRPMs, the patches from the original sources, and make post-EOL package releases... hmm... mental juices flowing. Anyway, whilst I churn over the possible financial implications of said business applications of providing packages support for retired software(got to remember that OSS/GNU is good for this very reason), I'll leave you be.

      Have a good one, and good luck keeping up with updates! I've got my own planing to do. lol

    21. Re:Clarification requested by BenRussoUSA · · Score: 1

      On the Redhat website at: http://www.redhat.com/software/whichlinux.html
      "Now there's an important point we need to cover. Red Hat Enterprise Linux is sold through a one-year subscription and it does have a licensing agreement. But before you mention the "p"-word ("proprietary"), understand that the code is open and protected by the GPL license. It's not proprietary. We're licensing the services, not the software. The source code files can be downloaded by anyone, and you still have the right to use the software after the license and services expire. You're simply paying for the value Red Hat adds: The enterprise enhancements, the ISV and IHV certification, the support services included with the product, and the security and software updates through Red Hat Enterprise Network."

      The SRPM's for all the RPM's in the RedHat distro are available via anonymous FTP from the Redhat website. As are the SRPM's for all the updates they release.
      I mirror all those SRPM's on my local network, and rebuild the binary RPMs and maintain my own RPM FTP site, and I have an APACHE server running CURRENT (the free up2date compatable server).
      I used some anaconda tools to rebuild a few index files and hdlist files, Then I use Redhat 7.2 BootNet floppy images and point them at my FTP server's RPM directory and I install what is functionally identical to Redhat Advanced Server.
      I then modify the RHN_GPG_KEY and the RHN_CERT and I modify the up2date and rhnsd configuration files to point them at my inhouse "CURRENT" server instead of the RedHat "RHN" server. Now I have basically the same thing as RedHat Advanced Server, but I call my distribution "DEADRAT" not "REDHAT" -Ben.

    22. Re:Clarification requested by Lumpy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I hate to do this but you obviousally didn't bother to read the parent post.

      From RedHat's licence agreement [redhat.com]:

      4. REPORTING AND AUDIT. If Customer wishes to increase the number of Installed System, then Customer will purchase from Red Hat additional Services for each additional Installed System. During the term of this Agreement and for one (1) year thereafter, Customer expressly grants to Red Hat the right to audit Customer's facilities and records from time to time in order to verify Customer's compliance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
      Can RedHat enforce this considering the software they're selling me is under open source licenses?

      So please list again what you were saying that does not violate the above?

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    23. Re:Clarification requested by maraist · · Score: 1

      There's always red carpet. Somewhat frustrating for certain configurations, but it works.

      --
      -Michael
    24. Re:Clarification requested by jregel · · Score: 1

      If I understand correctly, the GPL doesn't force Red Hat to make the code available to everyone. They have to provide it, or make it available to people with their binaries (ie, paying customers). By including source CDs with their binary CDs, they are complying with the requirements of the GPL.

      The GPL also allows any customers to distribute the source for free without restriction.

      It doesn't to my knowledge, force companies to give the source to people who haven't got their binaries, and doesn't make them give the binaries away.

    25. Re:Clarification requested by BenRussoUSA · · Score: 1
      Because the term "INSTALLED SYSTEM" is defined within the license agreement from which section 4 (that you quoted) came from. It is defined as:

      "the number of servers on which Customer installs Redhat Linux Advanced Server"

      If you download the SRPMS, build RPM's and then use anaconda to build your own CD's and then use the resulting CD's to install a functioning LINUX OS on a server, you are not installing "RedHat Linux Advanced Server" you are installing a Linux OS that has no name, but consists of publicly available software.

      Then, if you wanted to download any subsequently released SRPM's (errata/updates) and build those into RPM's and install them you are free to do so.

      When you "buy" advanced server, you are not buying a license to use the OS. You are buying the following: (AFAIK, IANAL)

      • A copy of documentation which is copyrighted.
      • A set of CD's which are copyrighted.
      • A subscription to an online service (RHN) and some support services.
      What the EULA specifically restricts you from doing:
      • redistributing anything you get through the use of RHN.
      • using the CD's for the purpose of installing a system, unless you have purchased an RHN subscription for RHAS for the server on which you are using the CD's
      The EULA that is on the CD's and on RedHat's Site specifically says that the individual packages on the CD's are covered by their own copyrights. The EULA also says that you have all the rights granted by those copyrights. RedHat also provides all the SRPM's for all the packages on their FTP site for free, and they provide all the SRPM's for all the errata/updates for free. Some of those RPM's are not OpenSource, and you have to be carefull how you use them.
    26. Re:Clarification requested by lspd · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about that? The terms are a bit confusing, but I was under the impression that the license for RedHat ES was being quoted at an annual per server rate. Where did you read that a $60/year RHN subscription will entitle you to erratta for AS/ES/WS and eliminate the need for the more costly enterprise service agreements?

    27. Re:Clarification requested by David+Jericho · · Score: 1
      Basically it's the Red Hat network stuff that's not open sourced. What you're paying for with RHAS/RHEE is support, not the actual OS.

      Contact your local Red Hat office, they're quite willing to send you a copy of their licensing information. If you don't like the terms, feel free to tell Red Hat how much they suck.

      You're quite allowed to post modified ISO images sans all the RHN stuff. You can actually take a RH 7.3 CD image, put the RHAS you built onto it, change the catalogue and off you go.

      A little while ago, I downloaded all of the RHAS SRPMs, built them up and installed a RHAS box for myself. Easy enough to do with a day of drinking coffee waiting for a compiler.

      I really should release my build instructions, or an ISO. Last I looked, I couldn't find anyone else that'd done it.

    28. Re:Clarification requested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      why aren't the ISO images publicly available ... if it contains GPLed software anyway?

      Linux, GCC, Emacs, etc. are GPLed. "Red Hat Linux," the compilation thereof, is not. It would be nice if AS ISOs were available, but they're not. I haven't tried it, but I believe that you can make a comparable distribution from the SRPMs that are available.

    29. Re:Clarification requested by jTurbo · · Score: 1

      The way I understand it is that to qualify for errata beyond a year is to purchase an enterprise product which gives you errata for 5 years (~3 full, 5 security). $350/server buys you ES and a year of rh(e)n, later you only need to pay for rh(e)n wich I belive costs $60/server? year. please correct me if I'm wrong

      --
      a sig with any other name would be as witty ...
    30. Re:Clarification requested by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but anybody who they give the binaries to can redistribute them at will, and the source code can be demanded by anybody the binaries are redistributed to.

      So, for instance, a group of people could set up a small cooperative. One person buys a copy of the Red Hat product, and makes copies for everybody else.

      Red Hat can not restrict any customer from doing this 'cooperative' sort of thing, at least not with GPL'd portions of Red Hat Linux. They can, however, include material on the CD that isn't GPL. The filestructure, readme files, etc. on the CD do not need to be GPL. I know from direct experience of asking one of the Red Hat marketing people in person back in the days of Red Hat 5.0 that even back then they frowned on people making copies of the retail version of the 5.0 CD.

      They're really selling 'support' for the money people are paying, though. A certain amount of handholding, which is important for non-geeks who want computers to be reliable information processing appliances.

    31. Re:Clarification requested by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Check out CheapBytes, who have been selling cheap Linux CD's for probably almost as long as Red Hat has been in business. They're prohibited from using the Red Hat name on any of their products but they have cleverly named 'equivalent-generic' products cheaply available. Red Hat in particular has been one of the Linux Vendors who has made the most noise about CheapBytes selling their ISOs.

    32. Re:Clarification requested by m_evanchik · · Score: 1

      From what I can tell, they're just selling copies of RH's regular releases, which are already freely available for download.

      They do not seem to be selling any RH ES or AS versions.

    33. Re:Clarification requested by ajs · · Score: 1

      And, had the original poster made such a clear go at the terms and still felt that there was a specific legal problem, I would have been happy to entertain it.

      In fact, I'm not entirely sure how Red Hat would defend this one in court. They could say that, of course, they cannot restrict your copying, modification, use and disclosure of the binaries or source that came with the system and of which RH is not the primary copyright holder because of the terms of the GPL (RH is required to agree to the GPL or only distribute GPLed programs in accordance with copyright law); however they will not allow such copying, etc of the WHOLE SYSTEM which includes non-GPLed parts owned by Red Hat. I could see that, and it would make a strong case.

      My guess is that Red Hat (if they're as business savvy as they have proven to be thus far), couldn't care less. They know that large companies will comply with the terms of the EULA. After all, the main reason for buying the software is the support, not the packaging or the CDs. If they get caught violating the terms of the support, they suddenly lose it, and that would suck. When I worked at Fidelity Investments with free software of various sourts, one of the most common questions was, what do we do if it breaks? If someone like Red Hat had been around then, we would have had no problems (as it was, it just took some explaining of the savings over proprietary systems, and how many admins that would buy in leiu of third-party support).

  14. Please explain how "free" can CO$T by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1

    Please explain what their yearly subscription gets you? I don't understand what they're providing. Security updates? Doesn't that already happen in RH for free?

    I can certainly understand paying them for tech support. We've all been there. :)

    1. Re:Please explain how "free" can CO$T by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      Please explain what their yearly subscription gets you? I don't understand what they're providing. Security updates? Doesn't that already happen in RH for free?

      With paid support you get priority access to those security updates. I don't know if you've noticed, but I had a heck of a time getting to those sendmail errata after all the publicity. In theory, cheap schmucks like me were held back so those who paid could get them. (And I'm even a RHCE! Thought that might count for something :^)

      But support is more than that, it's being able to call up and whine "It broke, how do I fix it". And having somebody who knows something about it help you out. Even things that seem easy can go south fast even if you know what you're doing, what do you think an MCSE thats feeling adventurious is going to do when he needs to set up a sendmail relay?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    2. Re:Please explain how "free" can CO$T by ArmorFiend · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      Uh, can you explain to a dumb debianer how to get these free updates? Like the name of the program? email me.

    3. Re:Please explain how "free" can CO$T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      apt-get.

      Seriously, it has been ported to RH.

      Or, you can subscribe the RHN and get a "demo" account you can use. Now they require you to fill out a survey in order to use it, but if you're a smart Linux using type person, you might be able to figure out a way to check a local mirror for updates and install them yourself. I think it's called "FTD" or something like that.

  15. Walking a tightrope by TopShelf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Red Hat is attempting to both leverage the cost-advantage of Linux, but also offer enterprise-class service and support. This is an essential step for Linux to take off in the business arena, since no CIO is going to stake his career on a grassroots OS. He/She has to have a financially stable vendor that can be relied on to handle the R&D to provide regular upgrades, as well as provide emergency support as needed.

    --
    Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    1. Re:Walking a tightrope by ajs · · Score: 1

      Thank you. First voice of reason I've heard. Sometimes I honestly think that most Slashdot readers would only be happy if Red Hat went back to selling $10 CDs.

    2. Re:Walking a tightrope by HuguesT · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No they would still be unhappy, complaining that they didn't have the balls to stand up to Microsoft.

  16. What price hike ?? by dr-suess-fan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sorry, But....

    Our shop has been evaluating the purchase of AS for some time now. It's been 1500US/yr and 2500US/yr
    for a few months at least.

    This latest offering is only adding ES and WS for
    those who still need/want support but don't want the
    full enterprise price.

    1. Re:What price hike ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      We have several AS seats in house, and I basically agree with you. I should point out a couple of things:

      1) ES will work for most people (those who do not need extra large memory, cpu, or clustering support). In fact, most of our servers do not use OS clustering and have 4 or less cpus, so ES would seem to work. But, we do run a fair number of 6gb ram Oracle boxes. And we would have to pay the AS prices for these boxes, even though we really do not need the greater support/features. We could build our own kernels with the necessary mods, but that gets troublesome with any large number of boxes, and we want them to take care of revisioning after all.

      2) For those of you saying you can use apt-get, or freshmeat or whatever else, remember that the binaries for AS 2.1, for example, are not available via these means. If you do not want to compile yourself, you have to have the correct entitlement (and RH seems to have prevented advanced users from switch machine to machin at rhn.redhat.com, like you can do with workstations or demos). All is fair in love and war, and since I have been playing in the UNIX world for quite a while now, I am not too surprised. I would like the "download binaries/updates for $60 a year with no other support for the AS versions" option, though. Many of the 7.3 packages work for AC 2.1, but enough of them do not to make it a pain.

    2. Re:What price hike ?? by maraist · · Score: 1

      Someone please mark parent up. Very informative

      --
      -Michael
  17. Re:Hmmm by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

    Given that the question comes up so regularly, perhaps it's worth considering that the use of the word "free" to describe something that is neither unrestricted nor available at no cost might not be the best idea a person ever had.

    --

    I write in my journal
  18. High availability clustering? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Over here: http://www.redhat.com/software/rhel/features/

    it talks about high-availability clustering. What software are they using?

  19. Re:Why do people continue to use red hat? by nenolod · · Score: 2, Informative

    And, you go around and troll.

    RPM is actually a pretty good packaging system, and RPM-based distros are what will bring linux to the consumer, because the common idiot can run the system.

    You _CAN_ use a stock kernel, and they offer many precompiled kernels that you can use. The files are in an acceptable location (i.e. configs are in /etc, so what do you mean there?)

    Also, you can DOWNLOAD it, so you arent paying $$$$$. Anyhow, I prefer Debian/Gentoo, so dont call this a redhat plug.

  20. If only there was a perfect operating system... by Omega's+Wildfire · · Score: 2, Funny

    Open source is great, but crappy source really does suck. Hey why don't you just run a Microsoft operati... Sorry my computer crashed. What was I say? Oh yeah, never mind.

    1. Re:If only there was a perfect operating system... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moron.

    2. Re:If only there was a perfect operating system... by Omega's+Wildfire · · Score: 1

      Okay back up and running... would you care to expound upon your previous statment? One would begin to wonder if a two syllable word such as moron could also be able to describe the user of said word. hmm... nah it must just be me. :)

    3. Re:If only there was a perfect operating system... by govtcheez · · Score: 1

      I agree with grandparent. If you're going to bash MS, at least be funny about it. That comment sucked shit.

    4. Re:If only there was a perfect operating system... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. It's so much more useful to the discussion to simply be a dick like you.

  21. Nice support options by jarrod.smith · · Score: 5, Informative
    The top tier costs $2500 and you get one year of 24x7 support with a one-hour response time and unlimited incedents.

    For a mission-critical business system (like one that MAKES REAL MONEY for a company) this is not a bad price to pay to keep running.

    ALso, if you've only got one or two boxes like this, paying RedHat $2500 a year would be a lot cheaper than keeping a really good UNIX sysadmin around.

    I think if you look at the competition (Microsoft and Commercial UNIX vendors), this would be pretty good deal.

    1. Re:Nice support options by ADRA · · Score: 1

      Hey, keep it down. We have AS Linux, and I am a *NIX admin. You are making me look replacable!

      --
      Bye!
    2. Re:Nice support options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $2500 is also a lot cheaper than a really crappy unix admin, too!

    3. Re:Nice support options by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1
      Exactly - where I work IT has installed its first Linux server - and it is for mission critical apps. They are a windows shop - but they have been forced into it by our North American head office - they were told run it (Oracle) on *nix or no support from them. So they have 2 x 2 cpu HPaq servers and have installed RHAS. It is being administered by an IT manager - MCSE and Novell cert. with no *nix experience (He tells me he is just learning vi and I tell him to get Putty for remote administration). Of course he has the Red Hat, Oracle and our global corporate IT support. I reckon he and the servers will survive.

