There has been lots of negative press regarding the lack of a Red Hat 10 distro with box sets and support for sale from Red Hat, for example:
Red Hat Linux Support To End
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/03/1749259
Red Hat realignment opens door for Red Carpet
http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=03/11/03/2136258
Red Hat tells customers, "No more freebies!"
http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=03/11/03/1657205
Though not long ago there was a more positive discussion:
Red Hat Linux Project Merges With Fedora
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/09/22/1712227
Progeny Brings Red Hat and Debian Closer Together
http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=03/10/25/1345240
I think that Red Hat opening up the development process to the community, via Fedora [1] is a great thing.
The exchange value of a Fedora CD set is basically the cost of producing and shipping them, there is some money to be made there but not much.
I think this is why Red Hat are concentrating on selling services to businesses.
Fedora is called Fedora in part because of the merger with the Fedora Linux Project [2], a group who were producing 3rd party RPMs for machines running Red Hat and also to enable the free as in free beer distribution to be reproduced en mass by anyone without having the hassle of removing the Red Hat logo before burning the isos [3].
However Red Hat could do what Mozilla does, sell cheap Mozilla CDs [4] or what OpenOffice.org does, link to people selling OpenOffice.org CDs [5]. After all Red Hat still sells hats, stickers, t-shirts and posters! [6].
I have been lurking and sometimes reading mail on the new Fedora lists [7] and lots of cool stuff has been happening, PPC ports, offers to help on internationalisation, the inclusion of more packages, support for other updaters like apt and yum and even a legacy project to support old Red Hat versions is being started.
What is essentially happening here is that the free software mode of production is asserting its nature and getting more into the driving seat -- free software works best when it is developed in an open and free manner.
In the meantime SuSE has been brought by Novell whom IBM have taken a big stake in. This gets loads of support and postive press:
Novell Announces Agreement to Acquire SuSE
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/04/1336252
FLASH - Novell buys SuSE
http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=03/11/04/1332252
I don't know what will happen with SuSE, will they realise that to survive they have to open up their development process and thus cede control to the community or will the hierarchical command structures of capital try to hang on to this distrubtion?
References
1. http://fedora.redhat.com/
2. http://www.fedora.us/
3. http://fedora.redhat.com/about/trademarks/guidelines/
4. http://store.mozilla.org/
5. http://distribution.openoffice.org/cdrom/
6. http://www.redhat.com/apps/commerce/coolstuff.html
7. http://fedora.redhat.com/participate/communicate/
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