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Interview with Red Hat VP Michael Tiemann

david_ross writes "An interview with Red Hat's Vice President Michael Tiemann has just been posted on LinuxQuestions.org. His responses in the interview show that RedHat's community product, Fedora, has a bright future: "The project has been incredibly successful, and we have a lot of people outside of Red Hat to thank for that. What Red Hat must now do is to finish the job of making Fedora a true community project by publishing, and getting accepted, a governance model". "

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  1. Take some of the load of of LinuxQuestions by teiresias · · Score: 5, Informative

    Michael Tiemann recently took some time to do an email interview with LinuxQuestions.org (Thanks Michael!). As you can probably tell from some of the questions, this interview is a touch old. If you have a question that you'd like answered, post it in this thread. I'll send a few of the best questions, as followups, to Michael.

    LQ) Tell us a little about yourself. Where are you from, where did you go to school and the other basics.
    MT) When most people ask this question, they mean "where did you get your degree?" I got my BS CSE from the Moore School at the University of Pennsylvania. That's the final resting place for several chunks of the first all-digital computer, the ENIAC. But I started learning about computers at home, about 1974, when my father bought and assembled an IMSAI 8080, then later a Cromemco Z2-D with three or four 64KB banks of RAM and a 10MB winchester hard disk. As I recall, the Z2-D computer cost as much as our station wagon. And that's when I started to learn BASIC, PL/I, Pascal, C, FORTH, LISP, and many other programming languages. It was a passion of mine since I was 12 to write a compiler, and after writing a few toy compilers in CS class, I got my chance in 1987 to transform the GNU C Compiler into the GNU C++ compiler, and later, to merge it as part of the GNU Compiler Collection.

    Believe it or not, the Z2-D from 1976 was my PC in college (1982-1986). With my summer job at Cromemco, I'd upgraded it with parts from the scrap heap: a 68020 processor, 1.5 MB of RAM (3 512KB modules), a 48KB two-port graphics card. I also bought a shiny new 50MB harddisk which consumed my entire summer earnings.

    LQ) What's the hostname of your favorite linux box and why is it named that? Also, if you couldn't use Red Hat or Fedora, which distribution would you use?
    MT) I haven't paid attention to hostnames in forever, but if I were not using Red Hat or Fedora, I'd probably use Mandrake. Mandrake seems to have a very large number of RPMs available for it.

    LQ) What was your first introduction to Linux? What was the reason behind you using Linux and was anyone in particular responsible for turning you on to Linux?
    MT) My first introduction was via Adam Richter, creator of the Yggdrasil distribution. He called me up and took me to lunch one day, mainly to try to understand whether what I'd learned at Cygnus (the world's first company to commercialize free software) could be applied to the business he was thinking about starting. I didn't think so: we were selling support contracts for $35,000 to more than $1M per year, and he wanted to sell CDs for $99 (or perhaps even less). The two models could not have been more different.

    I forgot about Linux until I got a call from Larry McVoy, telling me that there was this software company in North Carolina (software company in North Carolina!?) that had about 15 people and was growing by leaps and bounds. It was committed to free software, and Cygnus should look at acquiring it. While I was not that excited about Yggdrasil, I did become excited about Red Hat. We held a board meeting to discuss spending 10% of our equity in 1995 to acquire Red Hat but I could not convince the two other co-founders to make an offer. Four years later, Red Hat acquired Cygnus with 10% of their equity. Sigh.

    LQ) I remember reading an interview with you in late 2000 in which you answered the question "Which distribution do you feel is your main competitor?" with "Right now our main competitors are Sun Solaris and Microsoft." Fast forward to today, do you think that same answer still applies?
    MT) Moreso than ever.

    LQ) Now that the dust from the initial Fedora announcement has settled and FC has a couple releases under its belt, would you say the project is as successful as Red Hat had hoped? In what areas would you say it really shines and what do you think are its biggest shortcomings?
    MT) The project has been incredibly successful, and we have a lot of people outside of Red Hat to thank for that. What Red Hat must now do is to f

    --
    -Teiresias
  2. Re:Redhat? No thanks! by hackstraw · · Score: 3, Informative

    Debian really needs a "grown up" large company to provide commercial support, that will quiet the fears of managers.

    Is HP, grown up enough? http://www.hp.com/hps/linux/lx_debian.html

  3. leading-edge technologies with robustness by brlewis · · Score: 1, Informative

    The Debian testing distribution already balances the leading edge with robustness very well. I don't think we need a new distribution to do it.

  4. All we need... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    What Red Hat must now do is to finish the job of making Fedora a true community project by publishing, and getting accepted, a governance model.

    That and the public CVS server they've been promising for two years.

  5. hardware agnostic by asv108 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I should have been a little more clear, grown up support that is NOT hardware specific. Will HP support debian linux on Dell, IBM, whiteboxes, etc? When I pay for rhel i get hardware agnostic support from a name managers know, Debian needs a similar provider.

  6. Re:Redhat? No thanks! by Neil+Watson · · Score: 2, Informative

    The last time I checked out Redhat's prices they were awfully high. My boss remarked that he could by a Windows server for less. Considering how much of Redhat's, or any Linux Distro company, work is done for free by the open source community I would expect the price to undercut proprietary code software everytime.

  7. Re:Directory services by Erwos · · Score: 3, Informative

    Red Hat recently came to our school and talked about this very issue (among many others).

    Basically, OpenLDAP sucks. OTOH, Netscape has a very good version that doesn't suck. Therefore, Red Hat bought Netscape's, and will be open sourcing it shortly. All the other alternatives were proprietary, and Red Hat will only ship free software.

    -Erwos

    --
    Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
  8. Re:Redhat? No thanks! by mattdm · · Score: 2, Informative

    They were actually making money on RHL which means they dropped it for focus, not profit.

    Do you have a basis for this claim? From what I've heard from Red Hat folks, they were barely breaking even, if that.

    Red Hat really has no interest in you and me until we code something, put it back into the community, and they incorperate it into their workstation distro.

    And that's why all the stuff they write is released under the GPL. Those bastards.

  9. I'm not asking them to give away support by asv108 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Let me rephrase, I'm not looking for free support for a downloadable product. I want pay support for a product that I can download, install, and run for free.