Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-31 Thread Mark Rousell
On 30/10/2018 19:57, Rainer Duffner wrote:
> Found something:
>
> https://www.nextplatform.com/2018/02/15/ins-outs-ibms-power9-zz-systems/
>
>
> That’s the entry-level, I presume?

Thanks for that. Those were the kinds of prices I was vaguely
remembering. Not totally out of whack compared to high end name-brand
x86-64 servers (i.e. higher prices but not unimaginably so for the extra
power -- pun intended).

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Rainer Duffner


> Am 30.10.2018 um 20:37 schrieb mark :
> 
>> 
> Unless I'm misremembering, these are midway between small server and
> mainframe. I just did a search, and only found used systems, never new,
> and they were all "refurbed", starting at $1500, and going up to $22k...
> and still refurbed.
> 
> I think my guess of new, > $100k is about right.
> 
>mark
> 
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Found something:

https://www.nextplatform.com/2018/02/15/ins-outs-ibms-power9-zz-systems/


That’s the entry-level, I presume?


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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Richard Zimmerman
Please contact me off list

Many thanks,

Richard


Richard Zimmerman
River Bend Hose Specialty, Inc.

-Original Message-
From: CentOS  On Behalf Of John Plemons
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2018 3:44 PM
To: CentOS mailing list ; mark 
Subject: Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

If any one is interested, I have a brand new AS400 sitting upstairs in my 
computer room, it was a bought as surplus item, never used. I just hung onto 
it. It can be yours cheap, not wanting an arm and a leg for it, I would be open 
to a nice offer if anyone has an interest.

john plemons


On 10/30/2018 3:37 PM, mark wrote:
> Mark Rousell wrote:
>> On 30/10/2018 17:14, Simon Matter wrote:
> 
>> Yup. When I looked at IBM Power machines before (maybe about a year 
>> ago, not sure), there was actually a pricing tool on the website. You 
>> could go through various options for machines (GPUs, CPUs, storage, 
>> memory, etc.) and get a price. Annoyingly I didn't record detailed 
>> pricing info but, as I recall, the prices were painful but not 
>> totally out of comparison with high end x86-64 servers from HPE and 
>> the like. I wish I'd kept the quotes now.
>>
>>> IBM has the chance to change this now.
>>>
>> It would be nice if they would. But I think it be a very big step for 
>> them to willingly reduce prices unless and until other vendors can 
>> undercut them in a large enough scale. But it seems that a lot of 
>> people in larger businesses still like the security of "IBM" (even if 
>> they choose to run Linux on the boxes).
>>
> Unless I'm misremembering, these are midway between small server and 
> mainframe. I just did a search, and only found used systems, never 
> new, and they were all "refurbed", starting at $1500, and going up to $22k...
> and still refurbed.
>
> I think my guess of new, > $100k is about right.
>
>  mark
>
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread John Plemons
If any one is interested, I have a brand new AS400 sitting upstairs in 
my computer room, it was a bought as surplus item, never used. I just 
hung onto it. It can be yours cheap, not wanting an arm and a leg for 
it, I would be open to a nice offer if anyone has an interest.


john plemons


On 10/30/2018 3:37 PM, mark wrote:

Mark Rousell wrote:

On 30/10/2018 17:14, Simon Matter wrote:



Yup. When I looked at IBM Power machines before (maybe about a year ago,
not sure), there was actually a pricing tool on the website. You could go
through various options for machines (GPUs, CPUs, storage, memory, etc.)
and get a price. Annoyingly I didn't record detailed pricing info but, as
I recall, the prices were painful but not totally out of
comparison with high end x86-64 servers from HPE and the like. I wish I'd
kept the quotes now.


IBM has the chance to change this now.


It would be nice if they would. But I think it be a very big step for
them to willingly reduce prices unless and until other vendors can undercut
them in a large enough scale. But it seems that a lot of people in larger
businesses still like the security of "IBM" (even if they choose to run
Linux on the boxes).


Unless I'm misremembering, these are midway between small server and
mainframe. I just did a search, and only found used systems, never new,
and they were all "refurbed", starting at $1500, and going up to $22k...
and still refurbed.

I think my guess of new, > $100k is about right.

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread mark
Mark Rousell wrote:
> On 30/10/2018 17:14, Simon Matter wrote:

> Yup. When I looked at IBM Power machines before (maybe about a year ago,
> not sure), there was actually a pricing tool on the website. You could go
> through various options for machines (GPUs, CPUs, storage, memory, etc.)
> and get a price. Annoyingly I didn't record detailed pricing info but, as
> I recall, the prices were painful but not totally out of
> comparison with high end x86-64 servers from HPE and the like. I wish I'd
> kept the quotes now.
>
>> IBM has the chance to change this now.
>>
>
> It would be nice if they would. But I think it be a very big step for
> them to willingly reduce prices unless and until other vendors can undercut
> them in a large enough scale. But it seems that a lot of people in larger
> businesses still like the security of "IBM" (even if they choose to run
> Linux on the boxes).
>
Unless I'm misremembering, these are midway between small server and
mainframe. I just did a search, and only found used systems, never new,
and they were all "refurbed", starting at $1500, and going up to $22k...
and still refurbed.

I think my guess of new, > $100k is about right.

mark

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Mark Rousell
On 30/10/2018 17:14, Simon Matter wrote:
> Are you sure, has this changed? In the past time when I had to do with
> iSeries, they even had their own rack size, no chance to put them into a
> standard server rack.

Ah, I must admit that I didn't look at rack sizes.

> I agree the Power System L922 looks promising, but I'm afraid the "Please
> contact us for pricing" still means the prices are eye watering. The
> problem is that there is almost no competition in the POWER server market
> which results in higher prices.

