hello,
if someone willing to have Fedora 7 ( MOONSHINE )
please visit to Jamia...
we have also downloaded it
devesh,
JMILUG
( www.jmilug.org )
On 6/4/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Fedora 7 release (Raseel Bhagat)
2. Re: Weird RPM naming ( drifting OT here... ) (Yashpal Nagar)
3. Re: Weird RPM naming ( drifting OT here... ) (G Karunakar)
4. Re: Weird RPM naming ( drifting OT here... ) ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
--
Message: 1
Date: 2 Jun 2007 20:06:27 -
From: Raseel Bhagat [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ilugd] Fedora 7 release
To: The Linux-Delhi mailing list ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Hi,
A late reply, but still
On Tue, 29 May 2007 Parveen Verma wrote :
Hi
Is any one palnning to download Fedora 7
The OpenSourceDeal (www.opensourcedeal.com) guys have it.
The DVD AND the Live CDs.
Thanks,
Raseel.
--
Message: 2
Date: Sat, 02 Jun 2007 23:46:36 +0100
From: Yashpal Nagar [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ilugd] Weird RPM naming ( drifting OT here... )
To: The Linux-Delhi mailing list ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Karanbir Singh wrote:
Yashpal Nagar wrote:
I don't know how is the redhat
support in India but in UK it is not so.
I dont agree :) We work with Redhat people onsite ( in the UK ) and even
on
remote setups - and i can assure you, they are some of the best techies
to have
on your side when things break :)
I don't know what how does it relevent of comparing a RHEL techies
onsite and a RHEL support via call. As far as i know you are entitled to
get telephonic support from Redhat once you have bought a license,
getting a support onsite seems to be a special arrangement with Redhat.
I am sorry if i could't understand its meaning.
with the RHEL trial version and the subscription version ( specially
during the
trial period ). And I've never had more of an issue than just
transferring the
rhn entitlements over to new machines or new versions when they come
out.
It is more than one month now, IIRC redhat provided evaluation copy of
RHEL which we used and provided our existining RHN account to get them
under a single logon.
That is also quite an interesting statement - SuSe has , by far, had the
best
support setup inhouse for years and years, I remember talking to people
back in
2000 - 2001 and getting kernel patches out from them overnight to handle
specific issues. While this has *significantly* gone down in recent
years, its
not really that bad, to be completely written off. And a lot of that
talent has
moved into VAR's and associated business post Novel, should you want, I
am happy
to put you in touch with some of them.
shameless plug perhaps you need someone to come in and manage the
setup for
you ? if you let me know where you are based and what setup you have,
I'd be
happy to trot along with a quote /plug
I believe it is a perception which get developed when you work with
someone, I must admit i have been too much aggresive putting comments on
SUSE support, I should have taken some more time to understand how
they(novell network) work/responds. It was resolved painlessly. As far
as the setups are concerned, No, We are not looking someone to manage
them rather looking someone to give their setups ;)
You will actually find that Gora's initial response was in your real
interest -
mailing lists are not a real substitute for a support contract - even
when you
might sometimes get a faster response here ( hey, IRC will beat mailing
lists
hands down on speed of response ) - but when you have a supported
platform, your
first call should always be to the people supporting it. Not only is it
their
responsibility, they will ( or should ) have a process-to-resolution
recommendation / execution plan. Depending on the situation, not
adhering to
that p-2-r plan will invalidate your support even.
btw, if you really are having so many issues with your support providers
and
having to live off the handholding and spoonfeeding in the lists, why
bother
paying redhat / suse / mandriva at all ? and go the CentOS route - You
can bring
in local