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Battling for Linux support customers

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross
Managing Editor

A competitor of Red Hat says the Linux distributor is acting “proprietary” with its new Web-based support service, Red Hat Networks, but Red Hat says supporting its own software just makes business sense.

Reg Broughton’s company, Acrylis, offers WhatifLinux, a multi-distribution support service, launched in April. WhatifLinux is trying to separate its service from the Red Hat Network, launched in September, by saying its product supports all flavors of Linux, not just Red Hat.

“Red Hat’s offering is very much in the Red Hat model,” says Broughton, president of Acrylis. “It’s by Red Hat for Red Hat, if you like a pseudo-proprietary environment.”

But Billy Marshall, director of the Red Hat Network, says it only makes sense for Red Hat to support its own product. By concentrating on software updates, security fixes, and system optimizing information only for Red Hat, the network can deliver that information faster, he says.

“We don’t pretend to release things that have been evaluated in Debian,” he says. “Our customers have said, ‘We want you to take responsibility for these [Red Hat] updates.’ ” Marshall compared Broughton’s criticism to someone faulting NewsForge’s parent company, hardware supplier VA Linux, for not supporting Sun or Dell products.

The battle for market share in Linux support services may be especially important, because support is a large chunk of many Open Source companies’ business plans. When distributors are expected to give away a version of their product for free, people like Marshall argue that support is a way for Red Hat to stay in business. “We have a unique ability to provide a deep resource for Red Hat,” he adds.

One advantage of WhatifLinux is that a company can evaluate or use several distributions while still getting support for them, said Keith Erskine, director of product management for Acrylis. “We’re enabling choice for our customers,” he says.

To which Broughton adds: “Which is the whole point of the Open Source world, I thought.”

Broughton says he’s not trying to knock down Red Hat’s business model, just point out the difference between his product and theirs. “We wholeheartedly support and endorse the way Red Hat delivers the Red Hat Network,” he says. “The reason we support it is it’s identical to our own.”

The two services are similar in some ways. Both deliver support alerts, primarily by email, to users based on what kinds of information the user wants to see. Information can include software updates, security alerts, bug fixes, etc., with the goal of cutting through what Marshall calls “information overload” in the constantly innovating Open Source community to deliver features the user deems important.

“We’re giving you information only on things that impact your life based on the preferences you give us,” says Red Hat’s Marshall. “You don’t have to sift through the noise — we do it for you.”

Marhall talks up the assistance Red Hat Network can provide to companies that are often short of qualified Linux systems administrators. While Red Hat touts the product-specific information supplied by Red Hat Network, WhatifLinux pitches its unique “what if” decision support, giving the administrator analysis about what happens if he or she tweaks a piece of software or installs something new. WhatifLinux also says its two-sided encryption is an advantage, while it admits Red Hat’s user interface is stronger.

Pricing for the two services is based on a number of factors, including the number of users. Right now, Red Hat is featuring a free trial on Red Hat Network, but the price for a single user will be about $120 a year, Marshall says. WhatifLinux is priced at $49 a year for a single user.

Category:

  • Linux

Eazel feeling strangely optimistic

Author: JT Smith

Our friends at Linux.com interview three developers from Eazel, on IRC. They say: “We went into this project thinking that novice users would grasp a single click to open items… thinking about the
file browser as a cousin to a web browser… “

Category:

  • Open Source

Patch allows Linux to use bad DIMMs

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot readers talk about the BadRAM patch to Linux 2.2, “which allows it to
make use of faulty memory by marking the bad pages as
unallocatable at boot time. If there were a source of cheap faulty
DIMMs this would make building Linux boxes with buckets of memory
significantly cheaper; it also demonstrates another advantage of having the
source code to one’s operating system.”

Category:

  • Linux

Micromatix.net finalizes LinuxOne merger terms

Author: JT Smith

Newsbytes: Baltimore’s International Mercantile Corp. (IMC), which
does business as Micromatix.net, today said it has signed a stock
exchange/merger agreement with LinuxOne Inc., formalizing a letter of
intent announced last month.

Category:

  • Linux

Caldera beta-tests Linux management tool

Author: JT Smith

CRN reports, Caldera Systems executives say the company is
beta-testing its Volution management software, which could
make Linux more attractive to ASPs and other service
providers.