Yup. When I looked at IBM Power machines before (maybe about a year ago,
not sure), there was actually a pricing tool on the website. You could
go through various options for machines (GPUs, CPUs, storage, memory,
etc.) and get a price. Annoyingly I didn't record detailed pricing info
but, as I recall, the prices were painful but not totally out of
comparison with high end x86-64 servers from HPE and the like. I wish
I'd kept the quotes now.

> IBM has the chance to change this now.

It would be nice if they would. But I think it be a very big step for
them to willingly reduce prices unless and until other vendors can
undercut them in a large enough scale. But it seems that a lot of people
in larger businesses still like the security of "IBM" (even if they
choose to run Linux on the boxes).


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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Valeri Galtsev




On 10/30/18 12:47 PM, Mark Rousell wrote:

On 30/10/2018 16:40, mark wrote:

Linux was IBM's silver
bullet on a free platter. I mean, *how* many operatings systems do you
want to support...?


Yup, it must cost them a pretty penny to maintain all those proprietary
operating systems (especially when you include their mainframe ones). I
suspect that Linux


I would add "and FreeBSD" here. Mentioning only one of BSD descendants, 
the one with largest userbase.


Valeri


will eventually replace i and AIX -- eventually. But
I bet there are some significant clients who are still willing to pay
money to keep them going.





--

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Sr System Administrator
Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics
Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics
University of Chicago
Phone: 773-702-4247

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Mark Rousell
On 30/10/2018 16:40, mark wrote:
> Linux was IBM's silver
> bullet on a free platter. I mean, *how* many operatings systems do you
> want to support...?

Yup, it must cost them a pretty penny to maintain all those proprietary
operating systems (especially when you include their mainframe ones). I
suspect that Linux will eventually replace i and AIX -- eventually. But
I bet there are some significant clients who are still willing to pay
money to keep them going.



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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Simon Matter
> On 30/10/2018 14:40, Simon Matter wrote:
>>> On 30/10/2018 06:46, Simon Matter wrote:
> On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
>> To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM
>> POWER
>> and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the
>> hardware
>> market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS
>> alive)!
> Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
> supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
 What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD
 based
 servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads
 and
 we
 didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.
>>> As a matter of interest, did you look at IBM's own Power Systems (IBM
>>> System i, AS/400, System p, as was)? They promote some of these models
>>> as having very powerful processing capabilities but I wonder how they
>>> compare in practice with Epyc or Xeon systems.
>> I always had the impression that those IBM systems were priced in a
>> different range from what we were interested in. And I know that I
>> didn't
>> find any price listed online when looking for POWER servers from IBM
>> last
>> time - and I know what that means :-)
>
> Yup, I thought they'd be eye-wateringly expensive.
>
> Nevertheless, they are just rackmount servers, much like the kinds of

Are you sure, has this changed? In the past time when I had to do with
iSeries, they even had their own rack size, no chance to put them into a
standard server rack.

> x86-64 servers you can buy from Dell, Lenovo, HPE, Tyan, Gigabyte, etc.
> Better CPUs and buses but otherwise quite similar.
>
>> If they came back now with something like their deprecated X86 servers
>> (Netfinity, System x) but on POWER, that could be interesting.
>
> Haven't the IBM x86 servers gone to Lenovo now?
>
> As far as I can see, IBM Power Systems *are* in effect what you are
> looking for, i.e. a Power-based server to run Linux (or AIX or IBM i  if
> you prefer) -- well, that's how IBM would see it I think. They already
> support Linux on Power Systems. But I don't think they are going to
> undercut themselves, sadly.

I agree the Power System L922 looks promising, but I'm afraid the "Please
contact us for pricing" still means the prices are eye watering. The
problem is that there is almost no competition in the POWER server market
which results in higher prices. IBM has the chance to change this now.

Regards,
Simon

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread mark
Mark Rousell wrote:
> On 30/10/2018 14:49, mark wrote:
>
>
>> I wouldn't expect a system 1, if that's the current name
>>
>
> AS/400 -> eServer iSeries -> System i -> Power Systems
> RS/6000 -> eServer pSeries -> System p -> Power Systems
>
>
> So the current 'Power Systems' range combines what was AS/400 with what
> was RS/6000. They all use Power CPUs now and run Linux, IBM i, or AIX.
>
> "IBM i" is, of course the operating system previously known as OS/400
> and then i5/OS.
>
> Simple, eh. ;-)
>
Thanks. 

Just goes to reiterate what I said the other day: Linux was IBM's silver
bullet on a free platter. I mean, *how* many operatings systems do you
want to support...?

  mark

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Mark Rousell
On 30/10/2018 14:49, mark wrote:

> I wouldn't expect a system 1, if that's the current name

AS/400 -> eServer iSeries -> System i -> Power Systems
RS/6000 -> eServer pSeries -> System p -> Power Systems

So the current 'Power Systems' range combines what was AS/400 with what
was RS/6000. They all use Power CPUs now and run Linux, IBM i, or AIX.

"IBM i" is, of course the operating system previously known as OS/400
and then i5/OS.

Simple, eh. ;-)



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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Mark Rousell
On 30/10/2018 14:40, Simon Matter wrote:
>> On 30/10/2018 06:46, Simon Matter wrote:
 On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
> To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM
> POWER
> and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the
> hardware
> market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!
 Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
 supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
>>> What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD based
>>> servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and
>>> we
>>> didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.
>> As a matter of interest, did you look at IBM's own Power Systems (IBM
>> System i, AS/400, System p, as was)? They promote some of these models
>> as having very powerful processing capabilities but I wonder how they
>> compare in practice with Epyc or Xeon systems.
> I always had the impression that those IBM systems were priced in a
> different range from what we were interested in. And I know that I didn't
> find any price listed online when looking for POWER servers from IBM last
> time - and I know what that means :-)

Yup, I thought they'd be eye-wateringly expensive.