      Still my skunkworks research labs Mandrake 8.2 server was the first Linux server in the company here in Canada. Maybe even my efforts at Linux evangelism on our CEO helped a bit - but really it seems that the companies global IT strategy is moving towards Linux. I reckon they will be buying more RHAS, RHES etc. I think Red Hat has got its marketing strategy just right for middle to large corporate customers.

  22. Good but not great. by FatherOfONe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am glad that they have made this change. We were kinda screwed when Oracle said that they would ONLY support the "Advanced Server" version of RedHat and RedHat said that they were only going to support 7.1 until the end of the year.

    However, I cannot believe that they don't offer some type of per incident support basis. There are a number of places here in Indiana that want to add RedHat instead of NT and or NetWare, for say 20-30 servers, but they don't want to pay $2,500.00 a server for 7X24 support! Both Novell and Microsoft offer a per incident support, and when I called to complain about this I was told that RedHat isn't competing with Novell or Microsoft, but Sun. I don't see it that way.

    --
    The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    1. Re:Good but not great. by ewilts · · Score: 1

      However, I cannot believe that they don't offer some type of per incident support basis.
      This topic just came up on the mailing lists, and they *do* offer per-incident suppport.
      http://www.redhat.com/support/techsupport/producti on/INS_sod.html

      --
      .../Ed
    2. Re:Good but not great. by Zathrus · · Score: 4, Informative

      So why not go with the Standard service for $1500?

      I'm guessing you're wanting 24x7 support, but not with 1 hour turn around or unlimited incidents. And if web support isn't sufficient (and, in general, I can't imagine a 4 business day turnaround being sufficient) then, yeah, I guess you're out of options.

      But just how many calls would you need to put into MS or Novell before Redhat becomes cheaper? What about turnaround time? How long do your servers need to be down before that 1 hour turnaround starts paying back?

      The second question is really the key one -- I suspect most shops could get along just fine with the Standard option, which is pretty dang cheap. And if you're just replacing a file server or the like then go with ES - which is $350 or $800 depending on your support needs.

      As for who they're targeting - I'm not a sysadmin, but it would seem to me that ES is targeted more toward the Novell/MS and AS more toward Solaris/AIX/HP-UX. It's certainly not a hard line though. But, in general, it's a lot easier to port an application from another Unix to Linux than it is from Windows/Novell to Linux.

    3. Re:Good but not great. by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of your comments, and for my business the standard $350-$800 is fine, but for a lot of Novell and Microsoft shops it isn't.

      My question to RedHat is WHY NOT offer this type of support? Just come up with some amount per call and offer it. In my experience they were almost "Microsoft" like in their arrogance. They don't offer ANY per call support options unless you buy one of the "Server" versions.

      As it is now, it is difficult sell for some customers that are use to NT and NetWare and it could easily be fixed. It is just such a trivial deal, I can't believe that they haven't fixed it yet.

      Here is an example that I can think of.

      Someone working for ABC consulting gets their RHCE. They will then be going out and supporting RedHat in their area. ABC consulting should be able to buy a block of support calls to RedHat for that person to use when needed.

      I hope that they offer this someday soon. I have been seriously considering SUSE because of this issue. Not that RedHat will miss my $20,000 a year that much.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    4. Re:Good but not great. by dr-suess-fan · · Score: 1

      It is kinda frustrating, we were hoping for that option as well.

      I discussed this with RedHat and they suggested that we might license 1 or 2 critical servers with annual support, and the rest could be just the flat-rate 800$.

      i.e. if you have 5 servers and they are all configured the same way and do very similar tasks, you can open a case against the one with support as the issue is likely to be applicable to any of the hosts.

      Redhat recommended this and I Sun tolerates it too. Most of my software support calls to sun are tied to the O/S, not the particular instance of it. i.e If SEAM under Solaris 8 is broken, it's broken on all hosts, not just one.

      HTH.

    5. Re:Good but not great. by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the info! I wonder why their sales people don't know about this?

      The only thing I see bad about this is:
      1. Only during normal hours, not 24X7.
      2. It appears to only covers basic configuration support.

      I can't find a number to call on the site for this and I don't see what the price is. Any idea on the cost?

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    6. Re:Good but not great. by Mathetes · · Score: 1

      SuSE's Enterprise offerings are priced similar. What would you gain?

    7. Re:Good but not great. by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      They offer per incident support.

      I just found out that Oracle 9i is now certified under SUSE also.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    8. Re:Good but not great. by BruderTux · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked the Oracle License alone was 36000 $ per CPU. So do the 2500 $ for _support_ really matter?

    9. Re:Good but not great. by Zathrus · · Score: 1

      Why are you comparing Oracle's pricing to Redhat's? They have nothing to do with one another.

      As it happens, $2500/yr for support is considerably better than the $10k+/year offered by most Unix vendors. That's for a mid-level box... have more CPUs or faster CPUs and it's usually more expensive.

  23. Why it costs so much by Hellraisr · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's because they're offering 5 years of service with the software, which is pretty good if you ask me.

    1. Re:Why it costs so much by Tack · · Score: 1

      The product life span is 5 years, but you have to pay the $1500 or $800 or $350 (depending on what you bought) per year per server to keep your subscription active.

      Jason.

  24. Redhat Shell Game by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The simple fact is for Redhat to call one prodcut a "server" and another "work station" is misleading, because at the OS level it's still the same OS, and that's what matters.

    The plain fact is when you get down the the OS level, all distros are the same...

    Dont's be fooled by RedHat Markeing into paying for "enterprise bells" and whistles".

  25. Completely cuts out the middle group of users by vondo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I understand why Redhat wants to try to collect money from its vast user base that uses RH to get actual work done, but there doesn't seem to be a reasonably priced option for non-power users.

    For home/hobbiest users, there is the free downloadable Standard Linux. But, with at most 12 months of security updates, this isn't really a viable option for use in any environment outside the home (and not even for a lot of them). Personally, I want to use my computer, not be updating it all the time.

    My situation at work is this: I'm a researcher. Since I'm one of just a few with any expertise, I'm the de facto sysadm for about 25-30 machines running RH 7.2 which we installed just about a year ago. We use the machines mostly as desktops. Lots of people don't run anything besides ssh, mozilla, and OpenOffice plus the usual suite of calculators, CD players, etc.

    Since my real job isn't taking care of these machines, and since I don't want to interupt people's work, upgrading every 12 months is out of the question. But, spending $180/yr/machine on support I really don't need is also not a great option. All we need is security updates for these systems so we don't get hacked. That's it. I don't need Oracle certification, etc.

    But, I don't see any way in RedHat's plan to give me minimal support for a long period of time (2-3 years) for a reasonable cost. Of course maybe their update RPMs will be available somewhere since, after all, this is free (open source) software. Barring that, it looks like RedHat will cost us a lot more than MS would.

    I'm also of the opinion that this model of release every 4 months is not viable anymore. Things just aren't progressing that quickly any more. IMO, RedHat should be making a new release of their standard product every 18-24 months and releasing service packs that update critical packages like the kernel and X (to deal with hardware compatibility), security updates, and maybe essential applications like KDE, GNOME, mozilla. I'd be more than happy to pay a reasonable amount ($50/yr/machine) for something like this.

    1. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exactly.. my big beef I guess is the End Of Life being so short. What if I want to keep running RH7.3 for a while? What if I really can't get to that machine for an upgrade whenever I feel like?

      I wish they would keep the RHN stuff for the old versions. They could just hike the price every year ($60, $80, $100, $120, etc) ...

    2. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Yort · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But, I don't see any way in RedHat's plan to give me minimal support for a long period of time (2-3 years) for a reasonable cost.

      Ah, but that's the beauty of Open Source - you don't *need* RedHat to give you 2-3 years of support for reasonable cost. You can get that from someone else. If there are enough people like you out there to support a business model that satisfies your needs, then someone will probably start one (if there isn't one already).

    3. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Turadg · · Score: 4, Informative
      I'd be more than happy to pay a reasonable amount ($50/yr/machine) for something like this.

      How about $60?
      Red Hat Network Purchase Information

      Red Hat Network Basic service level: $60/year per system subscription

      Red Hat Network Basic service provides software management, priority service, and access to Instant ISOs (full versions of Red Hat Linux) for individuals with one or more systems. A Basic subscription is required for each system supported on Red Hat Network. A Basic subscription to Red Hat Network provides:

      • Email notifications of available updates (errata)
      • Flexible scheduling of updates
      • Delivery of the actual updated files (packages)
      • Summaries of update results
    4. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by consumer · · Score: 1

      It certainly looks to me like the basic Red Hat Network for $60 per year provides everything you want.

    5. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      How about $60?

      Thank you. I was just saying this to someone else. I have been on this plan for two years now. worth every damn penny and then some. it works, everytime, very fast. AND (as i stated elsewhere) they let you register your UNPAID systems and get info/emails about them, free. You don't get to use up2date with them, but you at least KNOW when they are out of date.

      IMHO, Redhat has a great thing with this program.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    6. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by vondo · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't think so, because as I understand it, that's for the Standard version of linux which has a 12-month lifetime (which means 9 or less by the time we get it rolled out). I'd love to be wrong and that one could get errata for several years for standard Linux or Enterprise that way.

    7. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Kanon · · Score: 1

      Yes but with Redhat making versions obsolete after 12 months you can only continue using the subscription after you upgrade *all* you machines when Redhat decide.

      We're currently looking at changing distros where I work. We can only do updates like that at certain times of the year. We simply can't adhere to Redhat's schedule of upgrades and we also can't do without security patches. :(

    8. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by small_dick · · Score: 1

      I have a small network of RHAT workstations and admin them, all I do is ssh -X into them remotely and run up2date...depending on what gets updated they are fully up2date at the next reboot.

      I bought one boxed set and have a free basic subscription to rhn. I could also have bought a "cheapbytes" cd and done the same thing, or downloaded ISOs. Toggling the rhn entitlements for each machine is kind of a PITA but there is no way I'm paying $12 x 6 x 12 per year for Linux.

      Granted I'm only doing admin on these six machines
      NFS server and NIS, migrating from 7.2 to 8.0 was almost trivial, just did a couple machines at a time.

      I suspect you will be getting your wish soon. As RedHat and Linux stabilize, the releases will probably stretch out over longer periods of time.

      As long as we're wishing, I wish redhat would let people run their own up2date servers. I don't know of a way to do that. I would much prefer to keep a local repository of updates and let my machines log into that with the up2date stuff.

      Apparently SUSE has a means to allow this, but I'm not sure.

      --


      Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
      See my user info for links.
    9. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      Methinks you're not in as bad a situation as you think. (Oh, that's a minimum of 12 months, not a maximum of 12 months;)
      Exploits will be primarily against unpatched new versions, somewhat lesser against unpatched older versions. You can go a long time by watching security updates and then turning off or uninstalling anything vulnerable. What you will lose are the latest updates to the old versions of the desktop apps, etc.
      Whenever the current desktop starts feeling a bit seedy, try out the latest version (on your timetable), and if it's decidedly better, it's probably time to start switching the users.
      Methinks things are progressing that quickly. Whether the things that are progressing quickly are the things you are interested in is a different matter. (Don't throw out the older versions. Sometimes they work when the newer ones do not;)

    10. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

      Nope, because you still have to upgrade every year to get security fixes.

    11. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by vondo · · Score: 1
      Methinks you're not in as bad a situation as you think. (Oh, that's a minimum of 12 months, not a maximum of 12 months;)

      That's what I thought too, but I did see the word "maximum" on RedHat's page somewhere today. Even if they stick to 12-13 months rigidly, planning for and executing a new roll-out takes a month or two. So realistically, we'd get something like 10 months use out of their standard linux. Figure in their release shedule, and things get even worse. If you HAD to upgrade today, it would be to 8.0 which gets 9 1/2 months of support (from today) before EOL.

      Exploits will be primarily against unpatched new versions, somewhat lesser against unpatched older versions. You can go a long time by watching security updates and then turning off or uninstalling anything vulnerable. What you will lose are the latest updates to the old versions of the desktop apps, etc.

      Yeah, until someone finds a hole or exploits SSH or Apache or something else absolutely critical to how we operate. Then you either need to shut down and not do work or do an emergency distro-upgrade and not do work. And believe me, there is no way I'll run software with known holes until I hear about an active exploit on Slashdot. Code Red/SQL Slammer shows how dangerous that can be.

    12. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by madhippy · · Score: 1

      As long as we're wishing, I wish redhat would let people run their own up2date servers. I don't know of a way to do that. I would much prefer to keep a local repository of updates and let my machines log into that with the up2date stuff.

      autoupdate does the trick ...

    13. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://freshrpms.net/apt/ includes free mirrors as well as instructions on how to make your own.

    14. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by mslinux · · Score: 1

      RH upgrades are simple! Just get the latest ISO, plop it into the CD drive and go! When it finishes, you have the latest release *and* all your old files and configuration. I can do 20 uprgades in about 4 hours with 5 sets of CDs.

    15. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      For the (few) things absolutely critical to how you operate, methinks you would be better going the ./configure; ./make route instead of using rpms. Security through obscurity can work, but to do so it should first be obscure. But you're right in that 12 months (that's RedHat months, not your months) is definately too short a time. Oh well, surely there'll be some kind of Pink Bow Tie Linux that keeps up with critical updates to obsolete Red Hat.

    16. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 1

      I have a small network of RHAT workstations and admin them, all I do is ssh -X into them remotely and run up2date...depending on what gets updated they are fully up2date at the next reboot.

      Out of curiosity, have you looked at using Thin Clients with one central server instead of multiple installations?

      I'm curious why more people don't thin clients.

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    17. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by nlinecomputers · · Score: 1

      Ah, but that's the beauty of Open Source - you don't *need* RedHat to give you 2-3 years of support for reasonable cost. You can get that from someone else. If there are enough people like you out there to support a business model that satisfies your needs, then someone will probably start one (if there isn't one already).

      Short of a company being formed to write "Red Hat like" code for abandoned older versions how is that going to happen? Your going to have to hope that some small company is going to be able to maintain and if needed write patches for a product that the orignal author/creator/disto no longers supports. Not impossible but not very likely either. Better just to go to another disto all together.

      --
      Slashdot, home of supporters of free software, free music, and free speech.Except for Moderators that disagree with you.
    18. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "But, with at most 12 months of security updates, this isn't really a viable option for use in any environment outside the home (and not even for a lot of them). Personally, I want to use my computer, not be updating it all the time."

      No, it is not AT MOST 12 months. It is AT LEAST 12 months. The wording makes all the difference.

      Red Hat did not use to have a policy on erratas. Now they have. The policy is that they guarantee erratas for 12 months on their consumer/hobbyist distribution. It says nothing about them not offering anything beyond that, it is just not a guarantee. Before this policy they guaranteed you nothing at all.

    19. Re:Completely cuts out the middle group of users by seb249 · · Score: 1

      Except to extend the product life time. I have several servers running 7.2 and to be honest It now comes down to do i 1. Get back on the upgrade cycle which i was rather enjoying not being on. 2. Cough up for Advanced Server and the various other flavours of RH, 3. Look at going to another distro - I was actually migrating the servers from Mandrake to RH but all that is now put on hold 2 Is probably the most likely course of action but then with a bit of planning I should only need to be patching the usual edge of network services which i can do manually. Either way RedHat was previously the distribution that i found comfortable to work with the shortened end of lifetime support period without the option of paying for extended support is as one person has put it a dealbreaker.

