Hey,

 

Allow me as a long time Microsoft developer/user as well as an early Linux
adopter 1999 to comment on the link posted.

The product comparison should have said only one thing. That Multiseat Linux
was/is cheaper than Multipoint Server 2011.
I have access to Multipoint server fully licensed from Microsoft free for
purposes of testing, demonstrating and feasibility
studies. The only issue I found was getting the right hardware. Now, if one
got hold of the right hardware for MS and had
the right drivers for Linux, a lot of the alleged shortcomings of MS would
be nullified.

We as opensource advocates should look to the real issues. As yourself why
you need to purchase EVEN ONE license for
multiseat Linux. Is that really opensource? If we paid the company to come
support and do the installation then that would
make sense.

Do not be deceived by marketing hype. The core issue is the price of the
licenses and your end users. Ruth be told if you have
enlightened users who know more about word-processing and spread sheets than
they do about word and excel, then to cut down
deployment costs you should go for multiseat Linux since after you get the
OS and pay for the license then from that point onwards
everything else is free (as in beer not as in speech). I think however, if
you wanted to lower costs, just buy a number of cpus with
no hard-drives, a custom usb or cdrom Linux distro that connects to your lan
and presto!! 20 cdroms with Linux that when booted
give you your environment. This is what I used when studying intrusion
detection systems with silensec and I found it brilliant cause
all you had to do was give students a cdrom and remind them to backup to
flash before shutting down. Also the silensec guys had written
scripts to configure the network and give us access to the server we
alternatively attacked or defended against.

Try that route first before forking out any money. Jeff Atwood the man
behind Ubuntu.stackexchange.com once said, "never buy/invent what
you can steal/get for free". It is always my guide whenever I get a new
project. To first see what else has been done by others bother free and paid

 

Jake 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Brian Ssennoga
Sent: 31 October 2011 15:36
To: Uganda Linux User Group
Cc: FBT; [email protected]
Subject: [LUG] Linux This Client Software

 

Hello FOSS People,

In our (IHSU's) continued quest for a thin-client solution, we have landed
on this -
http://www2.userful.com/products/product-comparison/userful-multiseat-vs-win
dows-multipoint - 

I wonder, has anyone come across this before? Any prior experience we might
want to learn from? 

We will surely go onto the free trials, as we await sales information, so we
know how expensive/cheap it is.

-- 
Love indeed conquers all.....
Brian A. Ssennoga

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