Nevertheless, they are just rackmount servers, much like the kinds of
x86-64 servers you can buy from Dell, Lenovo, HPE, Tyan, Gigabyte, etc.
Better CPUs and buses but otherwise quite similar.

> If they came back now with something like their deprecated X86 servers
> (Netfinity, System x) but on POWER, that could be interesting.

Haven't the IBM x86 servers gone to Lenovo now?

As far as I can see, IBM Power Systems *are* in effect what you are
looking for, i.e. a Power-based server to run Linux (or AIX or IBM i  if
you prefer) -- well, that's how IBM would see it I think. They already
support Linux on Power Systems. But I don't think they are going to
undercut themselves, sadly.

-- 
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread rainer

Am 2018-10-30 15:53, schrieb Simon Matter:

Still I wasn't sure how to compare the real life speed of POWER9 
compared

to something like the AMD EPYC 7601.


It probably depends on the workload.


And then, will everything work smooth
on POWER the same way it does on the AMD?


AFAIK, there were a lot of microcode-updates from AMD to fix bugs in the 
first batches of Threadripper and Epyc.


It was not smooth sailing from the very beginning.


POWER seems still not a first
preference arch for CentOS, so how would it impact us? Is it smart to 
add
another CPU arch if we still have to run some X86 code, like in our 
case

SAP MaxDB (which is also available for AIX on POWER but not Linux on
POWER)?

In the end we decided for AMD EPYC but kept the POWER thing in mind. 
Now

that IBM announces the purchase of RedHat it just reminded me that this
could become interesting again in the future. Let's see how it goes.


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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Simon Matter
> On 2018-10-30 02:46, Simon Matter wrote:
>>> On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
 To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM
 POWER
 and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the
 hardware
 market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS
 alive)!
>>>
>>> Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
>>> supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
>>
>> What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD
>> based
>> servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and
>> we
>> didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.
>>
>> Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems
>> anymore.
>> IBM could change this now.
>
> IBM's Power8 and Power9 servers run 8 threads per core, so a 24 core
> Power 8 server runs 192 threads, as long as the operating system can
> handle it, you should be fine.
>
> And if you're looking for major operations running on Power, look no
> farther than Google...they're a huge part of the Power consortium and
> run a huge farm of Power systems on Tyan boards.

Well, Google is in a different situation. They can even request their own
modified motherboards and customize so they get exactly what they want. We
can not do that in the SME market.

What was looking very interesting was this Raptor server:
https://secure.raptorcs.com/content/TL2SV1/intro.html

However, the bigger POWER9 CPUs were not available at the time we were
looking at it - this has changed now.

Still I wasn't sure how to compare the real life speed of POWER9 compared
to something like the AMD EPYC 7601. And then, will everything work smooth
on POWER the same way it does on the AMD? POWER seems still not a first
preference arch for CentOS, so how would it impact us? Is it smart to add
another CPU arch if we still have to run some X86 code, like in our case
SAP MaxDB (which is also available for AIX on POWER but not Linux on
POWER)?

In the end we decided for AMD EPYC but kept the POWER thing in mind. Now
that IBM announces the purchase of RedHat it just reminded me that this
could become interesting again in the future. Let's see how it goes.

Regards,
Simon

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread mark
Simon Matter wrote:
>> On 30/10/2018 06:46, Simon Matter wrote:
>>
 On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

> To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM
>  POWER
> and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the
> hardware market again (and of course don't forget to keep
> Fedora/CentOS alive)!
>
 Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The
 fastest supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
>>> What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD
>>> based servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with
>>> 64Cores/128Threads and
>>> we didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.
>>
>> As a matter of interest, did you look at IBM's own Power Systems (IBM
>> System i, AS/400, System p, as was)? They promote some of these models
>> as having very powerful processing capabilities but I wonder how they
>> compare in practice with Epyc or Xeon systems.
>
> I always had the impression that those IBM systems were priced in a
> different range from what we were interested in. And I know that I didn't
> find any price listed online when looking for POWER servers from IBM last
>  time - and I know what that means :-)
>
> If they came back now with something like their deprecated X86 servers
> (Netfinity, System x) but on POWER, that could be interesting.
>
Um, yep. The AS/400/system 1/whatever is not a small system. It's what
used to be called a mid-frame, not a micro. It's money.

Back around '94, I worked at a small software house that had it's own
DOS/VSR/SP mini-mainrame: Looked like a *very* large tower case... and
cost $192k. I wouldn't expect a system 1, if that's the current name, to
be under $100k or $200k, minimum.

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Simon Matter
> On 30/10/2018 06:46, Simon Matter wrote:
>>> On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
 To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM
 POWER
 and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the
 hardware
 market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!
>>> Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
>>> supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
>> What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD based
>> servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and
>> we
>> didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.
>
> As a matter of interest, did you look at IBM's own Power Systems (IBM
> System i, AS/400, System p, as was)? They promote some of these models
> as having very powerful processing capabilities but I wonder how they
> compare in practice with Epyc or Xeon systems.

I always had the impression that those IBM systems were priced in a
different range from what we were interested in. And I know that I didn't
find any price listed online when looking for POWER servers from IBM last
time - and I know what that means :-)

If they came back now with something like their deprecated X86 servers
(Netfinity, System x) but on POWER, that could be interesting.

Regards,
Simon

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Mike Burger

On 2018-10-30 02:46, Simon Matter wrote:

On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM 
POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the 
hardware
market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS 
alive)!


Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.


What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD 
based
servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and 
we

didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems 
anymore.

IBM could change this now.