  26. Well, what should I get? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, I have a bunch of small business clients who set up Red Hat web servers and pay the $60/yr Red Hat Network fee. We chose Red Hat because of the Red Hat network no-brainer upgrade system.

    Now, looking at these choices, they are very expensive for a small business. Or to put it another way, not much better than Windows. And the workstation product apparently "doesn't come with server applications". Which to me means "compile it yourself". Which defeats the whole point of paying money for Free software.

    I don't even know exactly *what* those prices include. Are they one-time expenses? Do they include updates and upgrades? For how long? How come I can download the Basic edition, but not the Standard edition (what's the diff?)

    So what will I choose for these small business folks?

    That's right, the correct answer is: screw Red Hat and install FreeBSD. At least you can upgrade over the network.

    1. Re:Well, what should I get? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, stick with what you've got. You are not an enterprise, you're a small business.

      If your customers are cheapies, get them the SOHO solution, Red Hat Linux 8.0. If they want to pay for support, get em the $200-$400 version, "ES" I think.

    2. Re:Well, what should I get? by dentar · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The trick:

      Pay for ONE SYSTEM to be on the red hat network. Tell up2date to keep the files it downloads. Write a script to grab all of those and install them on the rest of the machines too. (Assumes default install etc...)

      Better yet, be a real geek and type ftp updates.redhat.com and then use get.

      --
      -- I am. Therefore, I think!
    3. Re:Well, what should I get? by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      "Better yet, be a real geek and type ftp updates.redhat.com and then use get."

      I dunno, I like the automatic md5 checksuming rhn does, I like that I can manage everything from a single place...

      true, I could do that myself as well, but...for $60 a year, is it worth my time? Even with a couple dozen servers? Maybe, maybe not.

    4. Re:Well, what should I get? by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 1

      Or you could use autoupdate, which works better and doesn't require you to dig through menus on the rhn website to update a box. Also, I've had rhn just drop boxes I had entitlements for. Look for me to change distros before the end of this year.

  27. NOOO!!!! EVIL!!!!! by t0ny · · Score: 1
    Oh My Goodness.... Charging for an operating system. What is this world coming to?!?!?

    My OS longs to be free!!!!

    --

    Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.

  28. Windoze is $79.00 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just bought a new computer, that's what the shop charges for WinXP. I opted for a naked drive and a homemade Slackware install.

    1. Re:Windoze is $79.00 by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      That's the best decision you ever made.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
  29. Still Too Much by lal · · Score: 2

    I'm happy to pay for errata. $349 per server is too much for errata. I don't want any kind of support from RH other than errata.

    I use RH now, and have for years. But I'm actively looking for another distro. Plus, I'm tired of the marketing b.s. that accompanies their segmentation of the market.

    1. Re:Still Too Much by praksys · · Score: 1

      I'm happy to pay for errata. $349 per server is too much for errata. I don't want any kind of support from RH other than errata.

      Maybe you should take a look at Redhat Linux (according to Redhat this is suitable for those who want minimal support). Redhat Enterprise Linux is probably not the Linux you are looking for. Redhat Linux (no Enterprise) can still be had for as little as US$39.95.

    2. Re:Still Too Much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Red Hat Network. $60 per year per server or free if you fill out a survey, and the $60 level provides you with instant ISO access as well as all of the bugfixes.

      Come on, people... do some research. Really. This information is pretty easy to find.

    3. Re:Still Too Much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      $60 per year per server or free if you fill out a survey

      Initially, a "basic" account was available, free of charge, to anyone. Then, "basic" changed to "demo," which was free of charge, to anyone. Now, "demo," requires filling out a survey every couple of months.

  30. This is a serious question by ralphus · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Can someone please explain to me why it makes sense to buy specific versions of redhat? What makes them different from just downloading the ISO's yourself and customizing via the install program?

    Do they do heavy system modification to change how Advanced server handles memory or threads or something? Sorry, I'm ignorant here, I have always used redhat from the ISOs and pay for entitlement.

    --
    Revolutions are never about freedom or justice. They're about who's going to be top dog. -- Kilgore Trout
    1. Re:This is a serious question by ewilts · · Score: 2, Informative
      1.It's the support.

      2. There are no binary ISOs

      Red Hat does to lots of customizations, and if download the source rpms, you can look at the changelogs to see what they've done.

      If you download the source rpms and build a system yourself, you'll have trouble getting patches for that system - in fact, they're not available at all via RHN unless you pay the subscription fee to the right channel.

      --
      .../Ed
    2. Re:This is a serious question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      In our case, we bought AS because of its alleged ties with Oracle. The idea they are trying to sell is that Oracle and RedHat made countless modifications to standard Linux kernel (memory, threads) to make it more sutable for enterprise Oracle installations.

      The reality is that it really sux - very unstable and moody. We have another Oracle box running on stock redhat 7.3 - no problems. The AS box has to be rebooted about as often as Exchange server does ;-)

    3. Re:This is a serious question by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      it is the support, but they also bundle the type of programs that are relevent for the type of package you are buying. from my experience with their offerings, part of what you are getting (besides service) is a different build of kernel, some stuff preconfigured, etc. if it knocks 10 hours off configuring and testing (easy to do) and it costs you $50 an hour for a tech (dirt cheap tech, i might add) then it saved you $500. For most companies, the price, $800 is the cheapest part of installing a server anyway.

      Time DOES equal money. If you want an ecommerce server, to generate $1mil in sales (small time) then paying 0.08ths of 1% of your sales for the operating system AND support is a bargain.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    4. Re:This is a serious question by wawannem · · Score: 1

      Support isn't the only thing you pay for here. I went to a small conference hosted by IBM and RH where they showcased AS and AW. Basically, you get a stable system that will change very little over time. This might not seem like a big deal, but at large organizations like where I work, even the smallest library changes have to be QE'd internally before we can install updates into production. This becomes a real cost monger when you think about QE dealing with our own changes as well as the changes that the open source world makes to its software.

      Here, we have a habit of only testing and installing security related fixes. This minimizes the QE workload, but under this model, products get EOL'd pretty quick and then no more support is available. You can end up with an outdated RH system pretty quick. The Advanced series of their software allows us to develop and deploy a system that we know will be supported for a given amount of time, and that the changes made from RH will minor, thus requiring less QE time on our part etc. For our organization, this clearly makes a good case to replace some of our big iron from Sun.

    5. Re:This is a serious question by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      THANK YOU!!! I have a stock 7.1 box and it has been up near 100% except for one hardware problem. I asked the people at Oracle, and they said that the reason they did this was to improve reliability! I don't know how you improve on 100%???

      I have been frozen on Oracle 9.0.2 and won't upgrade until this mess is worked out. I knew that there was problems with this.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    6. Re:This is a serious question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong this was done for certification sake. It was getting impossible to keep certification testing on kernel versions (which was the way it was originally done) - and now is done with specific versions of 'enterprise' linux. Red Hat AS, SuSE Linux Enterprise Edition 7, and just recently United Linux (thus any of the update CD's from SuSE, Turbo Linux, etc).

      Something is wrong with the other AC's system if they are having to cycle that quickly - they need to look closely if they have certified hardware. I work with more than 100 customers who we have hosted Oracle E-Business Suite for on RHAS - basically rock solid.

  31. TWENTY-NINE by jms258 · · Score: 3, Funny

    the number of RHCEs at the red hat operations building pouring buckets of water over their web server to keep it from exploding from the brutal, merciless slashdotting it is now receiving. -jms258

  32. Cheating? by buddha42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What's going to stop me from buying "WS" for $300 and using it as a server? Will WS refuse to download certian RPMs from up2date or something?

    1. Re:Cheating? by Chewie · · Score: 1

      Nothing. You just won't get automatic updates or support for the server apps you install yourself.

      --
      49 20 68 61 76 65 20 74 6F 6F 20 6D 75 63 68 20 66 72 65 65 20 74 69 6D 65 2E
    2. Re:Cheating? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing, I would imagine.

      However, if the web server died and someone tried to call in for support, you'd have a problem :)

    3. Re:Cheating? by jmu1 · · Score: 1

      Well, look at it this way: More than five people can use it at a time ;)

    4. Re:Cheating? by Seanasy · · Score: 1

      I think the point of paying for any RedHat Enterprise product if the support that comes with it. I you purchse WS and use it as a server, that's fine. Just don't expect help from RedHat on server type problems.

  33. But--- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the stuff is as good as claimed, it shouldn't *need* any support. I thought this Linux stuff just ran forever. If it needs a bunch of support, why switch from Windoze? Hell, the in-house support guys would have to learn something new, and that's not real cost-effective.

    1. Re:But--- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no one claims any operating system doesn't need support. redhat is selling the support. (i.e. you won't need the in-house guys to learn anything new)

  34. OK, I'll bite. by Dthoma · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As far as I can tell, Red Hat does not have "files in the wrong place" any more than any other Linux distro - instructions for a lot of things intended for other distros are still very useful guidance for RH users like myself.

    The packaging system may not automatically resolve dependencies, but it's bloody good as it is. I download an RPM, and use 'rpm -ivh' and I'm up and running 99.9% of the time. If I need some other RPMs, it'll tell me. If I need to su to root to install, it'll tell me. If it can't or shouldn't uninstall a package it'll tell me. Plus I can override it's warnings if I like.

    If by stock kernel you mean the kernel that comes with the OS, then you are completely and utterly incorrect. If the kernel didn't work then why the heck would they ship this system? You can even download 'pure' kernels from if you like. No one's stopping you, but the stock kernel is perfectly fine and recompilable as is!

    And I'm not paying massive amounts of "$$$$$" for Red Hat either. RH 8.0 cost me only £35 (about $55), which is a whole heck of a lot cheaper than Windows 2000/XP. Heck, if you like, you can download the entire thing for very little or nothing.

    --

    Note to M1-ers: a curt but otherwise insightful message is not "Flamebait" or "Troll".

  35. Well, it just goes to show... by somethingwicked · · Score: 2, Funny

    You can't put RedHat in the Enterprise, but you can put Enterprise in the RedHat.

    No, wait, you CAN put RedHat in the Enterprise, but you-no wait...crap...nevermind

    --

    ---"What did I say that sounded like 'Tell me about your day?'"---

    1. Re:Well, it just goes to show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you can't put Red Hat in the Challanger, nor in the Columbia.

  36. apt-get is free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    to get the same thing as rhn for absolutely free
    check out the apt-get for rpm package

    http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/

  37. Red Hat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Red Hat, is that a brand of condoms?

    1. Re:Red Hat by baggins2002 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but its for your computer. Keeps it from catching those W32* viruses

    2. Re:Red Hat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      true that, my man. slap that Red Hat(tm) on your wang, and stick it in that thang. It's GPLed, for her pleasure.

  38. I do! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I only had to pay £35 to get 7 bitchin' Red Hat stickers!

  39. Why not use Apache for free? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, mod me N00b, but why pay for something you can get for free, like Apache? How much support do you really need for a server, $800 seems like a lot of support, unless the software fucks up alot, in which it would need a lot of support.

  40. Tell me how... by tarkin · · Score: 1

    ...a price of $800 gonna price Redhat out of a market that is believed to replace the billion dollar UNIX market that SUN and IBM dominate ?
    Even an unlimited license of Mac OS X Server is $999 ?
    Al other UNIX operating systems cost a hell of a lot more don't they ?

    Maybe you won't buy it because you only need the software and *not* the support and *not* the Redhat Network management tools, but those big iron buyers will want the same level of support of their previous purchases.

    I just hope they'll continue to release community editions ala Redhat8...

    --
    blaah !
    1. Re:Tell me how... by afidel · · Score: 1

      yes, but their real competition will be from other linux distro's, I'm sure someone can come out with a comparably tested version of their server product at a lower price point. When a 1U 2CPU web server can be had for a little over $1,000 spending $800 for the server software seems kind of crazy. I personally think that people will install one version of this per server farm and call RH when any of the boxes has a problem.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    2. Re:Tell me how... by 42forty-two42 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I just hope they'll continue to release community editions ala Redhat8...
      If they stop, just switch to another, like Debian, Mandrake, or (my personal favorite) Gentoo. That's one of the strengths of Linux. If Microsoft discontinued XP Home, you'd have no choice but to but XP Pro. Not so here.
    3. Re:Tell me how... by tarkin · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right, there's always gonna be some Linux to use instead of Redhat, but if you want to use the Redhat Network tools and/or services without the need of an Enterprise distro (and cost) you're screwed ;-)

      --
      blaah !
    4. Re:Tell me how... by 42forty-two42 · · Score: 1

      There are alternatives to RHN. Gentoo has emerge -U world. Debian has apt-get. Mandrake has... something. Why would you need RHN specifically?

    5. Re:Tell me how... by Zathrus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I personally think that people will install one version of this per server farm and call RH when any of the boxes has a problem

      I suggest reading the license - it states that the licensing is one copy of software per system (search for "Installed Systems"). Underreporting of systems can lead to a 20% fine.

      Your licensing prices exclude support costs. That's all well and good for home users, but businesses generally want support. Bundle in support costs on that Win2k Server and you're well over $800.

      If you're building a file server, then the client access libraries are going to kill you fast... even at $180 per WS license you'll end up ahead with RH.

      As far as going with another distro - you're simply missing the point. What's costing money here isn't the software - it's the support. Most of the other distros don't offer support to the level that RH does, and that's why businesses gravitate toward RH if they're going to do Linux at all.

    6. Re:Tell me how... by 42forty-two42 · · Score: 1

      Use some other tools and/or services then. They're not the only system. Or write your own update notifier and hire someone for support.

    7. Re:Tell me how... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right on target about support, but there's a little bit more to it... You're also buying supportability in the OS.

      That means that ISVs like Oracle, Veritas, BEA, IBM, BMC, CA, etc. can afford to validate and certify their applications on something like Advanced Server.

      Think like a big software company for a minute (no, I'm not kidding)... Let's pretend you're Oracle as an example: You want to offer your software to the widest possible audience which means you want it to be available on the most possible platforms. In order to do that and keep your customers, you need to test, validate, and support your software on all of these various platforms.

      With me so far?

      Ok, now let's think about the difference between every other Linux distro out there (including Red Hat Professional) and Red Hat AS: the biggest difference is the release cycle. AS comes out on a 12-18 month cycle. Everything else comes out with new features every couple of months (or weeks, or even days), right? If you neede to test, validate, support your product on Linux, which one of these would you choose?

      Look around the market. You'll see Oracle, PeopleSoft, SAP, BEA and many others offering real, supported, tested, validated products on Red Hat AS. That's because they can amortize the investment in certification and support over the life cycle of the OS. In other words, they don't have to kill themselves trying to hit a moving target.

  41. Packaging by LINM · · Score: 1

    $800 and it doesn't have apt-get. Broken RPMs? I'm sticking with Debian.

    --

    Hunger is the best sauce.

    1. Re:Packaging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And both choices don't work as well as FreeBSD.

    2. Re:Packaging by Tralfamadorian · · Score: 1

      Get a clue

    3. Re:Packaging by LINM · · Score: 1

      Ok

      He who knows knows not what is not that he knows not
      He who not knows knows not what he knows not of

      --

      Hunger is the best sauce.

  42. This isnt bad by bludstone · · Score: 2, Informative

    I work for a company (that will go nameless) that offers 24/7, 1 hour callback tech support on the product.

    No, its not redhat.

    We charge over $20,000 for A SINGLE USER.

    This is very _very_ competatively priced.

