>Why pay for it? I run redhat 6.0 at home, I didn't pay for it, I copied the CD from a friend (who I think originally downloaded it). However, now we need a linux machine at work. We will buy a copy of RedHat and probably a support contract too. Why, because my Redhat CD has been distributed at work for people to play with on their home computers. Consequently, I now feel more than happy that I have 'paid' for my copy of RedHat simply by encouraging my company to buy a copy.
> Because degrees, in the end, don't always mean > their holders are smarter than people without
> degrees.
Don't know about the US but in the UK on average most graduates are smarter than non-graduates.
A few graduates are dumb, and have no real world experience it's true, but there are many more non-graduates who fit that description than graduates.
Trees that have been cut down leave space for (wait for it....)
More Trees.
Not a revolutionary concept there.
>Why pay for it? I run redhat 6.0 at home, I didn't pay for it, I copied the CD from a friend (who I think originally downloaded it). However, now we need a linux machine at work. We will buy a copy of RedHat and probably a support contract too. Why, because my Redhat CD has been distributed at work for people to play with on their home computers. Consequently, I now feel more than happy that I have 'paid' for my copy of RedHat simply by encouraging my company to buy a copy.