Telco switches to Ubuntu from RHEL for one reason...
Kristian Erik Hermansen
kristian.hermansen-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org
Wed Aug 8 16:26:39 EDT 2007
On 8/8/07, Matthew Gillen <me-5yx05kfkO/aqeI1yJSURBw at public.gmane.org> wrote:
> Can you elaborate on how Fedora is not geared toward businesses?
Fedora users cannot purchase official support as they can with Red
Hat. Canonical offers a support program for Ubuntu through their
website.
http://www.ubuntu.com/support/paid
If an enterprise wants Red Hat-based support, they can't be running
Fedora. Or maybe you know of some deal where this is possible?
> Not really. If it were just a bunch of bits, then Fedora would have an
> official commercial repo too (if not now, then soon). There's nothing special
> (from a purely technical standpoint) about Ubuntu that allows them to have
> such a thing and not Fedora (or Debian for that matter).
And Fedora just as well could have a commercial repository. But maybe
the users don't want it. I have no idea...
> It's also about your rights with the software. Can I, as a sys-admin, make an
> image of a given system and replicate it as much as I want? Or do I have to
> keep track of software licenses, and generate new license keys for each new
> machine, etc. Can I derive my own custom/specialized distribution from the
> packages that distro X provides? Or do I have to examine each package to
> check it's licensing to see if I'm allowed to re-distribute it?
You can do whatever you want. If you want an entirely free Ubuntu,
use Gobuntu. It is everything you want, without any proprietary code
creeping into your distro :-)
> This is where the "official" package restrictions in Fedora and Debian provide
> a lot of value: I know that every package is freely redistributable without
> having to spend any time at all looking at individual packages. Debian's
> strict adherence to this policy was no doubt a boon to Ubuntu when it was
> first getting off the ground...
That is why repositories are separated into main, restricted,
universe, and multiverse. main == 2200 core packages. Restricted is
less than 10 packages or so. Universe is everything that is user
contributed and free. Multiverse is the stuff that has non-free
licensing pertaining to modifications, but is distributable. You have
many options. If you want, only use main and universe and leave off
restricted and multiverse. Use the source Luke :-)
--
Kristian Erik Hermansen
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