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MandrakeSoft Publishes Support Policy

joestar writes "MandrakeSoft has posted a statement about its product support policy on its website: 'At a time when some of the established Linux companies are turning away from their Open Source roots and progressively abandoning full-time commitment to Open Source Software, many people have asked MandrakeSoft to clarify its position regarding product-lifetimes and its Open Source development model.' As a result, this interesting reading provides 8 Golden Rules that lead Mandrake Linux development and product support lifetime. This certainly makes MandrakeSoft one of the most 'Open Source' Linux companies, and all Linux companies should maybe think about releasing such a statement."

22 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Free Beer! by Talrias · · Score: 5, Funny

    4) Free as in 'Libre' and Free as in 'Beer'!

    These guys must have the best pub ever! Where did you say they were based again?
    --
    aterr - an open source threaded discussion board.
  2. Download version will continue! by Goyuix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    4) Free as in 'Libre' and Free as in 'Beer'!

    A download version of Mandrake Linux, consisting entirely of Open Source software, will continue to be released, provided without cost, and supported.


    This is great news in my opinion. Any company that won't offer a "preview" of their product (like ISO's of a downloadable version in this case) will never earn my bucks. This is imperative if they hope to get me to join the club, buy the boxed set, etc. Besides, what I really want is a DVD so I don't have to swap CD's, so if I like the ISO's enough, there is a fair chance I will buy their power pack and get the DVD.

  3. "8 Golden Rules?" by wobblie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's nice, but it's still not a Social Contract

    1. Re:"8 Golden Rules?" by belmolis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Granted that it isn't quite the Debian social contract [English version], it's still pretty good. I think that it is especially interesting that Mandrake, which is known, and sometimes derided, for being easy to install and friendly to newbies, is doing this.

    2. Re:"8 Golden Rules?" by critter_hunter · · Score: 4, Informative

      Their installer and any other software they provide does NOT have to be GPLd. Lindows' installer is not GPLd, among other things. Not sure about Red Hat's. Also, as copyright-holders of the installer's code, they can change the license on newer versions if they wish it. This is a written commitment that they won't exercise this right.

      --
      Karma: Could be worse (could be raining)
    3. Re:"8 Golden Rules?" by belmolis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree, Mandrake is a nice distro. I've been using it for several years and just installed 9.2. I've been using UNIX since 1982, GNU/Linux since 1995 and remember installing a device driver in 4.2BSD by manually editing the device switching tables and recompiling the kernel. So I'm not exactly a newbie. But I like a distro that installs easily and recognizes my hardware. I have plenty of other things to do than hassle with my installation, including installing all of the non-standard software that I use. I may do a pure source installation on one of my machines soon, for optimization and to get better acquainted with the current system, but except for that situation, I see no reason to shift from Mandrake. People who deride a distribution just because it is easy should get a life; its a silly form of machismo.

  4. It remains to be seen by cluge · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is still early in this companies lifetime - so it remains to be seen if they will keep to their own rules. The fact that they published the rules is indeed a heartening step in the right direction. I hope that other distros follow suit, especially in the category of product lifetime. If Mandrake can follow these rules, they become a more attractive alternative to the jaugernaut that is RedHat, and Suse. This is especially so for corporate rollouts where EOL is important and so is ease of installation. As the "linux market" becomes mor mature each vendor will have to carve out a niche. Mandrakes may be "Easy to install and our support lasts longer than your computer". Refreshing in these days of "rental OS" and forced upgrades.

    AngryPeopleRule

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  5. OEM support through Sun, HP etc???? by stonebeat.org · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can I get OEM Suport for Mandrake products through Support/Service providers like Sun, HP, Dell etc?
    Most large corporation like to have just one support contract from one major service provider (sun, dell, or HP etc). They don't want to manage several contract for the data center equipment.
    One thing I like about RedHat is: OEM support for RedHat products is available from Sun and HP.

  6. Not *quite* flamebait, but misguided by abulafia · · Score: 5, Insightful
    (Moderators: ... Oh, fuck it. You're going to do whatever it is you do.)

    You're right, it isn't a statement that can be legitimately compared to Debian's statements. That would be because Debian is not a company.

    I _love_ Debian. This laptop I'm writing this on is running Debian (Thinkpad 570, -unstable, to be precise.) One of the big wins with Debian is precisely that it can make such a social contract. Companies cannot, and stay viable.

    That Mandrake is willing to go this far is a wonderful point for them, and we should applaud them.

    I'm vaguely reminded of a time in college when I was lambasted for only offering a couple of hours a week at a charity. When I pointed out that dedicating more time would likely result in me flunking out, thus losing my loans, thus moving somewhere else and not being able to give a couple of hours a week to the project, I was ridiculed for lack of dedication.

    --
    I forget what 8 was for.
  7. vmware included? by bbdd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    one of the sales pitches for the powerpack version is:

    "9. Compatibility: run Windows and Mandrake Linux on the same computer."

    and a picture of vmware running is shown. i would buy it in a minute if it came with a copy of vmware.

    but, *sigh*, it doesn't.

    how can they plug this as a benefit if it can't do it, or in this case, for only a limited time?