IBM's Power8 and Power9 servers run 8 threads per core, so a 24 core 
Power 8 server runs 192 threads, as long as the operating system can 
handle it, you should be fine.


And if you're looking for major operations running on Power, look no 
farther than Google...they're a huge part of the Power consortium and 
run a huge farm of Power systems on Tyan boards.

--
Mike Burger
http://www.bubbanfriends.org

"It's always suicide-mission this, save-the-planet that. No one ever 
just stops by to say 'hi' anymore." --Colonel Jack O'Neill, SG1

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Mark Rousell
On 30/10/2018 06:46, Simon Matter wrote:
>> On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
>>> To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM POWER
>>> and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the hardware
>>> market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!
>> Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
>> supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
> What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD based
> servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and we
> didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

As a matter of interest, did you look at IBM's own Power Systems (IBM
System i, AS/400, System p, as was)? They promote some of these models
as having very powerful processing capabilities but I wonder how they
compare in practice with Epyc or Xeon systems.

-- 
Mark Rousell
 
 
 

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread rainer

Am 2018-10-30 10:03, schrieb Eddie G. O'Connor Jr.:




_To me it looks pathetic that a lively profitable entity with an
entirely different corporate psychology is consumed by big
conglomerates. What for? _



Even more profit.
Also, borrowing money is still very cheap these days (AFAIK, Amazon has 
financed most of their expansion - this is only possible because of 
continuously low interest rates) and companies want to take advantage of 
that, while low interest rates lasts.



_By the way I am 60 and been following Linux/Linus since Kernel 0.99.
Some time before RedHat appeared strong on the scene."_
_ _
_Andreas - 10.2018 _

It might not be a "PROBABLE" scenario...but its is a POSSIBLE one!
What would that entail? Just because Red Hat is a strong contributor
to the code nowif "Big Daddy" says to pull the plugwho's to
refuse them?...they OWN Red Hat now!



Yes, possible.

As of currently, RedHat isn't really replaceable.

IBM might sack half of the RHAT devs but that doesn't mean they could 
continue to write their code at some other place.
That other place would have to pay them, too, and it's unlikely to be 
for the same thing as before.


You can clearly see that in the OpenSolaris forks: a lot of people were 
let go, but none of the forks really took off.

The people went elsewhere.

IBM knows all this. There's likely going to be MSFT-licensing squeeze 
going to happen in the (somewhat distant) future.

And a push to cloud (and OpenShift).

From what I hear, almost all software-vendors are increasing licensing 
costs next year. Not only MSFT. Everybody that thinks they can get away 
with raising prices is doing so right now.


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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Eddie G. O'Connor Jr.



On 10/30/18 3:27 AM, rai...@ultra-secure.de wrote:

Am 2018-10-30 08:06, schrieb Eddie G. O'Connor Jr.:



Yeah.I guess that's one way to look at it.

My biggest worry? Is I've placed so much time and effort "getting to
know" Fedora and its intricacies, idiosyncrasies, its ins and
outs...dealt with ridicule on this very same list when I first
started, have "cut my teeth" on learning VERY hard lessons about
certain syntax in the Terminal and what NOT to type...only to have
that all "taken" away from me at the whim of IBM. It just seems
unfair. I'm hoping like H3LL that the developers @ Fedora are
seriously thinking about forking "Just In Case"!? I mean they could
still use the .RPM extensions, and possibly even still pull their code
from RHEL, but at least they would be autonomous and wouldn't have to
rely on IBM's good will in order to keep on churning out whatto
me...is the best Linux distro on the planet! As I write thisI'm
eyeballing the spare ThinkPad T-410 that I've neglected since I have
Fedora running on a Dell XPS, and I'm thinking its time to get "back
to my roots" and to find a distro I can put on that device and run
without concernI've heard some decent things about this "Pop-OS"
which comes with System76's hardware. Maybe I'll give that a
spin..then like I had said before...there's always Debian plain
vanilla...with maybe MATE or Cinnamon?.or else its going to have
to be where I buckle down and finally learn all there is to know about
LFS and Arch Linux and then move on to one of those...(God!.at
47!?its like how can I POSSIBLY start over again!?...) and THIS is
the kind of turmoil that ensues when a corporation buys a fully
functioning open course company!



I think you seriously underestimate the amount of influence and sheer 
man-power RedHat brings to Linux - and IBM, too.


https://www.linuxfoundation.org/blog/2017/10/2017-linux-kernel-report-highlights-developers-roles-accelerating-pace-change/ 



There's a reason RHEL is an enterprise-distribution - and Debian 
et.al. aren't (and never will, outside their niches).


RedHat writes ton of code that is needed for Linux to be truly 
"Enterprise" and that exists nowhere else.
The above statistics is only the kernel - but Enterprise Linux is so 
much more than a kernel.
That code isn't going to write itself, nor is somebody else going to 
pick up unless someone will pay the bill.
Maybe somebody can fork all the code and maintain it for a while - but 
to stay relevant, there must be further development, a roadmap ...


Sure, there's Google and a couple of other companies - but they really 
only write for themselves and as much as people try cargo-culting 
them, most companies aren't Google and their use-case hardly matches 
anyone else's.


I still remember when SAP announced that their engineers had ported 
their ERP to Linux - a sparetime-project at the beginning - and they 
were making it a tier 1 platform.

That was over 20 years ago.

Linux has come a long way.



True. It has, but still as another poster stated?

