Installing fedora at school

Paul Howarth paul at city-fan.org
Fri Jan 28 15:53:38 UTC 2005


James Mckenzie wrote:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Paul Howarth <paul at city-fan.org>
> Sent: Jan 28, 2005 8:44 AM
> To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list at redhat.com>
> Subject: Re: Installing fedora at school
> 
> Danial Rehman wrote:
> 
>>My school is thinking of installing linux on some of the computers,
>>and were wondering if it's legal to use linux for non-private usage. I
>>really didn't get what they meant but something about linux only
>>beeing free if your going to install for yourself and not for a whole
>>school or corporation or whatever.
>>
>>So I'm wondering if it's allowed to get fedora for about 10 compters
>>at my school the legal way.
>>I always thought linux was free for everyone?
> 
> 
> |Linux itself is free for everyone. Some distributions may additionally 
> |include proprietary software that is not free for everyone, but Fedora 
> |is not one of those distributions. You can install it on as many 
> |machines as you like.
> 
> One of the things that I would like to point out is that FC is a BETA or testing product.  I would not install it to a production or training environment. I would use a more stable distribution in such an environment, such as RHEL.

However, Red Hat Enterprise Linux is one of the distributions that 
cannot be installed on as many computers as you like. There are 
substantial discounts available for educational use, but it's not free.

CentOS (http://www.centos.org/) is a free clone of RHEL that's worth 
looking at.

Paul.




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