  8. Read the statement entirely...! by joestar · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Why they didn't provide the link to the table I
    > have no idea, but after several minutes (way to
    > damn long) of searching here it is: (...)

    Did you read the statement?

    "Additional information is located at:

    # The home of the Mandrake Linux project.
    # The home of the "Cooker" community.
    # Mandrake Linux's Wiki for Cooker
    # MandrakeSoft products
    # Official MandrakeSoft product lifetime table
    http://www.mandrakesecure.net/en/productlifetime.p hp"

  9. Join the Club by CptnKirk · · Score: 5, Informative
    Although they didn't plug it in this press release. If you like what you see here, and like the product, you might be interested in the Mandrake Club. The Mandrake Club offers the ability to "donate" money to the Mandrake development effort.

    The club has three pricing levels, each with slightly different benefits. What I get from the club is their community RPMs, and discussion boards. Silver members get DL access to their PowerPack ISOs for free as well. Club members get to help shape what goes into future releases, and have early access to Mandrake RPMs of new releases. Mozilla, NVIDIA Drivers, etc. Don't see an RPM you want, vote for it, and someone will probably generate it.

    Anyway, if you think that MandrakeSoft is doing right by the Linux community, this may be a nice way of sending them some cash, while getting a little more use from the distro you're probably already using.

  10. Oddly, these could still apply to Red Hat... by Kelson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... if you include Fedora Core as a Red Hat product, with the possible exception of #3 (no change in product lifetime).

    #1 - Software updates for all supported products. Note that anything older than Mandrake 9.0 is already not supported, and therefore they have no committment to provide updates.

    #2 - Product lifetimes not hidden. The same is true for Red Hat, or at least it has been for the past year. The EOL of the 7.x series was announced way back in March or April, and was very easy to find.

    #3 - Product lifetimes will not change. This one they may have on Red Hat. I don't remember the old lifetime for RH 7.3 or 8, but I did expect it to be longer.

    #4 - Free as in libre and as in beer. True if you include Fedora Core - and Red Hat reps have gone on record saying that RHEL would have no future without the free distro.

    #5 - GPL code. Same is true for Red Hat's installer, config and other tools. They're picky about trademarked names and logos, but all the code is open source.

    #6 - Open source development. Mandrake Cooker was there first, but Fedora has picked up the same model.

    #7 - Free Support. Note that they specifically mention "community-supported MandrakeExpert.com" - so Mandrake itself isn't pledging to provide anything more than the forum for other people to provide support.

    #8 - Mandrake listens to you. OK, this one they may have too. On the Fedora Core lists RH seems to be responding to people, but there's always the "faceless corporation" side of things. This point could easily start a flamewar, so I'll keep out of it.

    1. Re:Oddly, these could still apply to Red Hat... by Kunta+Kinte · · Score: 5, Insightful
      ... if you include Fedora Core as a Red Hat product, with the possible exception of #3 (no change in product lifetime).

      Fedora Core is not a supported Red Hat product. You can not get support for Fedora Core.Redhat Support will point and laugh at you if you ask. You have to upgrade to their costly enterprise versions. You can and do get support for Mandrakes product.

      #1 - Software updates for all supported products. Note that anything older than Mandrake 9.0 is already not supported, and therefore they have no committment to provide updates.

      Much better than releasing a product in say, what was it March? And EOLing it by the end of the year, like RedHat did.

      I use to be the biggest Redhat cheerleader. Until Redhat made me, and a lot of people I am sure, eat crow. Here we are being the biggest Linux proponent in our colleges's IT department, totting all the savings we will have with RedHat Linux. How we won't have to do all the software license accounting we do with other commercial software etc. The department went ahead and ordered a large beowulf cluster and numerous labs all standardized with Redhat with the impression that we do support and licenses were free.

      Now we are scratching our heads looking for an upgrade plan, after Redhat announces that there will be no software updates for their free platforms as they exist in a matter of months.

      Oh, but you get to continue to QA for them for free

      --
      Based on upvotes, Ageism is the only "-ism" Slashdotters care about and think isn't SJW
  11. Lame Marketing Ploy To Rally True Believers by reallocate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Obviously targetted at ideologues angry at Red Hat, this is a lame marketing ploy by Mandrake to rally True Believers in another attempt to sell product.

    Nothing new is announced here. Mandrake -- a good distribution -- is simply engaging in a bit of transparent posturing.

    Open source entails no obligation by any individual or any company to make their product available gratis. If it does, it will be the death of open source. Mandrake can continue to attempt to make a profit selling the same product it is also giving away, but lot's of people consider that to be an incredibly stupid business decision.

    Open source does not obligate a business to provide support for a product any longer than it wants to, regardless of how angry that might make some people. Nothing that Red Hat released as open source has been withdrawn.

