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- Re: LINUX Platform that has more market/demand now
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тАО09-21-2005 01:59 AM
тАО09-21-2005 01:59 AM
Re: LINUX Platform that has more market/demand now
A free alternative to Redhat Enterprise Linux is CentOS (www.centos.org).
The is basically a clone of RHEL without the redhat branding. It has a strong user community with good support.
If you need enterprise support though, RHEL and Suse are definately the way to go.
Alan
The is basically a clone of RHEL without the redhat branding. It has a strong user community with good support.
If you need enterprise support though, RHEL and Suse are definately the way to go.
Alan
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тАО09-21-2005 02:05 AM
тАО09-21-2005 02:05 AM
Re: LINUX Platform that has more market/demand now
Hi Dave,
What are you planning to do on your Linux box? Do you want to use it as a server or as a workstation?
Myself (and loads of others) are very happy RedHat users. To fool around and learn, download Fedora 4 on cd/dvd and install.
Also for the more serious applications, fedora is a good O.S. (Even my own personal website and mailserver runs on fedora 4.)
There are many communities on the internet (ITrc for instance) with great knowledge, so all your questions will be answered.
Cheers,
Renarios
What are you planning to do on your Linux box? Do you want to use it as a server or as a workstation?
Myself (and loads of others) are very happy RedHat users. To fool around and learn, download Fedora 4 on cd/dvd and install.
Also for the more serious applications, fedora is a good O.S. (Even my own personal website and mailserver runs on fedora 4.)
There are many communities on the internet (ITrc for instance) with great knowledge, so all your questions will be answered.
Cheers,
Renarios
Nothing is more successfull as failure
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тАО09-26-2005 01:43 AM
тАО09-26-2005 01:43 AM
Re: LINUX Platform that has more market/demand now
fedora is good for knowing and toying with what will be in the next RH release. CentOS is great because it gives you RH for free!
use RH in production environments, though i guess you could still use CentOS in dev environments.
use RH in production environments, though i guess you could still use CentOS in dev environments.
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