"/_But it is also entirely possible that CEntOS 8 will be the last one 
to come out. Before a corporate agenda will "merge" it with their 
general philosophy. _//_

_//__//_
_//_To me it looks pathetic that a lively profitable entity with an 
entirely different corporate psychology is consumed by big 
conglomerates. What for? _//_

_//__//_
_//_By the way I am 60 and been following Linux/Linus since Kernel 0.99. 
Some time before RedHat appeared strong on the scene."_//_

_//__//_
_//_Andreas - 10.2018 _/

It might not be a "PROBABLE" scenario...but its is a POSSIBLE one! What 
would that entail? Just because Red Hat is a strong contributor to the 
code nowif "Big Daddy" says to pull the plugwho's to refuse 
them?...they OWN Red Hat now! And this was my concern, at least as its 
own entity, RHEL had the luxury of whom to do business with and whom to 
reject / turn down. Now? They will be "goaded"? into playing with 
whomever the headmaster SAYS they're to play with! I dunnomaybe I'm 
thinking about it too much but it just doesn't bode well when a company 
gets bought out with nary a resistance. I guess only time will tell.




EGO Ii








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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Andreas Kasenides

On 30/10/2018 09:25, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:


On 10/30/18 3:20 AM, Rob Kampen wrote:

On 30/10/18 20:06, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:


On 10/30/18 2:46 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM 
POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the 
hardware
market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS 
alive)!

Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time. The fastest
supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD 
based
servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads 
and we

didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems 
anymore.

IBM could change this now.

Regards,
Simon

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Yeah.I guess that's one way to look at it.

My biggest worry? Is I've placed so much time and effort "getting to 
know" Fedora and its intricacies, idiosyncrasies, its ins and 
outs...dealt with ridicule on this very same list when I first 
started, have "cut my teeth" on learning VERY hard lessons about 
certain syntax in the Terminal and what NOT to type...only to 
have that all "taken" away from me at the whim of IBM. It just seems 
unfair. I'm hoping like H3LL that the developers @ Fedora are 
seriously thinking about forking "Just In Case"!? I mean they could 
still use the .RPM extensions, and possibly even still pull their 
code from RHEL, but at least they would be autonomous and wouldn't 
have to rely on IBM's good will in order to keep on churning out 
whatto me...is the best Linux distro on the planet! As I write 
thisI'm eyeballing the spare ThinkPad T-410 that I've neglected 
since I have Fedora running on a Dell XPS, and I'm thinking its time 
to get "back to my roots" and to find a distro I can put on that 
device and run without concernI've heard some decent things 
about this "Pop-OS" which comes with System76's hardware. Maybe I'll 
give that a spin..then like I had said before...there's always 
Debian plain vanilla...with maybe MATE or Cinnamon?.or else its 
going to have to be where I buckle down and finally learn all there 
is to know about LFS and Arch Linux and then move on to one of 
those...(God!.at 47!?its like how can I POSSIBLY start over 
again!?...) and THIS is the kind of turmoil that ensues when a 
corporation buys a fully functioning open course company!


wow, I am just 62 and looking forward to the next round of CentOS - 
version 8 coming up? - must be due soon 

Love learning new stuff, it never gets old (pun intended).
sorry for the noise, but couldn't resist, must be the age 




Hahahaah!.good one! Now THAT made me smile!.thanks for the 
laugh! Gotta remember to not always be the Doom & Gloom bearer! :o)! 
Guess I'll just keep on truckin' with F29...and hope all goes well.




EGO II





But it is also entirely possible that CentOS 8 will be the last one to 
come out. Before a corporate agenda will "merge" it with their general 
philosophy.


To me it looks pathetic that a lively profitable entity with an entirely 
different corporate psychology is consumed by big conglomerates. What for?


By the way I am 60 and been following Linux/Linus since Kernel 0.99. 
Some time before RedHat appeared strong on the scene.


Andreas



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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread rainer

Am 2018-10-30 08:06, schrieb Eddie G. O'Connor Jr.:



Yeah.I guess that's one way to look at it.

My biggest worry? Is I've placed so much time and effort "getting to
know" Fedora and its intricacies, idiosyncrasies, its ins and
outs...dealt with ridicule on this very same list when I first
started, have "cut my teeth" on learning VERY hard lessons about
certain syntax in the Terminal and what NOT to type...only to have
that all "taken" away from me at the whim of IBM. It just seems
unfair. I'm hoping like H3LL that the developers @ Fedora are
seriously thinking about forking "Just In Case"!? I mean they could
still use the .RPM extensions, and possibly even still pull their code
from RHEL, but at least they would be autonomous and wouldn't have to
rely on IBM's good will in order to keep on churning out whatto
me...is the best Linux distro on the planet! As I write thisI'm
eyeballing the spare ThinkPad T-410 that I've neglected since I have
Fedora running on a Dell XPS, and I'm thinking its time to get "back
to my roots" and to find a distro I can put on that device and run
without concernI've heard some decent things about this "Pop-OS"
which comes with System76's hardware. Maybe I'll give that a
spin..then like I had said before...there's always Debian plain
vanilla...with maybe MATE or Cinnamon?.or else its going to have
to be where I buckle down and finally learn all there is to know about
LFS and Arch Linux and then move on to one of those...(God!.at
47!?its like how can I POSSIBLY start over again!?...) and THIS is
the kind of turmoil that ensues when a corporation buys a fully
functioning open course company!



I think you seriously underestimate the amount of influence and sheer 
man-power RedHat brings to Linux - and IBM, too.


https://www.linuxfoundation.org/blog/2017/10/2017-linux-kernel-report-highlights-developers-roles-accelerating-pace-change/

There's a reason RHEL is an enterprise-distribution - and Debian et.al. 
aren't (and never will, outside their niches).


RedHat writes ton of code that is needed for Linux to be truly 
"Enterprise" and that exists nowhere else.
The above statistics is only the kernel - but Enterprise Linux is so 
much more than a kernel.
That code isn't going to write itself, nor is somebody else going to 
pick up unless someone will pay the bill.
Maybe somebody can fork all the code and maintain it for a while - but 
to stay relevant, there must be further development, a roadmap ...


