On Wed, 26 Mar 2003, Audioslave - 7M3 - Live wrote:
I was also gullible with the DOJ game that was played out. I guess the days for convincing others to switch from Windows to specifically Red Hat are getting lesser.
To be fair about the mp3 issue. It isn't that major of a deal to get the proper rpm for it to work again. It does however take away the idea of a ready to go, everything included attitude. that I had in the past.
To conquer the desktop market, you have to be attractive and hassle free , in the eyes of the future customer. I see too many things
I'm curious as to what is misleading you to believe that Red Hat is targeting the home MP3 using desktop market. Or any market in which MP3 support is mandatory, or even necessary.
Is there even one? And if so, is that market one in which there is a viable ecomonimically feasible business model?
I think not.
Support for Windows 98 is about to end in June, according to my friend, who is blind. I relayed to him that there is some work on applications that will aid the unseeing. He commented about desiring to switch to Linux, because of this imposed limitation.
The main reason that I assumed that the desktop market was something that you were shooting at was the looks of RH 8. It has what most desktop users need, available.
On our local LUG, there are a few of people converting to RH 8, but still dual booting into XP.
Also, the use of Linux within my personal work environment is very limited. To my knowledge, it is only used for a few purposes. The business model looks lesser than the desktop, to me.
I now see three markets. Server use, corporate use and home use. I think that home use is higher than business use, excluding server use.
I do feeel that getting the schools to teach Linux and invest in hardware, with the savings, will increase Linux adoption. I do feel that a push to commercialize Linux too heavily will result in a backwave for Linux to break into the market, as a feasable alternative to proprietory software.
For me, growing away from Windows. I wouldn't want to have to feel repelled from using Red Hat. I've been pushing Red Hat, to other, pretty heavily. I've only convinced a few to try it out.
For adoption at our business. I was thinking about our division in Norway. They currently use win2k professional for the OS. Older versions sell with NT4.
They want to check into using Linux, in order to reduce the price of their product. I was going to try to push Red Hat. Now, I'm considering checking out other distros, for their adoption.
Basically, this system is used for dimensioning. Linux would probably be a better OS for the system.
For our also inconvienienced Norwegian friend. The division is CargoScan. They are Headquartered in Oslo.
In short, the desktop market is probably more feasable now. Mainly because of Windows discontinuing their support, for their products. But with making RH more expensive, selling it, to businesses, looks less likely. The adoption of more stringent end of life cycles also is a crippling point, within Red Hat.
Jim
-- To the systems programmer, users and applications serve only to provide a test load.
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