    --

    no .sig
    1. Re:This isnt bad by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      work for a company (that will go nameless) that offers 24/7, 1 hour callback tech support on the product.

      No, its not redhat.

      We charge over $20,000 for A SINGLE USER.


      Holy crap, you work for SCO then?

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  43. If you don't like it don't buy it by karearea · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We hear/see a lot of comments about not wanting to pay the M$ tax when buying workstations.

    I think the simple solution to people not wanting to pay the Redhat (damn where can I put the $) tax, is to not pay it - use another distro.

    That's what's so great about linux, you don't like redhat don't use it, you don't like Slackware don't use it, you don't like Debian don't use it etc etc etc.

    I thought the whole thing about OSS was choice, we just need to convince those brainwashed by Redhat (such as Oracle) that they should aim to support other distros, come up with a certification program so that people can build their own that is supported by Oracle.

    Just my humble opinion.

    1. Re:If you don't like it don't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "we just need to convince those brainwashed by Redhat (such as Oracle) that they should aim to support other distros

      Well, there we have it, folks! Redhat is now Evil(tm) too!

    2. Re:If you don't like it don't buy it by Seanasy · · Score: 1
      I think the simple solution to people not wanting to pay the Redhat (damn where can I put the $) tax, is to not pay it - use another distro.

      Uhmmmm... you can just not pay the 'RedHat tax' and still use RedHat. For free. From ISOs from their FTP site.

      RedHat Enterprise -- and your so-called RedHat tax -- is for companies that want an OS with support, lots of support. RedHat never gave support for free. They're not affected if you use another distro. In fact, it might save them some bandwidth costs.

      The comparison to MS doesn't hold water. Everyone legally using MS WIndows, and some not using it, have paid for MS Windows. Lots of people legally using RedHat have never paid a dime or have paid only when they felt like it. To say, "paying for support for RedHat is a tax," is ludicrous.

    3. Re:If you don't like it don't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      linux has to have some viable companies. redhat, regardless of what you think of their products, is good for the linux community. I think the only ones that don't think so are KDE users, who think that gnome would die without redhat. I use redhat, and I'm at the bleeding edge of the applications I use. I got freshrpms.net for some minor ones, i compile gimp (./configure --prefix /opt/blah; make install) and rpmbuild -ta gaim-CVS.tar.gz). I've upgraded through 7 years of releases.. I have no clue about people who spend further time admining their box..

    4. Re:If you don't like it don't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Redhat provides a stable foundation for ISV to build upon. It sounds like BS I know, but when other distros offer something as consistant, then the ISV's will port to them too.

      Funny that you should mention Oracle and other Linux distros because they just announced they would support UnitedLinux. Vendors DO support other stable and consistant linux distros, and Redhat has not "brainwashed" them. Don't talk smack about a company that does do good for the community.

    5. Re:If you don't like it don't buy it by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "I think the simple solution to people not wanting to pay the Redhat (damn where can I put the $) tax, is to not pay it - use another distro."

      The simpler solution is just to download Red Hat Linux for free.

      "Use another distro" is an argument you use if you have another agenda.

  44. Emerge this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    emerge your ass.

  45. updating made easy, w/o the RHAT by bongoras · · Score: 2, Informative

    I would suggest installing apt for rpm. See http://freshrpms.net/apt for details. Once that is installed and configured, updating to the latest redhat patches is as simple as:

    apt-get update; apt-get dist-upgrade

    1. Re:updating made easy, w/o the RHAT by vondo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yes, but someone has to produce the patches. I don't use up-to-date currently, I do wget of a mirror and then do rpm -Fvh commands to upgrade what I want. That's not the problem, it's the existence of updates in the first place.

      And as I understand it, won't one of those commands update me to the latest distribution of RH not just fixing the software I have, but replacing a bunch of things that don't necessarily have problems? That means new things break, people come asking "How do I do this now? It used to work." etc.

    2. Re:updating made easy, w/o the RHAT by Seanasy · · Score: 1
      And as I understand it, won't one of those commands update me to the latest distribution of RH not just fixing the software I have, but replacing a bunch of things that don't necessarily have problems? That means new things break, people come asking "How do I do this now? It used to work." etc.

      No. Using apt to do an update will never upgrade to a new version of RedHat. Your apt sources.list specifies which version you want. And, you just have to choose a repository that updates the way you like. If you used Freshrpms you might get upgrades more often than you want but mostly on non-essential (e.g. xine, mplayer, gkrellm, armagetron) packages. There are other repositories.

    3. Re:updating made easy, w/o the RHAT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      replacing a bunch of things that don't necessarily have problems? That means new things break, people come asking "How do I do this now? It used to work." etc.

      That's a systemic problem with Linux. Updates, changes and bugfixes frequently break older applications. Since it's constantly in development, there is a need to update relatively frequently.

      I wholeheartedly agree with you. Linux is a terrible, terrible, choice for any more than one machine in a given organization. It's just way too immature of a codebase.

    4. Re:updating made easy, w/o the RHAT by einer · · Score: 1

      actually, you can make apt upgrade your entire distro by downloading the redhat release rpm for the distro you want to upgrade to, then running up2date.

      It's a very bad idea to do this on a machine that you plan on using for anything besides a paperweight. Not that it WON'T work, but there is the chance, and it's not a supported 'migration path.'

      Nice little trick though. :)

  46. Serious Question... by ElGuapoGolf · · Score: 1


    If ES is based around Advanced Server, is it still based around Advanced Server 2.1?

    Will it still have the same bugs as AS 2.1?

    Are they finally going to throw a Java application server in there?

    Will there be filesystems available other than ext2/3?

    1. Re:Serious Question... by ashitaka · · Score: 1

      Will there be filesystems available other than ext2/3?

      Upon install:

      Boot: Linux expert Reiserfs

      --
      If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    2. Re:Serious Question... by ElGuapoGolf · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know....

      But is this officially supported by RedHat? Meaning, do I (rather would my company) lose support for FS related issues if I use that option? If so, it's not ready for prime time, IOO.

  47. ouch! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man, why do they put BS like this in their agreement:

    During the term of this Agreement and for one (1) year thereafter, Customer expressly grants to Red Hat the right to audit Customer's facilities and records from time to time in order to verify Customer's compliance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.

    What if I buy it for home use (i.e., to have the same thing at work as at home, which I often do). That means I have to keep the fridge stocked with Red Hat's favorite beer or what?

  48. Does stock RedHat change? by Yort · · Score: 2, Insightful
    All this buzz is only for the "Enterprise" products, right? I mean, won't RedHat continue to release its usual RedHat 8.1 type product (although perhaps not quite as often?). I would think this would still be a viable option for many of those folks for whom the Enterprise Server is overkill.

    For many companies, tho, the certification for standard vendors like Oracle are extremely important. If you don't have these, it doesn't matter how free your operating system is.

  49. Per machine? by gamartin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Can anyone clarify for me whether these "subscriptions" are explicitly licensed for exactly one machine? Am I allowed to download the workstation product for $179, create CD's, and then install it on 100 machines? I understand the problem of only having purchased 1 entitlement for the Red Hat Network; the question is am I permitted to install it on N machines for $179, or am I required to pay N times $179?

    The Red Hat WWW site is surprisingly uninformative about this question.

    1. Re:Per machine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANARHE (I am not a Red Hat Employee) but, you pay support for ONE machine. You could install on other machines, but they will be unsupported by Red Hat. The only one they'll talk about is most likely to be the one with the RHN entitlement.

    2. Re:Per machine? by Tack · · Score: 3, Informative
      Can anyone clarify for me whether these "subscriptions" are explicitly licensed for exactly one machine?

      From RedHat's License Page:

      • 4. REPORTING AND AUDIT. If Customer wishes to
      • increase the number of Installed System, then Customer will purchase from Red Hat additional Services for each additional Installed System. During the term of this Agreement and for one (1) year thereafter, Customer expressly grants to Red Hat the right to audit Customer's facilities and records from time to time in order to verify Customer's compliance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement.
      (Emphasis mine.)

      So the answer is, it is X dollars ($1500, $800, 350, $180, whichever product / service level you want) per year, per system. That may be competitive if you want or need business hours or 24-hour phone support, all the fancy certifications and other features you get with RHEL, but if you just want access to binary erratas for a 3-5 year product life span, that's not realistic pricing, IMHO.

      Jason.

    3. Re:Per machine? by lobotomy · · Score: 1

      Someone in the know please answer this. I have the same question and also found the Red Hat site lacking in details.

    4. Re:Per machine? by T5 · · Score: 1

      If it's going to be a continuation of the service like RHAS, there will be channels dedicated to these products, and entitlements of those channels. I suspect, that like RHAS, it's an automatic subscription and you can't pass it around like you can the basic subscriptions.

  50. Red Hat is inching up by LinuxParanoid · · Score: 5, Informative

    Red Hat has definitely been inching up the scale.

    Journal filesystems hitting maturity, logical volume management, asynchronous I/O for the database guys, TPC-C benchmarks (unaudited though?), improved clustering

    There are still things Linux lacks (last I checked) that the conventional UNIX vendors have added to their systems over the last five years: things like hot-swap memory, hot-swap CPUs, memory failure resiliency (OS quits using memory if recoverable but warning-sign single-bit ECC memory errors get too great), kernel hot-patching, multipath IO, workload management stuff, and ever-more SMP/NUMA scalability.

    Still, seems like Red Hat is making great strides. Hat's off! (ugh, sorry about that, couldn't resist. ;-)

    --LP

    1. Re:Red Hat is inching up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> There are still things Linux lacks (last I checked) that the conventional UNIX vendors have added to their systems over the last five years: things like hot-swap memory, hot-swap CPUs, memory failure resiliency (OS quits using memory if recoverable but warning-sign single-bit ECC memory errors get too great), kernel hot-patching, multipath IO, workload management stuff, and ever-more SMP/NUMA scalability.

      Or in short, all those things that make an enterprise server an enterprise server.

      They can call it Red Hat Super Nintendo edition, for all I care - it doesnt make it true.

    2. Re:Red Hat is inching up by awx · · Score: 1

      hot-swap memory, hot-swap CPUs, memory failure resiliency (OS quits using memory if recoverable but warning-sign single-bit ECC memory errors get too great), [...] multipath IO...

      Aren't these commodity PC hardware shortcomings?

      --
      Feel that power? That's mah MOUSING FINGER
    3. Re:Red Hat is inching up by stratjakt · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, that stuff exists in the PC world. Linux support for it doesnt.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Red Hat is inching up by Elbereth · · Score: 0, Troll

      I looked at their web site once before, and I don't see any proof that the x86 servers there support any feature that Slashbots have been raving about. There is no Xeon motherboard that supports hotswap CPUs or memory. I really think I would have seen this if it existed, as I like to keep up on such things. Intel, Supermicro, Asus, etc are still making commodity motherboards. Who is this mystery manufacturer who is pumping out Xeon motherboards with hotswap CPUs and memory? What chipset is this mystery motherboard using?

      I call bullshit and marketing.

    5. Re:Red Hat is inching up by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Umm, no not bullshit and marketing. We had one in the office to test a few weeks ago, and are going to be selling them with our software to our clients. (We sell unix and NT based dispatching packages to police/fire/ems)

      This 'mystery manufacturer' who put together the motherboard is Stratus itself, IIRC. Pretty much everything in there is custom, it's not commodity hardware in the least.

      You want technical details? Call 'em and ask. It isnt like Dell.com where you order your cheap-o PC from the Customizer. You dont find the components at newegg.com. These things cost 20,000 and up.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    6. Re:Red Hat is inching up by LinuxParanoid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or in short, all those things that make an enterprise server an enterprise server.

      Well, I sort of agree with you. However, Sun/HP/IBM were calling their Unix offerings five years ago 'enterprise' without having any of those features (even though the mainframe mostly did). I've never seen a really firm definition, although I certainly have my own views about what the phrase should mean. While I agree a bit with your point, it's also not quite fair for the 'enterprise' guys to constantly redefine the enterprise feature set to include whatever the low-end guys don't have.

      You may of course disagree. The important thing is recognizing what Red Hat's enterprise solution does and does not provide.

      The real question to me is, do Red Hat's 'enterprise' enhancements effectively help Linux extend dominance beyond the web-server niche which Microsoft can, should, and will try to position it into. (Promptly before Microsoft offers a low-cost version of NT server with IIS-only.)

      --LP

    7. Re:Red Hat is inching up by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      Well, I sort of agree with you. However, Sun/HP/IBM were calling their Unix offerings five years ago 'enterprise' without having any of those features (even though the mainframe mostly did).

      I'm afraid you're mistaken. Sun, HP, and IBM have had all of those features for much longer than 5 years.

      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
  51. hello! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have heard that there are websites on the internet with photographs of naked women who don't have any clothes on. Is this true?

  52. Bet it's not "Free as in Speech" either by TrollBridge · · Score: 1
    Exactly how much of this new, huge, enterprise edition is available for the public to scrutinize and improve? Is the entire source available to download and compile?

    And even if most or all of the source IS available to tinker with, how much tinkering can a sysadmin do before he/she voids the service/support contract?

    --
    There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
    1. Re:Bet it's not "Free as in Speech" either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) It's still all "free as in speech"

      2) You're kidding about the tinkering question, right? Support requires dealing with a "known" and tinkering converts a "known" into an "unknown".

    2. Re:Bet it's not "Free as in Speech" either by TrollBridge · · Score: 1
      Not kidding at all. Isn't the ability to tinker with the source to either improve it or to meet a new or unique need the fundamental Free Speech argument supporting OSS?

      And yes, tinkering converts a "known" into an "unknown", hence the entire reason for my question. Will RedHat still support people who exercise their right to do whatever they want with the source?

      --
      There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
    3. Re:Bet it's not "Free as in Speech" either by MoxCamel · · Score: 1

      Of course it's your right to tinker with it. But there's nothing in the GPL that says Red Hat must support your hobby.

      To support a system, Red Hat has to be able to make certain assumptions. When you go screwing around with it, they can't make those assumptions anymore.

  53. I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by double_h · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I once thought of Red Hat as a geuninely good thing, and I do have to give them a lot of credit for helping make Linux more widely accepted in the workplace.

    But over the past year or two, based on their activities as a company and the merits of their distribution, I've been trying to convert all of the Red Hat servers at my workplace to Debian as time permits.

    I simply cannot bring myself to pay the up2date tax when apt-get is free and just plain works better. So instead I waste a lot of time tracking down and trying to install release-specific RPMs, which is a huge pain. Even Microsoft provides free updates for their operating systems (which, in many cases, cost less than an equivilant Red Hat license).

    I'd still rather administer a Red Hat server than a Windows server because it IS still Linux after all. But as a company, I really can't see much difference these days between RH and any of their enterprise-level competitors.

    1. Re:I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by jmt9581 · · Score: 1

      I use apt4rpm as well, and I'm wondering what "release specific rpms" you're talking about. Any specific examples?

      --

      My blog

    2. Re:I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use apt-get with Redhat. It is easy and free.

    3. Re:I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Is this for real? In what way is the fee one pays for priority access to RHN a "tax"? Is it somehow involuntary? Oh, you don't want to pay for it, I see, so it's a tax; I guess what I pay for food at the store is 100% tax, then. You want a for-profit company to provide stuff to you for free. I see, and what do they get out of it?

      Yes, yes, you can get updates for Debian for free. That's great. I hope you donate to Debian. That bandwidth ain't free.