Sure, there's Google and a couple of other companies - but they really 
only write for themselves and as much as people try cargo-culting them, 
most companies aren't Google and their use-case hardly matches anyone 
else's.


I still remember when SAP announced that their engineers had ported 
their ERP to Linux - a sparetime-project at the beginning - and they 
were making it a tier 1 platform.

That was over 20 years ago.

Linux has come a long way.







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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Eddie G. O'Connor Jr.



On 10/30/18 3:20 AM, Rob Kampen wrote:

On 30/10/18 20:06, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:


On 10/30/18 2:46 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM 
POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the 
hardware
market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS 
alive)!

Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time. The fastest
supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.
What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD 
based
servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads 
and we

didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems 
anymore.

IBM could change this now.

Regards,
Simon

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Yeah.I guess that's one way to look at it.

My biggest worry? Is I've placed so much time and effort "getting to 
know" Fedora and its intricacies, idiosyncrasies, its ins and 
outs...dealt with ridicule on this very same list when I first 
started, have "cut my teeth" on learning VERY hard lessons about 
certain syntax in the Terminal and what NOT to type...only to 
have that all "taken" away from me at the whim of IBM. It just seems 
unfair. I'm hoping like H3LL that the developers @ Fedora are 
seriously thinking about forking "Just In Case"!? I mean they could 
still use the .RPM extensions, and possibly even still pull their 
code from RHEL, but at least they would be autonomous and wouldn't 
have to rely on IBM's good will in order to keep on churning out 
whatto me...is the best Linux distro on the planet! As I write 
thisI'm eyeballing the spare ThinkPad T-410 that I've neglected 
since I have Fedora running on a Dell XPS, and I'm thinking its time 
to get "back to my roots" and to find a distro I can put on that 
device and run without concernI've heard some decent things about 
this "Pop-OS" which comes with System76's hardware. Maybe I'll give 
that a spin..then like I had said before...there's always Debian 
plain vanilla...with maybe MATE or Cinnamon?.or else its going to 
have to be where I buckle down and finally learn all there is to know 
about LFS and Arch Linux and then move on to one of 
those...(God!.at 47!?its like how can I POSSIBLY start over 
again!?...) and THIS is the kind of turmoil that ensues when a 
corporation buys a fully functioning open course company!


wow, I am just 62 and looking forward to the next round of CentOS - 
version 8 coming up? - must be due soon 

Love learning new stuff, it never gets old (pun intended).
sorry for the noise, but couldn't resist, must be the age 




Hahahaah!.good one! Now THAT made me smile!.thanks for the 
laugh! Gotta remember to not always be the Doom & Gloom bearer! :o)! 
Guess I'll just keep on truckin' with F29...and hope all goes well.




EGO II










EGO II

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Rob Kampen

On 30/10/18 20:06, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:


On 10/30/18 2:46 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM 
POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the 
hardware

market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!

Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.

What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD based
servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads 
and we

didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems 
anymore.

IBM could change this now.

Regards,
Simon

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Yeah.I guess that's one way to look at it.

My biggest worry? Is I've placed so much time and effort "getting to 
know" Fedora and its intricacies, idiosyncrasies, its ins and 
outs...dealt with ridicule on this very same list when I first 
started, have "cut my teeth" on learning VERY hard lessons about 
certain syntax in the Terminal and what NOT to type...only to have 
that all "taken" away from me at the whim of IBM. It just seems 
unfair. I'm hoping like H3LL that the developers @ Fedora are 
seriously thinking about forking "Just In Case"!? I mean they could 
still use the .RPM extensions, and possibly even still pull their code 
from RHEL, but at least they would be autonomous and wouldn't have to 
rely on IBM's good will in order to keep on churning out whatto 
me...is the best Linux distro on the planet! As I write thisI'm 
eyeballing the spare ThinkPad T-410 that I've neglected since I have 
Fedora running on a Dell XPS, and I'm thinking its time to get "back 
to my roots" and to find a distro I can put on that device and run 
without concernI've heard some decent things about this "Pop-OS" 
which comes with System76's hardware. Maybe I'll give that a 
spin..then like I had said before...there's always Debian plain 
vanilla...with maybe MATE or Cinnamon?.or else its going to have 
to be where I buckle down and finally learn all there is to know about 
LFS and Arch Linux and then move on to one of those...(God!.at 
47!?its like how can I POSSIBLY start over again!?...) and THIS is 
the kind of turmoil that ensues when a corporation buys a fully 
functioning open course company!


wow, I am just 62 and looking forward to the next round of CentOS  - 
version 8 coming up? - must be due soon 

Love learning new stuff, it never gets old (pun intended).
sorry for the noise, but couldn't resist, must be the age 



EGO II

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Eddie G. O'Connor Jr.



On 10/30/18 2:46 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the hardware
market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!

Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.

What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD based
servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and we
didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems anymore.
IBM could change this now.

Regards,
Simon

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Yeah.I guess that's one way to look at it.