    Open source is commonly touted as software that can be supported even if the company selling it goes away. So, then, why are different standards applied to the company known as Red Hat? Red Hat users have the source. Support it yourself, OK? Isn't that what open source is all about?

    Red Hat has no ethical obligation to support any of its products for any longer than it wishes to, and assertions to the contrary are hypocritical and contradictory.

    The primary ethical obligation of a business is to turn a profit. That's what Red Hat chose to do, and that is exactly what Mandrake is doing with this self-serving advertisement.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  12. Goal #1 by LazloToth · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Ask any MBA student on day one of classes: what is it that any company must do to survive? Of course, the answer is "profit." If you're asking, 'What about charities and non-profits?," then realize that even they rely on someone's profits. So the question for Mandrake, which has struggled mightily with finances in recent times, is whether a 5-year product life means a great deal when the company's welfare over the next 24 months is itself an issue. I like Mandrake and hope they will do well; I wonder, however, whether they have the teeth and bones, like RedHat, to profit sufficiently to improve and maintain their product whilst paying their developers, managers, accountants, et.al., a decent day's wages.

    --


    It's only funny until someone gets hurt. Then, it's hilarious.
  13. No, it is better by ChrisWong · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In some ways, it's better. The Debian social contract makes no time commitments on updates. It could be that Debian's support is so long because it takes them so long to get a new stable release out. On the other hand, Mandrake explicitly commits to 18 months of base updates. That's a solid commitment for those of us who want to put off upgrade hell.

  14. profit is *not* an ethical obligation by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even for a publically owned company.

    It's the goal pursued within ethical constraints.

    The shareholders are the employers. No employer can ethically oblige you to be unethical, just as a soldier is not obligated to obey an unlawful order. Nor can a coach ethically require a team member to cheat in sports. Profit does not trump other ethical requirements.

    Sure, the officer of a public company has an obligation to do right by the shareholders, but only to the extent that other obligations aren't shredded.

  15. Re:Real open source by vsprintf · · Score: 4, Informative

    What? You meant it? "They make money?"

    I realize you're having a problem with the OP's phrasing, but yes, they do make money. Besides the free download version, they offer a boxed set, a *professional* (more stuff) version, a server version, and a firewall product that all have a price tag. There are also quite a few users who support Mandrake's efforts with yearly contributions as a form of payback and in exchange for a few perks. The support for the free product is generally community support and the forums. Hope that helps you get over your hysteria.

  16. Re:Boycott French Linux flavors. by bninja_penguin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hmmm, I happen to like Mandrake, and use it on 5 systems. What their government does is their governments concern (re: the French.) And, as a funny historical side note to your comment ...they will look back to the moment they threw their support behind a tin pot dictator and basically shitted on the idea of people living free from oppression.
    You do realize that, a few decades ago, the United States of America actually "...threw their support behind..." Iraq (and it's "tin pot dictator") with weapons, training, and intelligence during the Iran/Iraq war?

    With your pathetic RAH-RAH pseudo-patriotic post (AC, of course), you give the impression that we should Boycott anything and everything Italian, after all, they supported Hitler. Boycott anything and everything Japanese, after all, they bombed Pearl Harbor. Boycott anything and everything English, after all, they tried burning the White House. Boycott anything and everything insert any country in the world here because ALL government at one point or another does monumentally stupid shit.
    So you just go ahead and fuck off with your ridiculous boycotts, and eat your "freedom" fries, and I will happpily continue using my "freedom" distro.

    --
    For those who describe their systems as 'boxen', do you order multiple 'boxen' of corn flakes also?
  17. Thinly veiled FUD by Burdell · · Score: 4, Insightful
    At a time when some of the established Linux companies are turning away from their Open Source roots and progressively abandoning full-time commitment to Open Source Software...
    Other than being FUD targeted at Red Hat (please list ONE of these "rules" that is not being followed by Red Hat), why is this news? The only established Linux company turning away from Open Source that I'm aware of is the former Caldera, and they were never a big Open Source company (most of the software they developed was closed source). With Fedora, Red Hat has the most open development model among commercial Linux vendors. It can't touch Debian, but I think it'll come close once they get all the infrastructure in place.
  18. What's the deal? by CaptainTux · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What's the deal with all this anti-money stuff? Everytime someone tries to make money in open source they are villified and demonized by the community. But what is so wrong about this? Is it really fair to expect a company to invest money (quite a bit of money) in research, development, marketing, etc and then NOT want to make money for their efforts?

    It just amazes me to keep seeing this anti-money attitude in the oss community. Open source isn't about giving away software. It's about freedom. This confusion is one of the main reasons I think that it should not be referred to as "free software" -- it fosters an uninformed and misdirected belief that if someone doesn't give their work away then it's wrong. It's not people. Get over it. MandrakeSoft is a strong supporter of open source and I, for one, hope they do survive and become profitable.

    --
    Anthony Papillion
    Advanced Data Concepts, Inc.
    "Quality Custom Software and IT Services"