      I've heard vicious rumours (can't possibly be true) that Redhat offers free subscriptions to their update service. Even more untrustworthy freaks have come up to me on the street and claimed you don't even have to go through RedHat's servers to get updates. The wildest-eyed of the bunch say you can even use apt if you want to.

      Redhat pays people, including kernel hackers, to add improvements to the overall system you, even you Debian users, like so much. Quick: name a piece of GPL code on your system that contains contributions from Microsoft. Now name one by Redhat. Redhat, as a corporate entity, appears to have something like a social conscience, too. If you do some research, you might come across some evidence of it.

    4. Re:I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by GauteL · · Score: 1

      Apt-get exists for Red Hat too (for instance: apt.freshrpms.net). You do not have to pay for up2date.

      Red Hat is a commercial company, but people can download Red Hat Linux for free. I see no reason why Red Hat should also have to provide bandwidth and free services for people downloading the distribution for free.

      That said, nothing is stopping people from offering free services for Red Hat, something freshrpms.net does.

    5. Re:I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by Master+Bait · · Score: 1

      I agree. The Emperor's New Clothes comes to mind when I ponder the price of the so-called Enterprise edition. I guess some people are comforted by the thought of a Red Hat applications specialist who can look up a client's problem/solution of Google better than the client can!

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    6. Re:I just keep liking Red Hat less and less by blackmail · · Score: 1

      Actually, apt-get has been ported to RedHat. You can get it here. Free (RHN-less) updates and you just change sources.list and `apt-get dist-upgrade` when a new release comes out.

  54. Differences between Enterprise and other Redhats by tarkin · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's a nice page here explaining the differences between normal and Enterprise versions.

    Very useful for the suit to choose which Redhat is suited for him ;-)

    --
    blaah !
  55. OT:When is RH 8.1 due out? by JeffVolc · · Score: 1

    Now that you've mentioned Redhat....

    When is Redhat 8.1 due out? They've had three betas. I think it's due pretty soon. Is this press release going to coincide with a OS release soon?

    Jeff

    1. Re:OT:When is RH 8.1 due out? by EdMcMan · · Score: 1

      They probably started charging people to test the betas :|

    2. Re:OT:When is RH 8.1 due out? by halfelven · · Score: 1


      In April.

  56. Re:Hmmm by 42forty-two42 · · Score: 1

    That's why they invented 'Open Source' - to keep the suits from being confused.

  57. Unbelievable by The+Bungi · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Once again, this company goes one step too far. To boot:
    • Prices hikes. I mean, please.
    • Draconian license agreements that include "we own your ass" clauses to the tune of "we can go to your place and audit at will"
    • "Enterprise"?? What's that, a buzzword to sell more licenses?
    • And the licensing, oh boy. What do you mean I can't install my copy everywhere??? I already paid for it, damn it!!
    • Monopolistic practices that push other competitors out of the server business
    • I could go on and on
    It's time to put a stop to this. Perhaps the DOJ can take action, or maybe the state attorneys can start pressuring them. I don't know. It's just sad...

    .

    .

    ... what? Oh, this is Red Hat???

    Oh, sorry.

    .

    .

    Well, I'm glad that a Linux company is releasing an enterprise-class product. I mean, this can only bode well for Linux. Indeed, we are poised to push M$ out of the market for sure.

    Of course, if I don't like it I can just run... uh... Debian. yeah, Debian. I'll get enterprise-level Level 1 support from... uh... well, I'll tell the CTO we'll support it ourselves. After all, we have the code!!

    Uh... oh, and, uh, 'M$ sucks'.

    1. Re:Unbelievable by Zeebs · · Score: 1

      Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you your next slashdot editor!

      --

      Happy Noodle Boy says "F###ing doughnut! Mock me? You fried cyclops!!"
    2. Re:Unbelievable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pot |Kettle == Black! ::

      Advanced Search Preferences Language Tools Search Tips

      Web Images Groups Directory News
      Searched pages from microsoft.com for enterprise. Results 1 - 10 of about 190,000. Search took 0.18 seconds.

    3. Re:Unbelievable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1, flamebait. The sad thing is, you're absolutely right.

    4. Re:Unbelievable by bogie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Monopolistic practices that push other competitors out of the server business"

      Don't be a liar/drama queen that doesn't even happen.. Red Hat does not have nor will they ever have a monopoly on linux. They sure as shit don't have a desktop monopoly like MS does. So what was your point again?

      Oh but I forget your own of the resident Microsofties who regularly trolls Slashdot defending MS and spreading semi-FUD about linux in every post.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    5. Re:Unbelievable by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

      Don't be a liar/drama queen that doesn't even happen.. Red Hat does not have nor will they ever have a monopoly on linux.

      I'm sure he will respond for himself, but I'd like to point out that he said the "server" business, not all Linux business. I have no idea what the numbers are on enterprises running Linux at the server level and who their vendor is though.

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    6. Re:Unbelievable by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      Red Hat does not have nor will they ever have a monopoly on linux.

      I said "server market". I'll let you figure out why, since you seem to be so intelligent.

      So what was your point again?

      Right.

      Oh but I forget your own of the resident Microsofties who regularly trolls Slashdot defending MS and spreading semi-FUD about linux in every post

      You can call me "the equalizer".

    7. Re:Unbelievable by shdragon · · Score: 2, Insightful
      While I appreciate your glancing similarities between Red Hat and Microsoft, a closer examination of the facts reveals some questions which need answering.

      Price Hikes?


      What do you believe would be a fair price for what Red Hat is offering?

      Draconian licenses


      First, nobody's forcing you to. Second, seeing how they must give you 10 days written notice, it must take place during the business's normal business hours, this is not the only license offered for their product line, and the maximum penalty is 20% for taking advantage of them. I hardly view this as Draconian given that Red Hat's total market share of their target market is still smaller than most of their competitors. Red Hat is putting a lot behind their product, and I personally would be more shocked if there wasn't some enforceability clause in there. The honors-system & capitalism just don't mix. Again, I would like to reinfoce the fact that this offering is geared specifically towards businesses, not individuals.

      "Enterprise"?? What's that, a buzzword to sell more licenses?



      Absolutely. And probably a very smart move. Adopting your product to your customers habits is almost always a good idea.

      And the licensing, oh boy. What do you mean I can't install my copy everywhere??? I already paid for it, damn it!!



      This version of redhat is targeted at businesses, not home/power users, hobbyists, and all others who would get no added benefit from their offering. In most people's view, businesses should play by different rules than neighbors. A quick analogy: Neighbor Bob asks me if I will teach him to use widget X. I gladly show Bob free of charge. I am always glad to help out a neighbor. Next, Business Bill's shop comes to me and asks that I teach them to use widget X. Now, I would be glad to. For a price.

      Monopolistic practices that push other competitors out of the server business

      Would you care to elaborate on this point? For generalization purposes, the 3 main branches of GNU/Linux stem from redhat, slackware, and debian. All of these are alive and kicking. Let's not forget SuSE. Though not as popuplar in the U.S., SuSE has garnered a substantial portion of the international market. IMHO, suse is redhat's nearest "enterprise-level" linux competitor.

      And yes, if you don't like it, your can run Debian. Or SuSE, or slackware, or any of the other 150+ distributions. Oh, you want an engineer to go along with all that piece of software? I'm sure the company that sold you your hardware will be glad to help you out. Redhat is just another choice.

      And for the record, I am a jaded linux/slashdot user. >:b

      --
      "...we dont care about the economics; we just want to be able to hack great stuff."
    8. Re:Unbelievable by Mandi+Walls · · Score: 1
      Hm. Well, Mandrake has a new version of their Corporate server product out.

      HP offers SuSE and Red Hat configurations on their servers.

      Sun will probably have to go with SuSE, because Red Hat freaking hates them and they recently abandoned their own Linux flavor.

      It's not Red Hat's fault if other Linux vendors implode. They're not out there demanding that certain apps only be available on Red Hat. They didn't do that with Oracle, who has worked closely with SuSE as well as Red Hat.

      You don't like that Red Hat and Dell are partners? Fine, buy something from HP. No one is demanding you buy anything from Red Hat.

      Of course, if you're used to having your decisions made for you by your local Microsoft Sales Rep, maybe having all these choices is just too much overload.

      --mandi

    9. Re:Unbelievable by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      It's not Red Hat's fault if other Linux vendors implode

      You don't like that Red Hat and Dell are partners? Fine, buy something from HP

      Are you for real?? I can replace 'Red Hat' here for 'Microsoft' and I'd be making the same insightful point.

      Jeez.

    10. Re:Unbelievable by labratuk · · Score: 1

      Score: -1, Pro-Microsoft
      Karma: Crappy (see above)


      Oh, oh! That's why I get moderated down! It's because everyone's biased against me! Not because I behave like an idiot! It's all your fault, not mine!

      --
      Malike Bamiyi wanted my assistance.
    11. Re:Unbelievable by labratuk · · Score: 1

      You can call me "the equalizer".

      I'm going to start lots of posts to tell people of the wonders of shit eating.

      And I'm gonna change my sig to read:

      Score: -1, Pro-Shit-Eating
      Karma: Crappy (see above)

      And then I can claim that I'm not really a twat, it's just you people are all brainwashed into Anti-Shit-Eating thoughts.

      You can call me "the equalizer".

      --
      Malike Bamiyi wanted my assistance.
    12. Re:Unbelievable by The+Bungi · · Score: 1

      Holy fuck, what hole did you crawl out of?

    13. Re:Unbelievable by The+Bungi · · Score: 1

      So you're a shit-eater? Mmmkay. I can live with that. You can have the "equalizer" title. I've used it up already.

    14. Re:Unbelievable by Mandi+Walls · · Score: 1
      No you wouldn't. If you were to replace "Red Hat" with "Microsoft", it would be "You don't like that Dell and Microsoft are partners? Fine, don't buy a computer".

      You don't get that choice with Microsoft. You buy Microsoft from HP, Dell, Gateway, whomever, that's all you're going to get, right? You still have to deal with Microsoft no matter who your hardware vendor is. You want Linux? HP is going to offer you a choice of two different distributions. Sun wants to if they can.

      How do you compare that to microsoft? Where do you get a non-Microsoft version of Windows? From any vendor?

      The difference in the Linux space is that there are dozens of possible distributions. Hardware vendors can pick and choose who they want to partner with; they're not being strong-armed into anything by the software vendor. If they pick Red Hat, SuSE, Mandrake, even freaking Lindows, it's a decision based on "who can we count on to not let our customers down" not "we have to have Windows products on all our hardware or we can't offer it on any hardware and it'll never sell".

      Red Hat isn't out attacking anyone. They don't go around buying every other Linux company just because they can. They're not making extensions to glibc or gcc or apache and refusing to let SuSE or gentoo or StickUpYourButt Linux have access to them.

      --mandi

    15. Re:Unbelievable by The+Bungi · · Score: 0
      Look, you make good points. Yes, Microsoft is the only Windows vendor, duh. Yes, there are dozens of different Linux distributions. But Red Hat is about the only one that can support it at the enterprise level, the same way Sun does with Solaris. HP doesn't play very well in that area (unless you count HP-UX, which is not Linux).

      The question here is not about choice or the l33tness factor in having ten different versions of the OS to choose from. It's about companies that want to have what they have with Microsoft. Turnkey boxes, 24x7 support, documentation, resources. Period.

      Red Hat may provide that, yes, but they're coming to realize that they need to charge money, and they need to license and they need to do a bunch of stuff - the same stuff that Microsoft gets flamed for doing. It's called "doing business".

      Heck, how many zealots are ready to give Red Hat the finger now that they've become "the evil empire" of the OSS world?

      There's an obvious dychotomy there that I find particularly ironic. That's why I post this type of stuff. "Flamebait" it ain't. But the truth hurts.

  58. RedHat raises their rates... by mattb47 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The real story underneath this all seems to be that if you want stable, long-term support for your RedHat installations, you will be forced to purchase their new Enterprise products. Support for their SOHO/Community products will be more limited, and versions will be only supported for 12 months or so.

    If you *need* the support for your servers, this might not be the worst deal.

    But for workstations, this seems to be terrible. $299 for a basic workstation? I can get Win2k Pro for $150 or so with limited support, or I can get Debian (or other various Linux distros) for free. Yes I would get good added support for that $299, but how often do you need that level of support for workstations? Buy an alternative with a longer life cycle (Win2k/XP, Linux, whatever) and buy per-incident support. Workstations are usually not monolithic -- you have a whole forest of them (tens, hundreds, thousands, depending on the size of the organization). The more workstations supported by that orginization, the less monetary sense this seems to make.

    1. Re:RedHat raises their rates... by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "$299 for a basic workstation? I can get Win2k Pro for $150 or so with limited support, or I can get Debian (or other various Linux distros) for free"

      May I remind you that you can STILL get Red Hat Linux for free?

      These are advanced offerings from Red Hat that is meant to compete against similiar advanced offerings from their competitors. If it works out remains to be seen, but Red Hat continue to be one of the (if not THE) most GPL-friendly companies around.

  59. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  60. Paying for Linux by towaz · · Score: 2, Informative

    Your not paying for Linux your paying for the support. Also companies have someone other then microsoft to point the blame at when something goes wrong... :)

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Voltaire
  61. Training Course by orpheus2000 · · Score: 1

    Redhat has training for RH-Enterprise AS here

    Mind you it's just a 5 day course. Personally, as an RHCE, I'd like there to be an "Enterprise level" certification; I don't think a regular RHCE could just jump right into the Enterprise product line and utilize every new feature. There's a lot of stuff in the course that is just not encountered if you admin a small number of boxen, such as fail-over clustering with pirahna.

    However, if the course is over $2800, I'd hate to see what the cert would cost.

  62. Does Enterprise offer Indemnity protection? by spookymonster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My company won't go to Linux until they find a vendor willing to offer indemnity protection against lawsuits claiming we're using copyrighted software. To date, Red Hat has refused to do so. Our opinion is that it's the distro's responsibility, not the end-user. Does the Enterprise edition offer anything like this?

    --
    - Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
    1. Re:Does Enterprise offer Indemnity protection? by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2, Informative

      Then you may have a problem, because most non-Linux vendors won't offer you that indemnity either. As MS customers are finding out with the SQL Server lawsuits, for example. At least with RedHat you have the ability to produce the source to prove it's not the suing party's software.

    2. Re:Does Enterprise offer Indemnity protection? by spookymonster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At least with RedHat you have the ability to produce the source to prove it's not the suing party's software.

      But that still means I'm the one wasting time and resources to defend someone else's code. If I'm using an M$ product, I may not have access to the source code, but then again, I don't need it - M$ is going to court, not me.

      --
      - Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
    3. Re:Does Enterprise offer Indemnity protection? by spookymonster · · Score: 1

      Can you provide a reference to the SQL Server lawsuits you mention? I'd like to have it in my arsenel the next time I have a one-on-one with Senior Management :).

      --
      - Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
    4. Re:Does Enterprise offer Indemnity protection? by iiioxx · · Score: 2, Informative
    5. Re:Does Enterprise offer Indemnity protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should RedHat or any other vendor offer protection from lawsuites that someone brings against you? If you are using copyrighted software and you have proof of it's orgin that should be all you need. Either way you are going to have to employ a lawyer and spend money.

  63. confusing by asv108 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Red Hat Enterprise Linux WS provides support for workstation/desktop systems with up to two CPUs and 4GB of main memory. Designed with the desktop environment in mind, Red Hat Enterprise Linux WS does not include many server applications found in Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS and Red Hat Enterprise Linux ES.