My biggest worry? Is I've placed so much time and effort "getting to 
know" Fedora and its intricacies, idiosyncrasies, its ins and 
outs...dealt with ridicule on this very same list when I first started, 
have "cut my teeth" on learning VERY hard lessons about certain syntax 
in the Terminal and what NOT to type...only to have that all "taken" 
away from me at the whim of IBM. It just seems unfair. I'm hoping like 
H3LL that the developers @ Fedora are seriously thinking about forking 
"Just In Case"!? I mean they could still use the .RPM extensions, and 
possibly even still pull their code from RHEL, but at least they would 
be autonomous and wouldn't have to rely on IBM's good will in order to 
keep on churning out whatto me...is the best Linux distro on the 
planet! As I write thisI'm eyeballing the spare ThinkPad T-410 that 
I've neglected since I have Fedora running on a Dell XPS, and I'm 
thinking its time to get "back to my roots" and to find a distro I can 
put on that device and run without concernI've heard some decent 
things about this "Pop-OS" which comes with System76's hardware. Maybe 
I'll give that a spin..then like I had said before...there's always 
Debian plain vanilla...with maybe MATE or Cinnamon?.or else its 
going to have to be where I buckle down and finally learn all there is 
to know about LFS and Arch Linux and then move on to one of 
those...(God!.at 47!?its like how can I POSSIBLY start over 
again!?...) and THIS is the kind of turmoil that ensues when a 
corporation buys a fully functioning open course company!




EGO II

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-30 Thread Simon Matter
> On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:
>> To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM POWER
>> and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the hardware
>> market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!
>
> Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest
> supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.

What I meant is that POWER could become a competitor for Intel/AMD based
servers. We're now running AMD EPYC servers with 64Cores/128Threads and we
didn't find any POWER system which could compete in this area.

Also, looking at TOP500 list there are not so many POWER systems anymore.
IBM could change this now.

Regards,
Simon

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-29 Thread Brendan Conoboy

On 10/29/18 1:55 AM, Simon Matter wrote:

To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the hardware
market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!


Er, RHEL has been running on Power for a very long time.  The fastest 
supercomputer in the world is Power9 + RHEL.


--
Brendan Conoboy / RHEL Development Coordinator / Red Hat, Inc.
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-29 Thread Hakan Koseoglu
On Sun, 28 Oct 2018 at 23:23, Valeri Galtsev 
wrote:

>
> 2. Does anybody still remember OS/2 which lost userbase to MS Windows for
> workgroups, but IBM still supported it for quite long period of time. And
> OS/2 was much better IMHO.
>
>
As a long-time OS/2 user, I do remember, and damn what a miserable life
that was. As soon as I had wound my BBS down (which was running on Maximus
on OS/2), I had switched my home server around to Linux since I preferred
it way way more. Using any new hardware, or a decent graphics card was a
constant struggle and IBM wouldn't care much.

Support as in life support is as good as none.
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-29 Thread Simon Matter
>
> On Sun, October 28, 2018 6:07 pm, mark wrote:
>> On 10/28/18 17:54, Zube wrote:
>>> On Sun Oct 28 10:20:31 PM, Alain péan wrote:
>>>
 Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :
> Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.

 Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
 contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
 I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...
>>>
>>> That old war wound started aching again.
>>>
>>> IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun
>>
>> Actually, it could have been *much8 worse: *Oracle* could have bought
>> RH.
>>
>> That *really* would have been an order of magnitude worse.
>>
>
> I like the fact that it was IBM who bought RedHat. I remember several good
> things about IBM:
>
> 1. Postfix. Vietse Venema wrote it at IBM Thomas J. Watson Research
> Center, and IBM was really happy to release MTA written with security in
> mind under IBM Public License 1.0 which is a free software license - for
> everybody to use.

That's one example but I think there is much more in the history of IBM
when looking back.

To me it seems like, if they are smart, they will try to push IBM POWER
and RedHat Linux together to establish real competition in the hardware
market again (and of course don't forget to keep Fedora/CentOS alive)!

Regards,
Simon

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Valeri Galtsev


On Sun, October 28, 2018 6:07 pm, mark wrote:
> On 10/28/18 17:54, Zube wrote:
>> On Sun Oct 28 10:20:31 PM, Alain péan wrote:
>>
>>> Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :
 Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.
>>>
>>> Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
>>> contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
>>> I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...
>>
>> That old war wound started aching again.
>>
>> IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun
>
> Actually, it could have been *much8 worse: *Oracle* could have bought RH.
>
> That *really* would have been an order of magnitude worse.
>

I like the fact that it was IBM who bought RedHat. I remember several good
things about IBM:

1. Postfix. Vietse Venema wrote it at IBM Thomas J. Watson Research
Center, and IBM was really happy to release MTA written with security in
mind under IBM Public License 1.0 which is a free software license - for
everybody to use.

2. Does anybody still remember OS/2 which lost userbase to MS Windows for
workgroups, but IBM still supported it for quite long period of time. And
OS/2 was much better IMHO.

I bet many people can add other great things about IBM.

All in all I'm not unhappy IBM bough RedHat, but will be quite unhappy if
IBM sells RedHat to somebody else after some time.

Valeri


Valeri Galtsev
Sr System Administrator
Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics
Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics
University of Chicago
Phone: 773-702-4247

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread centos--- via CentOS



On 10/28/18 19:07, mark wrote:

On 10/28/18 17:54, Zube wrote:

On Sun Oct 28 10:20:31 PM, Alain péan wrote:


Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :

Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.


Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...


That old war wound started aching again.

IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun


Actually, it could have been *much8 worse: *Oracle* could have bought RH.

That *really* would have been an order of magnitude worse.


Not for Canonical...

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread mark

On 10/28/18 17:54, Zube wrote:

On Sun Oct 28 10:20:31 PM, Alain péan wrote:


Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :

Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.


Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...


That old war wound started aching again.

IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun


Actually, it could have been *much8 worse: *Oracle* could have bought RH.

That *really* would have been an order of magnitude worse.

mark
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Zube
On Sun Oct 28 11:07:50 PM, Jos Vos wrote:

> On Sun, Oct 28, 2018 at 03:54:06PM -0600, Zube wrote:
>
> > That old war wound started aching again.
> > 
> > IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun
> 
> At least IBM is a far more attractive buyer than the evil Oracle,
> well known for killing OSS companies as a strategy.  Also Microsoft
> has ben mentioned as possible buyer of Red Hat, that would be much
> worse too.
> 
> So, let's not be too pessimistic and give IBM a fair chance.  IBM
> certainly does not have a bad track record on open source and as
> a technology-driven company, at least a much better track record
> than most if not all other potential buyers.

