Bill Joy On Sun, Microsoft, Open Source, and Creativity
maitas writes "In this interview, Bill Joy talks about green energy and technology. His main point is: 'I'm all for sharing, but I recognize the truly great things may not come from that environment.'" The interview really runs the spectrum from the iPad to Microsoft, and from green tech to nanotech.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
The support contracts are a drop in the bucket compared to windows licensing fees which are per-server per-core and per-seat. The bigger a company you have, the cheaper RHEL gets. Not quite with Windows, although they have a bulk pricing, the costs for each CAL still adds up.
You could have 100k employees and still be around the $20grand support costs of RHEL. This on MS would be in the hundreds of thousands range.
Plus, you don't anything for RHEL server. If you want to DIY with in-house trained RHEL developers, do it.
Sun Hardware was actually quite pricy...
Compared to PCs, yes, but not when compared to the rest of the 'real Unix' market. Back in the 90s we had servers and workstations from many Unix vendors and the Suns were generally the cheapest of the bunch and the easiest to work with.