    So does this mean if I want to run a test server on my Redhat WS system, I won't find server packages on the CD? So how many flavors of Redhat are their going to be now, five? 3 Enterprise flavors, desktop, and download edition? Are they all going to use different packages? Will 8.1 download packages work on WS? So far the press releases have been really confusing, RH might want to think about clarifying what will be changed/allowed/restricted.

    The big advantage of Linux is that is supposed to be cheaper and less restrictive! I realize that Redhat comes with lots of software besides the OS, but lets face it, it is free software, so your not going to convince many hobbyists that paying $250 for Redhat WS is a bargain. I realize on the enterprise level $250/machine isn't bad, but it sure as hell isn't a bargain.

    1. Re:confusing by djtrippin · · Score: 1

      Red Hat Enterprise Linux isnt focused at the hobbyist, it is focused at the low end server and workstation market. More specifically, it's focused towards corporations. Everything the normal hobbyist, and even the advanced hobbyist, could possibly need is included in the standard Red Hat Linux platform that you can buy or download from the ditribution server and mirrors. Dont be confused, these changes in release are aimed at corporate usage.

      --
      Choose wisely you must...
  64. What I want by zyzko · · Score: 1

    While there is nothing wrong with the idea of RedHat charging whatever they want with their "enterprise" versions, what I really want is security errata for at least 3 years. I don't want no 'freakin "enterprise version" - just gime me the errata. This is not good, I like Debian, I use it at home, but migrating all the servers at work is a real PITA. While I accept that Linux is way better in many ways compared to Windows our clients necessarily don't think the same way. For them, Linux has been always the flexible, cost-efective solutions. By pricing their distribution in the same league as W2k Server RedHat really is pissing off a lot of customers.

    Just give me the errata for a smaller fee, please.

    1. Re:What I want by WetCat · · Score: 1

      Smaller fee? Use Mandrake, AltLinux, etc...
      Nobody forces you to use RedHat.

    2. Re:What I want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Red Hat Network. $60 a year per system; gives you all errata and instant access to ISOs.

      Do a bit of research, eh?

  65. Debian by ArmorFiend · · Score: 2, Funny

    my big beef I guess is the End Of Life being so short. What if I want to keep running RH7.3 for a while?

    cough *Debian* cough ;)

    1. Re:Debian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Debian rocks. But if you need an easy install with easy admin tools, try Libranet, which does a value-added package of Debian..

  66. Re:Good but not great. MS support by fprog · · Score: 1

    Well, when our IIS server broke, we had problems with different incompatible version of Windows 2000 Server, Professional, etc different version of IIS. The guy from Microsoft charged 600$/hr for the senior tech plus 400$/hr for a junior tech, all this because my stupid boss dislike Apache. Long life to stupid ASP pages. grrrrr

  67. OK, dumb question ... by gosand · · Score: 1
    I don't buy enterprise level stuff, so this may be a really dumb question - but is this a one-time or an annual fee? I see that you get a 1-year subscription to the RH Enterprise Network, but that was the only time related reference I saw.

    Is it just assumed that this is a per-year cost? If not, then I could see how this would be very advantageous over MS related products, where your licence is up for revision every year. I am guessing when you buy RedHat, you are buying it and not leasing it. If I had to make the decision, that would be a big selling point.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:OK, dumb question ... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Per server per year. They reserve the right to audit you to make sure you aren't running more servers than you licensed.

      As much as I like Red Hat, I don't think this is what Stallman had in mind when he wrote the GPL. I guess technically you are free to copy any Free software components of the product as much as you like, just not the whole package.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  68. Are you that naive? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Do you think that every company/organization that uses Linux is going to have in house programmers ready to fix any coding issue? Ugh.

    And usenet? WTF? For a REAL business?

    Dude, its 2003 not 1998.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    1. Re:Are you that naive? by fanatic · · Score: 1

      Do you think that every company/organization that uses Linux is going to have in house programmers ready to fix any coding issue? Ugh.

      No, but when an issue requiring a programmer arises, they'll be able to recruit from a much larger pool than for proprietary s/w, where you can only choose the owner of the code.

      And usenet? WTF? For a REAL business?

      Yes. The support on Usenet, for both open source and proprietary products, frequently exceeds that available from vendors, in promptness, and quality. I've seen total cluelessness from vendor reps. An intelligent person who's already been through the same problem (or similar) that you're facing is frequently much better than vendor support. And certainly cheaper.

      Dude, its 2003 not 1998.

      Yes, indeed. We no longer have money to burn and must spend it sensibly, that means not giving money away for proprietary solutions if good solutions are available for much less elsewhere.

      --
      "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
  69. Trim levels? by TKinias · · Score: 1

    Great, now we have trim levels for distros. Anti-lock brakes? Sorry, you need the EX for that. I don't care if you don't want a sunroof; EXs come with a sunroof.

    --
    In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
  70. Re:Good but not great. MS support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    You know absolutely nothing about computers, do you?

    "different incompatible version of Windows 2000 Server, Professional, etc different version of IIS"

    Fucking moron. Your IIS server didnt break, you were too stupid to use it. You deserve to pay a grand an hour to get it 'fixed' (or installed)

    Seriously, if you cant run IIS, what makes you think it's going to be easier to run Apache? A fucking chimpanzee can run IIS.

    Idiots are idiots, changing the OS doesnt make you any smarter.

  71. Selling GPL software. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    can you add/modify GPL software with proprietary code and sell it?

    Yes you can. Charge as much as you want.

    And as soon as you sell even one copy, your customer(s) can demand the source. They can then give away copies of the source, build from it, modify it, install their home-built version on extra machines, etc.

    And if your proprietary software is sufficiently closely integrated with the GPL code (see the GPL, LGPL, and their interpretations), your proprietary code also comes under the GPL. So you have to give the source to THAT to your customers, too, for them to modify, give away, or what-have-you.

    If your code is a separate add-on (rather than a modification that actually includes somebody else's GPLed code), you can additionally sell or license it under any other terms you want. It doesn't stop it from ALSO being available under the GPL - but you can make it available under other terms as well. (For instance: Letting your customer modify it and include it into some other non-GPLed system without having to GPL that.)

    You can do the same even if it DOES include GPLed code, PROVIDED you get the appropriate additional licenses from ALL the authors of the GPLed code you included. (For much GPLed code that may be very difficult or impossible.)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  72. Mindshare by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think this is going to cost Redhat mindshare as newbies (and perhaps CS departments) shy away from their expensive distros. I'm not sure how many they actually sold, but it was nice to see a boxed Redhat at BestBuy for around $50. If you don't have broadband, it's probably worth $50 for the CD's and the printed install guide.

    If the free download and the "Enterprise" what-ever are too different, it will have an impact.

    I wonder what situation this leaves Cheap Bytes and other CD copiers in?

    --
    Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
  73. Ninnle Announces Millennium Falcon Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Red Hat can fsck around with silly-assed space opera names, Ninnle can certainly do the same with bad movie titles!

  74. how long is it supported? is all pricing annual? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as is supposed to be supported for 5 years, but i can't find a declaration for it.

    i want to know how long errata will be made available for es basic server, and if i will have to pay $350/yr for that service.

  75. Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Wee · · Score: 1
    I gladly have the $60 annual on autorenew, because I have the choice to run one for pay, the others for free.

    If you automatically renew your support, you might wind up paying for support you won't be able to use. If you're running 7.x or 8.0, your support will run out on December 31st of this year because Red Hat has EOLed everything which is currently in release as of that date (6.2 errata support ends at the end of March). I'd either:

    a) Make sure to upgrade when 8.1 comes out
    b) Turn off autorenew and pay for up2date 12 months at a crack, coincident with new releases

    Also make sure to upgrade as soon as 8.2 comes out, as 8.1 will no longer be supported 12 months after release. You don't want to pay for support you're not getting. In order to continue to get errata support, you'll have to keep up this cycle, ad inifitum, or buy Advance Workstation (which has 3 year support, IIRC). In other words, you stay on the upgrade treadmill or lose your bargain. At least you have a choice, like you say.

    Best of luck to you. Don't upgrade your kernel by hand, and remember to always install software from RPM, and backup and custom configuration stuff. You don't want to have to completely re-image a machine just because you have to upgrade the OS in order to get support you've paid for, do you?

    -B

    --

    Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

    1. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Best of luck to you. Don't upgrade your kernel by hand, and remember to always install software from RPM, and backup and custom configuration stuff. You don't want to have to completely re-image a machine just because you have to upgrade the OS in order to get support you've paid for, do you?

      Actually, up2date defaults to NOT upgrading the kernel. You CAN force update the kernel. I have done this twice (on a test box, while sitting in front of it) and it worked great. rebooted and it actually worked. but generally it tells you it is skipping the kernel because it is marked to skip.

      As to them not supporting after a year, I need to check into this. I use, and PREFER 7.2. I have installed 8.0 on a couple machines, and don't like it quite as well, perhaps because I am just used to 7.2.

      I worry about upgrading my RENTED RACKSHACK boxes. Its not advisable to update a box that is located 1300 miles away via ssh.

      Now if they follow thru with their EOL products 12 months after new release, then my opinion of RH would change, and I would be looking at other distros. Outside of building new kernels, which i can do by hand, i see no reason to switch from 7.2, period. there are no new 'features', even with the kernel, that I give a damn about on my web server. The only thing 8.0 offers is Squirrelmail as a stock item, but i already have it installed on 7.2

      As to installing by RPM only, I pretty much do anyway, except stuff I build, which is updated less frequently. For security, my concerns are the command RPM packages anyway, proftp, apache, sendmail, openssl, ssh, etc. I never manually upgrade a package unless its for security or the bug directly affects me.

      To be honest, I would end up keeping 7.2 (until i NEEDED higher) and just manually updating the major packages anyway, rather than upgrade to a version that I don't want or need. Then again, Im the guy who wants to run an updated 95 instead of XP on my personal computer.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    2. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Wee · · Score: 4, Informative
      Actually, up2date defaults to NOT upgrading the kernel. You CAN force update the kernel. I have done this twice (on a test box, while sitting in front of it) and it worked great. rebooted and it actually worked. but generally it tells you it is skipping the kernel because it is marked to skip.

      I wasn't very clear in my original statement. Get a testing box, install 7.2. Now download, patch, configure, build, and install a new kernel. Now put a 7.3 CD in the drive, reboot, select "Upgrade" from the installer and see how far you get.

      I had to do these very steps to get a better VM and a new IDE (a driver that let me use DMA) driver for a machine at work. In order to get that box functioning, I basically had to make it "un-upgradeable". Therefore when support runs out in December, I will have to either:

      a) re-image it, and reconfigure everything on it (at which point I should just buy Advanced Workstation, right?)
      b) upgrade packages by hand
      c) twiddle with up2date's config so that it think it's a newer release
      d) done nothing, switch distros, hope, use apt4rpm, etc.

      You wil be forced to do something. Red Hat has decided it.

      As to them not supporting after a year, I need to check into this.

      From http://redhat.com/apps/support/errata/:

      Beginning with the 8.0 release, Red Hat will provide errata maintenance for at least 12 months from the date of initial release. At certain times, Red Hat may extend errata maintenance for certain popular releases of the operating system. End of Life dates for errata maintenance for currently supported products are listed below:

      Red Hat Linux 8.0 (Psyche) December 31, 2003
      Red Hat Linux 7.3 (Valhalla) December 31, 2003
      Red Hat Linux 7.2 (Enigma) December 31, 2003
      Red Hat Linux 7.1 (Seawolf) December 31, 2003

      I use, and PREFER 7.2. I have installed 8.0 on a couple machines, and don't like it quite as well, perhaps because I am just used to 7.2.

      Pardon my French, but tough shit. You'll have to either constantly upgrade, buy AW, or you'll upgrade everything by hand. See the list above. My big beef with Red Hat is that in their move to get everyone on AW/AS, they have forgotten the "little guy" like you and me. You don't even have the option to pay for errata support, no matter how badly you need it. Even thought they'll still be making packages for the same release of AW (which will be almost completely compatible with the free version of Red Hat), they won't be making them available to people who want to install packages by hand. It's not just that up2date will stop working -- there won't be any packages anymore.

      I worry about upgrading my RENTED RACKSHACK boxes. Its not advisable to update a box that is located 1300 miles away via ssh.

      Agreed. That's a sticky issue. I'd make sure someone around there will be able to powercycle if you need them too. I'd also see about getting a failover box or a hot spare similarly configured.

      Now if they follow thru with their EOL products 12 months after new release, then my opinion of RH would change, and I would be looking at other distros.

      Their EOL plans are certain and definite. Start looking. I've been looking at KRUD (although I wonder where they will get packages), SuSE and Gentoo. The KRUD people, BTW, are evaluating EOL contracts to support older Red Hat releases. That may be a way out for you (and me), provided it's cheap enough.

      Outside of building new kernels, which i can do by hand, i see no reason to switch from 7.2, period.

      Really? Again, tough shit. Red Hat has made that decision for you. Or, at very least, forced you to decide. That force comes from business needs, not your needs. I'm personally fed up with Red Hat. I've been using it since 4.2, and I own RHAT stock. The thing I liked about Linux was that decisi

      --

      Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

    3. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      thanks for the info, I went and checked, and you are 100% correct.

      wasn't very clear in my original statement. Get a testing box, install 7.2. Now download, patch, configure, build, and install a new kernel. Now put a 7.3 CD in the drive, reboot, select "Upgrade" from the installer and see how far you get.

      I have never actually upgraded linux, partially due to the old days, when they recommended you simply replace instead of upgrade, so I haven't tried this, although I believe you.

      If you roll your own kernels, (assuming newer version) can't you just backup the system map, and then delete the new kernel and tree before you upgrade? so it 'doesn't know' you rolled your own? I never delete old kernels or trees anyway.

      Oh, and I wouldn't try to upgrade from remote anyway, no way. I am HOPING we will move into our new building by july, with a shiny new T1. I have two dual p3/1g, and three dual ppro200's that I will setup to replace everything. lots of redunancy (the ppros actually still scream, IBMs, all scsi). We will only get about 30k to 100k users a month on this system (seasonal) and we outsource the ecommerce. Now I just need an OS to put on them.....

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    4. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Wee · · Score: 1
      If you roll your own kernels, (assuming newer version) can't you just backup the system map, and then delete the new kernel and tree before you upgrade? so it 'doesn't know' you rolled your own? I never delete old kernels or trees anyway.

      You know, I think the upgrade installer looks in the RPM database to see what kernel you have. It might try to find out via 'uname -r' or something though.

      I've had more than a couple machines which had the stock kernels fail during upgrade. They usually barfed during dependancy checking (after you pick "Select packages to upgrade"). The machines were never hosed, but I wasted a lot of time. The reason was that I had install stuff (like apache) that didn't come from rpm.

      Oh, and I wouldn't try to upgrade from remote anyway, no way. I am HOPING we will move into our new building by july, with a shiny new T1. I have two dual p3/1g, and three dual ppro200's that I will setup to replace everything. lots of redunancy (the ppros actually still scream, IBMs, all scsi). We will only get about 30k to 100k users a month on this system (seasonal) and we outsource the ecommerce. Now I just need an OS to put on them.....

      I've only done one remote kernel upgrade. Did it from source. Staring at the xterm window waiting for ping to say the machine was responding was a tense couple minutes... :-)

      And I hear on the old hardware. I have a K6-3/450 that is still in use and works just great (although it doesn't see as much load as yours). Boatloads of RAM is the key.