Category:

  • Linux

Turbolinux / IBM Road Show

Author: JT Smith

The IBM/Turbolinux road show will provide valuable cost-saving,
high-performance insights from IBM — the global leader in enterprise
solutions — and Turbolinux, the market leader in Linux software clustering
solutions and Linux internationalization. Linux PR announces, the Turbolinux / IBM Road Show will be in Los Angeles on Oct. 26, 2000.

AT&T to split in four

Author: JT Smith

With a new plan to divide the company into four separate entities,
AT&T today proclaimed that the days of the giant telecom monolith
were officially over, from Upside Today.

Category:

  • Linux

Macster officially becomes Napster for the Mac

Author: JT Smith

The Standard reports, In the midst of its legal problems, Napster names Macster as the Apple version of
its file-sharing program.

Caldera eServer 2.3 wins Network World Blue Ribbon award

Author: JT Smith

Business Wire: Caldera Systems Inc., a leading provider of “Linux
for Business” solutions, Wednesday announced that OpenLinux eServer 2.3 has received Network World’s Blue Ribbon
award for use as an enterprise server.

EC to research dangers of software patents

Author: JT Smith

EuroLinux provides a public forum and a rich knowledge base:

Bruxelles, Copenhagen, London, Madrid, Munich, Paris. October 25rd
2000. On Thursday 19th October 2000, the European Commission
announced
the opening of an official consultation on the economic and social
impact of software patents in Europe. In order to help European
Authorities to conduct an open consultation, the EuroLinux Alliance
of
software publishers and non profit organisations debuts a public
forum
and a rich knowledge base. The General Directorate for Internal Market has recognised recently
the potential negative impact of software patents on innovation,
their
danger for small and medium enterprises and the requirement for
Europe
to conduct in-depth researches on the economic impact of software
patents before changing European Patent Law. Obviously, there is no
economic consensus in Europe on this matter.

It is also widely admitted that any extension of the patent system
to
software is equivalent to an extension of the patent system to
intellectual or business methods implemented with software. Patents
on
“internet auctions”, “electronic voting”, “organising virtual call
centres”, “distributing recipes in supermarkets” or “managing a
company with a single accounting book” are typical examples of
software patents legaly granted in the United States. Once software
patents become legal in Europe, most of these examples will become
enforceable in Europe too.

Previous European consultations on software patents were mainly
targeted at patent attorneys and patent offices. Obviously, patent
attorneys and patent offices expressed a position in favour of
software patents. This new consultation should now be considered by
European companies, organisations and citizens as a real opportunity
to voice their own concerns.

EuroLinux kindly asks European consumers, European IT professionals
and European companies to urgently send public statements, reports
and
position papers on software patents to
[2]consultation@eurolinux.org.
Emails sent to this address will be automatically published on the
EuroLinux web site (http://petition.eurolinux.org/consultation) and
forwarded to the General Directorate for Internal Market at the
European Commission.

EuroLinux does not recommend sending private emails to the General
Directorate for Internal Market. Only open and public information
about the dangers of software patents will be considered seriously.
The EuroLinux public forum and its rich knowledge base are currently
the best guarantee for a transparent and democratic debate on
software
patents in Europe.

References

The EuroLinux Public Consultation –
http://petition.eurolinux.org/consultation

The EuroLinux Petition for a Software Patent Free Europe –
http://petition.eurolinux.org

The EuroLinux File on Software Patents –
http://petition.eurolinux.org/reference

About EuroLinux – www.eurolinux.org

The EuroLinux Alliance for a Free Information Infrastructure is an
open coalition of commercial companies and non-profit associations
united to promote and protect a vigourous European Software Culture
based on Open Standards, Open Competition, Linux and Open Source
Software. Companies members or supporters of EuroLinux develop or
sell
software under free, semi-free and non-free licenses for operating
systems such as Linux, MacOS or Windows.

The EuroLinux Alliance launched on 2000-06-15 an electronic petition
to protect software innovation in Europe. The EuroLinux petition has
received so far massive support from more than 50.000 European
citizens, 2000 corporate managers and 200 companies.

The EuroLinux Alliance has co-organised in 1999, together with the
French Embassy in Japan, the first Europe-Japan conference on Linux
and Free Software. The EuroLinux Alliance is at the initiative of
the
www.freepatents.org web site to promote and protect innovation and
competition in the European IT industry.