>>> On Sun, Aug 14, 2005 at 2:44 pm, in message
<200508141836.j7EIaOeP019329@ms-smtp-05.tampabay.rr.com>,
kelliott4@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
> I received my Novell 9.3 Technical Resource Kit. I was disappointed
that
> it only contained ISOs for burning Live CDs. I went ahead and burned
the
> CDs and tried them. Frankly, I could not see any reason to upgrade
our
> servers from SuSE 9.1 to 9.3. I'm pretty sure I must be missing
something,
> but the Live CD certainly did NOT do a good job of selling me on
buying
> upgrades.
>
> The first Technical Resource Kit was great. This one has become
shelfware.
> Meanwhile, I'm playing with Fedora Core on one test server and Debian
on
> another. The lack of an installable version of SuSE limits my
ability to
> evaluate.
>
> Odd that the powers- that- be would not include access to an open
source
> product. This seems to play into the hands of those who say that
Novell
> doesn't "get" open source.
>
> Ken Elliott
> =====================
>
> ----- Original Message-----
> From: slug@nks.net [mailto:slug@nks.net] On Behalf Of Bob Foxworth
> Sent: Friday, August 12, 2005 11:42 PM
> To: slug@nks.net
> Subject: Re: [SLUG] New Novell 9.3 Technical Resource Kit
>
>
>
>> >>>I do not know about the rest of you I never recieved mine.
>> >>>It was ordered and have yet to see the Resource Kit.
>> >>>
>> >>>Bill Preece
>
>
>> >>>>>>with the 9.1 ver in it which is what I am running right now
on
> my work
>> >>>>>>laptop. I would certainly like to get that one to. I guess I
did
>> >>>>>not >answer
>> >>>>>>one of the questions right with I ordered the original one...
>
>
> Consider doing this.
>
> Create a company name. Rent a PO Box in that name. Register the name
with
> the State as a "fictitious name" ($10/year) Have all your corporate
mail
> sent there. Should improve your chances.
> Also helps in getting trade magazines.
>
> - Bob
>
To start - open source does not mean free. Nothing is free. Open source
is the freedom to do with it what you please provided you adhere to the
license agreement - in the case of SUSE Linux that would be GPL.
Running a business on SUSE Personal is like playing with fire...you
will get burned by not having a support infrastructure in place. Don't
get me wrong - this code is what SLES is built from, however SUSE
Personal is not supported and has a 6 month lifecycle. SLES is fully
supported by a huge ecosystem and it's lifecycle is up to 7 years now.
The Technical resource kit is just that...a resource kit.
If you want to download SUSE Linux - simply go to opensuse.org and
download away!
JP
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