      -B

      --

      Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

    5. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Rogain · · Score: 0

      I had to do these very steps to get a better VM and a new IDE (a driver that let me use DMA) driver for a machine at work. In order to get that box functioning, I basically had to make it "un-upgradeable". Therefore when support runs out in December, I will have to either:

      a) re-image it, and reconfigure everything on it (at which point I should just buy Advanced Workstation, right?)
      b) upgrade packages by hand
      c) twiddle with up2date's config so that it think it's a newer release
      d) done nothing, switch distros, hope, use apt4rpm, etc.

      You wil be forced to do something. Red Hat has decided it.


      Or you could just (apt-)get debian.

      --
      The current Slashdot moderation system is made by gay communists!
    6. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by hanwen · · Score: 1
      I wasn't very clear in my original statement. Get a testing box, install 7.2. Now download, patch, configure, build, and install a new kernel. Now put a 7.3 CD in the drive, reboot, select "Upgrade" from the installer and see how far you get.

      What are you whining about? I always run nonstandard kernels, and I've upgraded both my home machine and work machine a dozen of times without any problems, using the procedure that you describe.

      --

      Han-Wen Nienhuys -- LilyPond

    7. Re:Don't forget to upgrade your OS by Wee · · Score: 1
      What are you whining about? I always run nonstandard kernels, and I've upgraded both my home machine and work machine a dozen of times without any problems, using the procedure that you describe.

      I'm using a machine right now that, save for a kernel and some drivers, couldn't be upgraded using the procedure that I describe. From where I'm typing, it's stating a fact, not whining.

      Oh yeah, would it kill ya to at least try to be partially civil? Jeez. I swear the Net has made people mean...

      -B

      --

      Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

  76. And that's CHEAP! by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    I'm just a little fuzzy on what's being paid for.

    mostly it's the 5 years service and support that is being paid for from what I can figure out


    Note that five years of enterprise-class support for an enterprise-class server product is REALLY CHEAP!

    Enterprise-class means that a business can trust it to perform mission-critical functions and preserve mission-critical data (such as recievables). For, say, a phone company's real-time call accounting application that could be several million bucks per hour of outage. (All the calls are free.) For, say, a commodities broker that could be MUCH more.

    Also the vendor certification program for hardware is probably part of why enterprises would pay in.

    Also the fact that a major support player has beaten it into sufficiently good shape that they CAN support it for $160/year (minimum 5 years), and WITHOUT charging another arm and leg every time somebody tries to USE the support. That shows confidence - implying low bug rates and easy configuration.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:And that's CHEAP! by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      I get nervous about an computer-related product that I am prepaying in advance for five years. It might seem cheap, but what are the chances that particular install is still going to be useful and in service five years from now? It seems like a long-term committment that suddenly becomes expensive if anything significant happens in the next five years. And when has the computing biz stayed that stable for five years? I mean, this isn't your "IBM Cobol mainframe in the air conditioned room in a bank" kind of gear we're talking about here.

  77. increased support responsibilities? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    USER: I have a problem with xyz

    REDHAT SUPPORT: Response 5 minutes later..instead of 1 day later..
    sorry we can not fix that because project xyz maintainer will not fix it..


    What is this support thing..marketing and vaporware..me thinks it stinks..

    1. Re:increased support responsibilities? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there any truth to this poster's claims? Anyone call Red Hat support before?

  78. Linux In frikin flation ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Redhat costs more than XP ???

    Redhat Linux :
    $179 Basic Edition

    Windows XP Home Edition :
    $172 (zipstorage.com)

    Uh, I think the non-monpolist needs to lower the price a little.

  79. What? by SlashChick · · Score: 1

    "I simply cannot bring myself to pay the up2date tax when apt-get is free and just plain works better."

    Er, what? up2date is free. Red Hat requires you to register the system with Red Hat to obtain updates and fill out a a survey every few months to keep your system up to date.

    If filling out a survey isn't your thing, or you have several systems to maintain, Red Hat provides unlimited access to errata, plus the newest release ISOs, for $60 a year per system. That's FIVE DOLLARS A MONTH. I'm sure you spend a heck of a lot more time than that "tracking down and trying to install release-specific RPMs." If your company can't afford to spend five dollars a month on updates for their servers, it has larger problems.

    It honestly sounds like you haven't really researched your options. Do yourself a favor and go check out the purchase options for Red Hat errata. Seriously, $60 a year is a deal for access to errata plus the newest ISOs!

    1. Re:What? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the 12 month End of Life is still terrible, and not viable. Hey Red Hat, how about letting us pay $75/system/year and giving us 2 years or something.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  80. All of this... by mcrbids · · Score: 1

    and none of it answers my real question(s)!

    What would it cost to get up2date to continue to work on my Red Hat 7.1, 7.2, and 7.3 systems?

    I standardized on RH 7.x because of their apparent willingness to support systems with up2date - notice that they are still supporting RH 6.2!

    But, with this news, I have to say, I'm quite upset. I've just finished deploying the last RH 7.2 system and now I have to - immediately - start using 8.0?

    This is smelling quite unpleasant.

    -Ben

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  81. Re:Neato but Here is my ;int cent=2; by sydres · · Score: 1

    actually I think the reason why there are those that still are hanging on is the fact that they all bought ms, sun, ibm solutions back in the dot com era and really are not ready for a change.
    Therefore companies Like Redhat, Mandrake, are just moving into the older markets (those that bought prior to that dot com environment) Who really do need to update. and those who are just feeling the pressure of a tight economy but have no choice but update.

  82. My take by bogie · · Score: 1

    For the "home" user right now linux's user base consists of users who are technically savy, these users probably won't care if once a year they have to upgrade.

    Then you have say small or even medium businesses who are trying linux because, hey its free. Red Hat is pulling out of this market and that's something I'm very concerned about.

    Basically regardless of whatever else you want to say about linux the real value lies in the fact its free. Of course there are other costs and factors involved, but really the price being $0 is the initial draw. Philosophically I think linux and its updates should be free forever(ie longer than one year). That's just the way I am and its how I've viewed Linux since I started using it with Red Hat 5.0. In general the way Linux is becoming semi-proprietary and non-free its not only disturbing, its something I'm just not interested in. The world needs and deserves a Free OS that they can rely on for years of faithful service. Isn't that what Linux was always about? Or am I now after all these years out of touch with today's Linux? Is it time to move to FreeBSD? They won't ever become nonfree or limit updates? Right??

    Knowing that Red Hat is going to a one year support plan who in their right mind is going to use it anymore for the types of uses we've taken for granted? I'm sure not going to be deploying it anymore.

    Red Hat is free to do whatever they want but small shops, churches, charities etc who have relied on Red Hat can no longer do so. After 8.1 has its run I'll be moving on to another distro(probably Debian) and also move to deploying another linux at any clients. Actually at this very moment my father's small law firm is finally about to join the 90's and get a server for his peer to peer lan. Up until recently there was no doubt it was going to be a Red Hat box, now there's no chance of that.

    Red Hat doesn't owe me or anyone else ANYTHING. But at the same time its sad that I can no longer rely on a company I've relied on for so many years. It's kind of like the "free" ride is over and part of Linux has changed forever. There's no one to blame but even if there was I don't think it would make me feel any better.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:My take by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://freshrpms.net/apt/

    2. Re:My take by bobaferret · · Score: 1

      You know, this is crazy. I a small shop, and I go out of my way to make sure that I'm using the newest version of RedHat at all times. except for one 6.2 machine that's on my TODO list..:) It's not like you have to pay for the new versions or anything. We do as a sign of support, and those free hats.

      As for shops with lots of systems, ie labs etc. NFS and NIS make most of this irrelevant. switch to remote GDM's and then you only have one machine to upgrade. Besides, a year of free support is pretty good.

      This also seems to run in line with developments in the community. New kernel every couple of years, new GLIBC, etc etc...thing that make maintaing older versions a pain in the ass. I imagine that most of the errata will last for a few years. Most od their package dependencies are >= 8.0 not = 8.1 They may stop supporting 8.0 directly, but most of the 8.x packages will continue to work.

      -jj-

  83. Okay, so let me get this straight ..... by Usagi_yo · · Score: 1
    Since the advent of linux, Sun Micro now offers Solaris for free (if under 8 processors), small disk fees apply.

    Now since the advent of Solaris being free, Red Hat has now decided to charge $2400 for an entreprise edition of Linux?

    Go figure, damned if ya do and damned if ya don't.

    Usagi Yo

  84. Stratus x86 fault-tolerance isn't BS/marketing... by LinuxParanoid · · Score: 1

    I call bullshit and marketing.

    Well, nice try. But you're wrong. Do a bit more research.

    There are custom motherboards involved, custom low-level software involved, and I believe custom chipsets. Stratus figured that maybe they could cut their+customer's costs by using commodity CPUs (and memory and peripherals, etc) back 5-10 years ago. I'm not sure it ever sold that well because people buying million-dollar servers don't benefit that much from shaving a few thousand off the CPU. But the binary compatibility is nice.

    Also, with Itanium and Itanium 2, there is support for a lot of this fancy hardware error recovery stuff in Intel-based chipsets for the first time (see the E8870 chipset docs and look for "Advanced Platform RASUM".)

    --LP

  85. the "Free Operating System" by SwedishChef · · Score: 1

    The least expensive Linux environment I could find on RH's site was $179 for the WS version. The least expensive "server" was $349 for their "basic edition" of ES. This differentiation between the server and workstation formats is a trend I see throughout the commercial distros. SuSE has gone so far as to remove functionality from its basic offering (version 8.1) in what seems to me to be an effort to direct us towards buying their spendy "server" product ($800+)

    RedHat's pricing for the Itanium processors was not given (it's determined by OEMs), but a small blurb announced that the (cheap) version 7.3 for the Itanium has been discontinued!!!

    While I can't fault these corporations for at least trying to turn a profit, the trend has caused me to step back and re-evaluate the use of Linux for very small business file servers. The last four servers I built have been freeBSD and it looks very much like that will continue until they, too, decide that they can gouge the customers with insanely high prices for what has been, up until recently, a "free operating system".

    My next desktop will almost certainly be Debian.

    I wonder what Linus thinks of all this.

    --
    No one ever had to evacuate a city because the solar panels broke!
    1. Re:the "Free Operating System" by Ancil · · Score: 1
      FreeBSD provides a support contract? No? Then you're not really comparing apples to apples, are you?

      If you don't want any support from RedHat, just get a copy of RedHat and install it on as many machines as you'd like. Heck, if you're really cheap, copy it from someone instead of buying it.

    2. Re:the "Free Operating System" by Junta · · Score: 1

      Well, if you are using freebsd, and accetp the terms of support with FreeBSD, I can find a cheaper 'Linux environment' on redhat's site, ftp.redhat.com, cost: $0.

      Red Hat is selling peace of mind and support. Companies that don't want to pay over 50k a year for someone who is decent with Linux or Unix to maintain their servers, but instead 30-40k for someone who can 'wing it', but the support contract is needed for when the cheap administrator's 'winging it' fails. A large number of businesses find this an acceptable compromise. Those who really want 24x7 guaranteed support within a few minutes pay for the real administrators, the rest can settle for a support contract supplementing a mediocre administrator.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    3. Re:the "Free Operating System" by small_dick · · Score: 1

      I clicked the "buy" button and you can order RedHat 8.0 personal edition for $39.95

      RedHat Store

      --


      Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
      See my user info for links.
    4. Re:the "Free Operating System" by codingOgre · · Score: 1

      50k a year? Poor chap.

      --
      Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement. --Red Hot Chili Peppers, Californication
  86. Windows Server 2003 price comparison by nrc · · Score: 1

    Here are links for pricing on RedHat Enterprise Blah Blah and Windows Server 2003.

    RedHat seems very competitive at most levels especially considering that there are no CALs to worry about and I don't think the Windows prices include the kind of service included in the RH Standard editions.

    But where RedHat really slips in this price structure is at the bottom end web server pricing. The cheapest RH server you can get is $349, which is dangerously close to Windows Server 2003 web edtion at $399.

    1. Re:Windows Server 2003 price comparison by cranos · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ummm no the cheapest Web Server package you can get from RedHat? Free. Just download the ISO's and burn away.

    2. Re:Windows Server 2003 price comparison by nrc · · Score: 1


      Is there someplace you can download the Redhat ES ISOs without paying? If not then you're stuck with regular Redhat and a product life cycle that most folks running web servers aren't going to want to have to deal with.

    3. Re:Windows Server 2003 price comparison by cranos · · Score: 1

      With the standard Red Hat you get everything you need to run an enterprise web server, Apache, Perl, PHP, PostGres and MySQL as well as enough dev tools to keep you happy for a while.

      The other thing to consider is that their are alternatives to the RedHat system, Gnomes Red Carpet Updater is one as is atp4rpm, the other thing you could do is build from source.

      Any moderately skilled Admin should be able to set up something to keep the updates coming. Failing that you could always migrate to another Distro, Suse or Mandrake or any of the other two dozen or so Distros.

      I do not believe that it is not possible to build a server or workstation from the downloadable ISO's that is not equivelant or better than the ES.

  87. So how long before SCO sues them by geekee · · Score: 1

    If red hat makes moeny from this stuff, SCO will probably claim the linux code was based on their IP and sue them too.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
  88. what world? Pricing themselves out of the market? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Informative

    $700 for MS win 2k server? what world do you live in?

    With the MS Win2k server all you get is the server and 5 accesses! No support [MS phone support is more $$ than phone SE#!], magrinal quality updates, and a system that cuts you off after 5 connections!

    The $700 license doesn't include Software Assurance. It dosen't include email or management tools either! For an MS network you will pay another $150 per box just to connect to the server [actual windows licenses not included!] Just posted at HardOCP was MS finally changing their licensing to allow multiple partitions on the same box. Previously, you had to pay "per instance per processor" of Windows on your boxes!

    In short, It's a steal. If you can't see that you obviously don't actually work in IT to see how bad MS has gotten! As you learn your way around, you get experience that doesn't go away--then you can fully support you own boxes for real savings. [even after your big raise for saving the Co $$$]

  89. Red Hat Small Business Edition... or else! by gamartin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I predict Red Hat will round out it's product line with a Small Business Edition with the following features:

    1. Slow releases -- small businesses don't care about bleeding edge features
    2. Security/errata updates -- small businesses need someone else to monitor these complex issues
    3. Support available for at least 3 years -- small businesses do care about stability
    4. No per-machine licensing restrictions -- small businesses look to linux for cost savings and will not tolerate per-machine licensing; product must be installable on multiple machines to realize cost savings
    5. Metered support options -- small businesses are willing to pay for actual support services used
    6. No compliance audits -- small businesses do not have time for that type of crap

    Why will Red Hat do this?

    1. Already producing slow releases for Enterprise Editions
    2. Already producing security/errata updates for other products
    3. Already doing long-lived support for Enterprise Editions
    4. No per-machine licensing because small businesses absolutely demand it
    5. Metered support is a compromise on support costs acceptable to small business
    6. Small businesses will not tolerate compliance audits

    This is a warning to Red Hat: you are alienating your small business customers! Give me a product that meets my business needs as outlined above, or I am going to take my business elsewhere.

    You have been warned.

    1. Re:Red Hat Small Business Edition... or else! by anonymous+cupboard · · Score: 1
      I like your suggestions but the current RHN model won't really hack the multiple systems model. Each system that you have registered with RHN ultimately costs RedHat bandwidth. I would suggest that if a system is designated as a local cache and only that pulls updates, then the additional system costs should be waived (or be nominal, say $5 for registering the profile). If I have ten systems, then I'm likely to call RH Support more often than with one system, so they can make their money on the calls.

