Red Hat Linux Enterprise 4.0 AS - 4 CDs
Red Hat is not only one of the oldest and best known Linux distributions, but is probably the one that has the most traction in the business community thanks to smart people, clever marketing, a steady stream of advertisements, and the introduction of some of the concepts that people take for granted in the commercial Linux space. Many Linux distributions, such as Red Hat, SUSE, Mandrakelinux, and even the ill-fated Caldera Linux distribution, have offered server and desktop products for years, but Red Hat was the first to make a lot of noise about “Linux for the Enterprise,” pioneering the label, if not the concept.
Enterprise Linux vendors have to walk the tightrope between providing stable and up-to-date versions of the software packages required in enterprise deployments. Stability is an interesting notion in the Open Source world. On the one hand, you have the legions of dedicated and capable developers who are continually identifying and fixing problems in Open Source software.
On the other hand, you have Linux distribution vendors who are doing the same thing themselves, either by committing resources directly to supporting various software packages or by incorporating patches from the Open Source community. Either way, this is still a net win over proprietary software with a single possible source, a black-box approach to software deployment, and painfully slow release and update cycles.
Red Hat’s focus on the Enterprise has had different effects on the desktop and enterprise communities. Desktop users who had previously committed to Red Hat have been split into two communities. One of these is made up of users who feel rejected, are disconcerted about desktop support, and have therefore largely gone elsewhere for supported desktop Linux products.
Size:~ 2 GB
EgeLeee tarafından upload yapılmıştır.Lütfen Yorumlayalım...İyi günlerde kullanınız...
Red Hat is not only one of the oldest and best known Linux distributions, but is probably the one that has the most traction in the business community thanks to smart people, clever marketing, a steady stream of advertisements, and the introduction of some of the concepts that people take for granted in the commercial Linux space. Many Linux distributions, such as Red Hat, SUSE, Mandrakelinux, and even the ill-fated Caldera Linux distribution, have offered server and desktop products for years, but Red Hat was the first to make a lot of noise about “Linux for the Enterprise,” pioneering the label, if not the concept.
Enterprise Linux vendors have to walk the tightrope between providing stable and up-to-date versions of the software packages required in enterprise deployments. Stability is an interesting notion in the Open Source world. On the one hand, you have the legions of dedicated and capable developers who are continually identifying and fixing problems in Open Source software.
On the other hand, you have Linux distribution vendors who are doing the same thing themselves, either by committing resources directly to supporting various software packages or by incorporating patches from the Open Source community. Either way, this is still a net win over proprietary software with a single possible source, a black-box approach to software deployment, and painfully slow release and update cycles.
Red Hat’s focus on the Enterprise has had different effects on the desktop and enterprise communities. Desktop users who had previously committed to Red Hat have been split into two communities. One of these is made up of users who feel rejected, are disconcerted about desktop support, and have therefore largely gone elsewhere for supported desktop Linux products.
Size:~ 2 GB
EgeLeee tarafından upload yapılmıştır.Lütfen Yorumlayalım...İyi günlerde kullanınız...