Of course.  For the next several $timeframes, it will all be
speculation, not worth a shovelful of earth.

I'd be happy, nay, over-the-freakin'-moon, to be proven wrong.

If the trajectory follows the Oracle (tm) pattern, the first change
will be that things that you used to be able to download unencumbered
will need an IBM username and password.  Everyone who is nervous will
try to reassure themselves and others that this isn't a fundamental
change, that it's really just a minor inconvenience, we can still get
what we need.  I think our English chums call this "the thin end of
the wedge."

I'll stop now and wait with everyone else, silently, to see what
happens.  But I can't resist an old joke from long ago when there was a
rumor about IBM buying Apple (I think this was in the late 80s or 90s):

Q:  What do you get when you cross IBM with Apple?
A:  IBM

Cheers,
Zube
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Jos Vos
On Sun, Oct 28, 2018 at 03:54:06PM -0600, Zube wrote:

> > Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :
> > 
> > Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
> > contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
> > I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...
> 
> That old war wound started aching again.
> 
> IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun

At least IBM is a far more attractive buyer than the evil Oracle,
well known for killing OSS companies as a strategy.  Also Microsoft
has ben mentioned as possible buyer of Red Hat, that would be much
worse too.

So, let's not be too pessimistic and give IBM a fair chance.  IBM
certainly does not have a bad track record on open source and as
a technology-driven company, at least a much better track record
than most if not all other potential buyers.

-- 
--Jos Vos 
--X/OS Experts in Open Systems BV   |   Office: +31 20 6938364
--Amsterdam, The Netherlands|   Mobile: +31 6 26216181
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Zube
On Sun Oct 28 10:20:31 PM, Alain péan wrote:

> Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :
> > Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.
> 
> Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
> contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
> I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...

That old war wound started aching again.

IBM:Redhat :: Oracle:Sun

Cheers,
Zube
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Albert McCann
> -Original Message-
> From: CentOS [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Alain péan
> Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2018 5:21 PM
> To: centos@centos.org
> Subject: Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat
> 
> Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :
> > Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.
> 
> Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
> contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
> I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...

IBM screwed up with the purchase of the Weather.com properties, including 
Weather Underground. For more than a decade, WU benefitted from thousands of 
people with personal weather stations feeding local data to WU. IBM now plans 
to kill the existing WU weather API (which also was the Weather.com API), and 
gives the appearance of screwing over all those personal weather folks. While 
IBM now claims that they will have minimal 'free' access 'to their own data', a 
huge number of the PW folks have bailed and left, as IBM won't even tell them 
if they can even have the three-day forecast, let alone the ten-day forecast, 
plus the weather alerts data.

The WU API will die 12-31-18, and still there is no announcement as to what and 
how the PW people will be allowed to access the API. this leaves a bunch of 
downstream users who had free API keys, which WU gave out to nonprofit users up 
until last April or so. It also screws over the paid API users, and looks like 
the costs for commercial API access will drastically increase. 

The IBM rep on the message forum still claims that IBM will support the PW data 
providers, but will not answer what exactly that will provide to those PW 
providers.

As they've completely screwed over users providing free data, I can see them 
attempting to do the same to the 'free software' company where they plan to 
monetize the software and data the same way as the weather data.

Read all the comments here from the PW providers:

https://apicommunity.wunderground.com/weatherapi/topics/end-of-service-for-the-weather-underground-api

Al
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Alain péan
Le 28/10/2018 à 22:10, Albert McCann a écrit :
> Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.

Red Hat would stay as a distinct entity inside IBM. IBM has also
contributed to Free software, and especially Linux kernel.
I don't know how bad it is and the implications for CentOS...

Alain

-- 
Administrateur Système/Réseau
C2N (ex LPN) Centre de Nanosciences et Nanotechnologies (UMR 9001)
Avenue de La vauve, 91920 Palaiseau
Tel : 01-70-27-06-88

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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Kay Schenk

On 10/28/2018 02:10 PM, Albert McCann wrote:

-Original Message-
From: CentOS [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Larry
Martell
Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2018 4:11 PM
To: CentOS mailing list 
Subject: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/28/ibm-is-reportedly-nearing-deal-to-
acquire-red-hat.html


Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.


The fact that IBM is buying RH isn't make me weep as much as this 
statement --


"The open source, enterprise software maker will become a unit of IBM’s 
Hybrid Cloud division, with Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst joining IBM’s 
senior management team and reporting to CEO Ginni Rometty."


Will the end-user market in all facets (desktop Linux?) continue to be 
supported?




--
--
MzK

"Less is MORE."
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Albert McCann
> -Original Message-
> From: CentOS [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of Larry
> Martell
> Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2018 4:11 PM
> To: CentOS mailing list 
> Subject: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat
> 
> https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/28/ibm-is-reportedly-nearing-deal-to-
> acquire-red-hat.html

Damn, this is bad enough to make one weep.
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Re: [CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Phil Perry

On 28/10/18 20:10, Larry Martell wrote:

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/28/ibm-is-reportedly-nearing-deal-to-acquire-red-hat.html


Also announced on IBM's website:

https://newsroom.ibm.com/2018-10-28-IBM-To-Acquire-Red-Hat-Completely-Changing-The-Cloud-Landscape-And-Becoming-Worlds-1-Hybrid-Cloud-Provider


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[CentOS] IBM buying RedHat

2018-10-28 Thread Larry Martell
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/28/ibm-is-reportedly-nearing-deal-to-acquire-red-hat.html
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