      I'm not sure whether three years ongoing support for the small bsuiness version is doable, but I reckon two is.

  90. Sod that for a lark by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    Looks like I'll be putting Sun boxes in instead. And I don't particularly like Sun boxes.

    Cheaper. Who would have thought.

    With Sun support, I get hardware and software support. Still have to pay the hardware support with RH.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  91. This is a difficult sell by jregel · · Score: 1

    I'm working on pushing Linux as a viable server operating system alongside our Solaris and AIX servers and while I recognise that Red Hat are still finding their feet with regards to the enterprise, our experience so far is making a serious deployment quite difficult.

    The reason is that our first systems for web usage used Red Hat 7.3, some of which we have updated to 8.0. Along the way, Red Hat announced that these systems would not have long term support, and servers should be using Advanced Server (at significantly more cost, but ultimately not a problem, just a bit of a shock for the PHB who thought that Linux was "free" (as in cost)). So we bought a copy of AS to do our testing on. Now we are faced with an upgrade and our test cycle is still at its initial stage.

    Now AS is being replaced by ES and AS is the new high spec version. I am in favour of these more business focused ideas as I think it will help Linux adoption, but all these changes are hurting us trying to push the server product as being rarely changing (comparable with Solaris etc).

    Yeah, I know we can still support our older systems, blah, blah, blah, but if you think that's how the business world works (and wants to work), you're mistaken.

  92. Re:Why do people continue to use red hat? by Karn · · Score: 1

    I've been running a stock 2.4.20 kernel with the preempt patches on my 8.0 desktop for a few days now..

    I wish someone would have told me I couldn't use a stock kernel before I compiled and ran it!

    --


    Why do I keep typing pythong?
  93. enterprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm sorry but as soon as people start using phrases like "enterprise", "mission-critical" and "deployment" i'm already out the room because that kind of marketing no-meaning bollocks-for-suits termanology makes me come out in a nasty rash rather than feel important (which i suspect is it's intended effect)

    all i care about is that my web site (serving around 10 million dynamic pages a month) has run without a glitch since it was put on a box running standard rh 7.2 some 8 months ago

    (soon to be running standard debian by the look of it)

  94. Does that mean by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Red Hat will come out and fix stuff that breaks? Or will they talk a receptionist through it on the phone? We're still going to need the in-house guys.

  95. It's all about the pricing... by Quixadhal · · Score: 2, Insightful

    $2500 USD a year for 24/7 tech support with a 1 hour response time is well worth it IF you're a business that is making lots of money, and thus has lots of customers, and cannot afford downtime.

    $800 USD a year is worth it IFF you're a medium to large company which is doing well and has a good established client base. A little downtime is acceptable, but tech support is still vital so it's as minimal as possible.

    $60 USD a year is the price they should sell Red Hat Linux at with up2date support, and perhaps a month of phone support to let new sysadmins call in with setup questions. This, almost anyone can afford, and it's a good bargin *IF* you get permenant access to errata.

    I work for a startup company, we cannot afford the $800 price point for Enterprise Server, and we have competant people here who don't need phone support (well, once in a blue moon for things like PERCRAID3 controllers...), but without the up2date access... it's not worth $5.

    Red Hat.... you are in a position that Bill Gates wishes he was in. You can afford to charge big money for all the support that costs you money to maintain, AND you can still collect peanuts from individuals who would like an easy-to-maintain system that isn't windows. Wise up!

    Windows XP is something like $300 retail, and it will have a good 5 years of free online updates. That works out to about $50 a year plus $50 for the box. Multiply that by a few million home users, and that's the market you're ignoring.

    Think about it... you already do the work to generate the errata, all you need to do is keep mirror sites up to date (most mirrors do this automatically), and keep your up2date network functioning.

  96. Current - Redhat Up2date Server Clone by Karn · · Score: 3, Informative

    I saw it mentioned briefly before, but I think most people have missed it. I saw it mentioned some time ago on Linux.com:

    Current is an open-source implementation of an up2date server.

    I've used it, and it does work, however I'm waiting for multple channel functionality and some other features before I switch to using it instead of apt.

    --


    Why do I keep typing pythong?
  97. support by zogger · · Score: 1

    --maybe find a local person who will work per incident and be on call for you? That might be a less expensive option. Heck there's tons of guys here on slashdot are unemployed or underemployed, maybe you can find a part timer on call here.

  98. Already do that, but... by rklrkl · · Score: 1
    ...in theory, you don't even have to pay for just one system (they give you one machine on a "demo" account for free - though they ask you to fill in a survey and validate your e-mail address every 60 days) if you want to be a tight-wad.

    The snags with using the "one download and spread it to all the others" are:

    • You can only handle one OS release that way. Have 7.3 and 8.0 on your network ? You'll need to register 2 machines (yep, time to dig out your Webmail accounts if you're still a cheapskate) - one for 7.3 and another for 8.0.

    • You need a way to "override" the Red Hat versions of some packages easily (I figured a way to do that with my script without having to hack around with the up2date config) - e.g. the infamous xmms without MP3 support RPMs in 8.0 - you want the MP3-enabled ones from Guru Labs of course.

    • You need to obsolete superseded RPMs automatically in your download filestore (again, I worked that out myself).

    • You need a way to distribute "local" RPMs (i.e. stuff that doesn't come with the RH CDs or with the up2date stuff, e.g. Opera, Java and so on) - I worked out how to do that as well :-) Mind you, even with multiple RHN subs, there's still no easy way to do this (RHN should allow you specify additional "local" RPMs on your filestore that are installed on all registered machines).

    • If you didn't pay, you'll need a cron job to download the RHN RPMs at 4.00am or so, otherwise you probably won't get connected during the day.

    My solution used an NFS directory to store the downloaded RPMs (but an rsync to local filestore on each slave machine would be equally good) and there's also some gotchas to work out (like creating soft-links in the master machine's /var/spool/up2date dir to link across each RPM there to your downloaded central copy [to fool up2date into thinking it's downloaded it already], plus remembering to do "up2date --nox --packages" on your master machine after installing the downloaded RPMs on it, so that RHN know about your updated RPM setup).

  99. real prices by sirshannon · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Windows 2000 Server, Standard Edition, with 5 CALs = $999 suggested retail price.

  100. -1, buy a text ad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The submission queue is no place for shilling products.

  101. no free lunch by Rick+BigNail · · Score: 1

    Bottom line, there is no free lunch.

    Hopefully Redhat is going to grow and become profitable, then maybe they would come back and provide some products to small business/non-profit market.

    Between the time, some smaller companies should be able to fill the gap, i.e. provide security updates to out-of-date rh version.

    BTW, if you are open-source supporter, there is no surprise here. Since proprietary software is not evil, Redhat has done nothing wrong -- maybe except the audit part, but no one is forced to buy their software either.

    And if you are free software supporter, then there is still the freedom to support out-of-date redhat distributions.

    And if you (myself included) are cheap ...

  102. You're a retard then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's why you check for compatibility of all of your components *before* you buy the system. And why you install the OS yourself -- and pay $50 or whatever for media and docs so you don't have to burn your own copies.

    For roughly $5,000 you can get a Linux fileserver with a higher capacity than what NetApp will sell you for $25,000. Sure, you don't get all of the neat features of a NetApp necessarily. But your price per gig is a lot lower. And you can't be a retard.

  103. one thing MS is good about is... by rxed · · Score: 0

    I used to work for MS tech support. We had open hands and no time limits per call. Not many companies can afford this. I think the average time you can spend (in ohter companies) per call is around 7 min. After 7 min company is loosing money (SBC/Yahoo stat's). To avoid this some companies introduced 'one problem per call' policy. Nobody can _afford_ to support people as MS.

  104. there is no price hike by itsdave · · Score: 1

    they just seem to have eliminated the "basic" version which was $600, the premium has always been $2500.00

  105. Another RedHat edition... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    AS? ES? WS?

    BS.

  106. What is RedHat thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RedHat is loosing 32 servers at $60.00/year for errata downloads. We are currently making plans to go to FreeBSD. This will come back to bite RedHat! Most people running RedHat DO NOT need any of their support...RedHat realizes this. So, if we pay the $11,000.00/year they want for our servers we are basically throwing $9,000.00 down the drain and they provide me no more service then the $1,900.00/year I am already paying.

    My sysadmin is so upset over this he wants to make the move away from RedHat IMMEDIATELY!

    1. Re:What is RedHat thinking? by seb249 · · Score: 1

      To be honest that was my first reaction as well and to some extent i still think that. Im a system administrator for a relatively small company (22 servers) Running a mix of Mandrake Redhat (i started to bring this in but have sort of cooled a bit) and Sco Unix *shudder* Most the Redhat boxes are running 7.2 patched and up to date etc etc. I like the 7.2 release and i dont particularly want to upgrade when the machines are doing their jobs reliably and without a problem. As most of you know when you set up a server with the base OS there is extensive customisation to bring the machine into a production environment. This in iteself provides a good reason to not be upgrading so often as we all have better things to do than rebuilding machines over and over. Anyway i digress I am starting to look at this in a slightly different light. As has been said before we dont actually have to rely on RedHat for support. I myself have decided that i am going to get more into working with the source and do more of the work myself. Hell i know that i will learn things to boot. As things stand though the current RedHat products offer small to medium business little. And this move has made me re evaluate things.

    2. Re:What is RedHat thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are in the same boat as us. We have never called RedHat and never will. Our concern is that we can not be updating our servers every 6-12 months for obvious reasons.

      What we need is the errata updates and notifications and we are willing to pay for it. We had been thinking of going to FreeBSD for quite some time for better performance and this may have been the push we needed.

      I wonder how many other people are out there thinking like us?

  107. Timelines for conventional UNIX enterprise feature by LinuxParanoid · · Score: 1

    My earlier comments: [Linux is still missing] things like hot-swap memory, hot-swap CPUs, memory failure resiliency (OS quits using memory if recoverable but warning-sign single-bit ECC memory errors get too great), kernel hot-patching, multipath IO, workload management stuff, and ever-more SMP/NUMA scalability. ... Sun/HP/IBM were calling their Unix offerings five years ago 'enterprise' without having any of those features (even though the mainframe mostly did.)

    Response: I'm afraid you're mistaken. Sun, HP, and IBM have had all of those features for much longer than 5 years

    OK, I respect you a lot but I have to differ. I stand by my statement, although I might qualify it just a tad by turning my "without having any of those features" into a "without having nearly any of those features." I went and looked stuff up to check my memory. According to my papers, 6 years ago was AIX 4.2, HP-UX 10.10, Solaris 2.51.

    Hot swap CPUs/memory were not out then for any of those vendors (one potential caveat below). 4.5 years ago we had AIX 4.3, HP-UX 11, Solaris 2.6. The first Unix vendor I remember starting to hype that stuff (and they would hype it if they had it, right?) was HP, with HP-UX's memory resilience which showed up in HP-UX 11 in September 1997. HP-UX 11 could also detect certain types CPU failures and notify the admin to shut down the processor, but this was not quite hot swap; it was swap-at-next-reboot. Likewise, IBM had some processor 'resilience' at that time. I think Sun was the first major UNIX vendor to have hot-swap CPUs, with Solaris 2.6 on its Ultra Enterprise 10000-only servers in 1997. I don't remember if the UE10000 ran Solaris 2.5 or not (perhaps you were closer to that as a Solaris admin?) but I really doubt hot-plug CPUs was in there any earlier, "much longer than 5 years" like back in the Solaris 2.4 and earlier days.

    Sun also introduced multipathing IO to the high-end UNIX environment with the E10000s, and the other vendors followed within a couple years. HP had a tool called Process Resource Manager for workload management for a long time, maybe even back in 1995; I don't recall when a comparable offering from Sun came out, and I don't think IBM's workload manager came out until 1998 or 1999. In terms of SMP scalability, 5 years ago in late 1996/early 1997 UNIX vendors were showing off 8 and 12-way TPC-C SMP benchmarks and maybe one of them had a 16-way benchmark out, but you didn't see 20, 32 and 64-way benchmarking till later after they had worked a bunch of kinks out.

    Anyway, I think saying Sun, IBM and HP Unix offerings had "all those features" for "much longer than 5 years" is just misremembering. I'm open to correction however.

    --LP

  108. Linux and Storage Sucks by superpulpsicle · · Score: 0

    Ever try putting Linux on a SAN and put oracle on it. If you have worked with solaris and windows, you'd know that these two are a walk in the park compared to linux. Everything ranging from bad incompatible JDK versions of oracle, to absolutely bs kernel compiling to get an HBA working with a SAN. Seriously, linux does not play well with ANY real corporate toys the like of NetAPP, EMC, HDS, Oracle... the list goes on. Linux is hobbiest linux, fun but definitely not mission critical.

    1. Re:Linux and Storage Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't agree. We have had FAR more uptime with Linux than with Windows. When we switched to Linux from Windows we immediately went to 99.999% uptime and didn't have the MS SQL lock-ups we were experiencing under Windows.

      In no way is this a slight on Windows or Solaris but Linux is only non-mission critical in the hands of someone that doesn't know what they are doing...much like Windows and Solaris!

  109. KRUD is at www.tummy.com by mnmlst · · Score: 1

    KRUD (Kevin's Redhat Uber Distribution) is a growing phenomenon spreading out of Colorado, for those who might not know.

    --
    In principio erat Verbum.
  110. You get what you pay for. by steevo.com · · Score: 1

    Major league hardware like a quad Xeon IBM x360 is a significant investment (the last one I bought was about $60,000), and a big enterprise (there's that word again) switch can be almost as much. Large scale, mission critial services cost money. Red Hat's Enterprise AS is just a small portion of TCO.

    Red Hat provides software, and the service behind it at many levels. They are just scaling up to a specific demand.

  111. wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that is only for the redhat channels, not the redhat es/as channels.

  112. Re:Timelines for conventional UNIX enterprise feat by illumin8 · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I shouldn't have said "much longer than 5 years". I was mainly thinking of the E10K, which as you've stated, was released in 1997. It supported either Solaris 2.51 or Solaris 2.6. Also, it did support hot-swap CPU and memory (through a process called DR or dynamic reconfiguration). Another thing that Sun servers have had since 1995 or so at least is the ability to notify you in syslog of single bit ECC errors. While not dynamically configuring out the memory, at least you were notified before those single-bit correctable errors turned into a double-bit error and took down your whole box.

    Kernel hot-patching took a couple of years longer, and is now implemented through a process that is basically "patch-now while your system is running, then on next reboot the patched kernel is actually put in place."

    I guess it probably is closer to 4.5 years ago, but my brain has been damaged from too much "Slashdot math" :-) and 2003 - 5 = 1997 or pretty close.

    Cheers.

    --
    "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
  113. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 0

    Proposed Additions to the PDP-11 Instruction Set:

    BBW Branch Both Ways
    BEW Branch Either Way
    BBBF Branch on Bit Bucket Full
    BH Branch and Hang
    BMR Branch Multiple Registers
    BOB Branch On Bug
    BPO Branch on Power Off
    BST Backspace and Stretch Tape
    CDS Condense and Destroy System
    CLBR Clobber Register
    CLBRI Clobber Register Immediately
    CM Circulate Memory
    CMFRM Come From -- essential for truly structured programming
    CPPR Crumple Printer Paper and Rip
    CRN Convert to Roman Numerals

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...