doughnuts on a fish hook
Howard Owen
hbo at egbok.com
Wed Aug 27 15:58:44 UTC 2003
On Wed, 2003-08-27 at 05:27, William Hooper wrote:
> If you are violating the license, you don't get support. If you don't get
> support one has to wonder why you aren't using RHLP...
Well, for similar reasons that ISVs like RHEL: less volatility. A stable
platform is a boon for sysadmin support, too.
Big enterprises are on the verge (or slightly over the verge) of
deploying Linux on the desktop in a big way. The reasons for this
are complex, but they simplify down to the fact that the cost savings
of doing so are starting to outweigh the costs of the conversion.
Part of the calculation is the relative cost of licenses vs Windows.
Another part is the cost of support of thousands of Linux desktops vs
Windows. With Red Hat's Enterprise strategy, the no-cost license is
coupled with the most volatile and least supported alternative. While
this is understandable from Red Hat's perspective, it makes it
impossible to hit the sweet spot on large scale Linux desktop
deployments.
I have one Fortune 1000 client who is wrestling with this issue. They
are rolling their own Red Hat based distro, and paying the price of
chasing the consumer OS, while looking over their shoulder at the
end-of-life dates for 7.x, 8 and 9. They have 1400 desktops rolled out,
in a potential market of 16,000.
I think Red Hat should drop license fees for their WS product. The
window of opportunity is open for Linux on the desktop, due to the
maturation of the technology, Microsoft's gouging on licenses, and the
lack of compelling new technology upon which they can piggyback new
proprietary lock-in strategies. This window will close as soon as
something truly new shows up. Microsoft will implement it stuffed full
of barbed hooks. If they still have 95% desktop share at that point,
the game will be over, for this round at least.
--
Howard Owen "Even if you are on the right
EGBOK Consultants track, you'll get run over if you
hbo at egbok.com +1-650-339-5733 just sit there." - Will Rogers
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