On Thu, 2008-04-03 at 00:32 +0800, Hendra wrote:
> --- Roy Ong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > 
> > this is a bad article. i remember reading a para citing the reason for
> > shifting away from Fedora is because the community is "no longer"
> > supporting it. really ... i think the editorial needs to get the facts
> > right ... either educate the interviewee or provide a clarification.
> > this highlights the lack of depth in editorial as well as the
> > interviewee. bad on both counts.
> > 
> > fedora is an on-going project and the reason is simply because they
> > refuse to update/upgrade their existing fedora distribution. and in the
> > first place ... choosing fedora as a production distribution for a
> > server? hugh? please ... personally, i'm hoping to see a formal
> > rebuttal, perhaps something from the local fedora ambassadors?
> > 
> > good, knowledgeable engineers don't come cheap. i guess this is a case
> > of you pay peanuts, you get monk*ys ... and you know what kind of advice
> > they give. sigh.
> 
> if really linux sysadmin, different linux distro won't make any different, 
> just
> open eyes on first day...  
> even for exploring *BSD & Sol...
> 
> Redhat, Novell and Sun are there, wondering why M$ replaced Mandrake? Same "M"
> ? :)

well, i guess then its not really a linux sysadmin then. in any case, i
think this will not be the last we hear of businesses switching from
some form of linux, foss, opensource to M$. 

we must all realize that for many SME business-owners, technology is
just not their game. they use technology to support their business
activities but that doesn't mean that they will have the ability to
understand, comprehend and make informed choices. many a times, things
are left to the "best person" to make the choices - and in some cases,
the "best person" is a relative junior "system administrator" whose idea
of a command line is still running .bat files - doing "dir/w" and
"ipconfig"

take a step back and look at where we are at today. for many of us on
this mailing list, we can probably tell that the article doesn't do
justice to fedora, linux and in a certain extent FOSS. but what's going
to happen thereafter? well, my personal guess is that these articles
about businesses switching to M$ products will still continue to make
the news, highlighting key features of the newer set of M$ products
while making a mockery of what alternatives they have been using
earlier. yes, you can be sure that's going happen - we all know it -
this isn't the first time that an article like this has made the
news ... but the true question is ... what are "we" going to do about
it?

"we" ??? yes - whose the "we" that i am referring to? well, anyone and
everyone involved in this linux, foss, opensource revolution - fedora
users, ubuntu users, linux users, community leaders, community members,
commercial business owners, developers etc. EVERYONE ... you know what
the problem is? the problem is ... with linux, foss, opensource ...
there is just TOO MUCH choice and TOO LITTLE education. listen to the
business owner and he'll likely to tell you ... 

"fedora, rhel, suse, debian, ubuntu ... whoa - so many choose from -
which one and how to choose hugh?"

and whose their beside them to make a choice? their own trusted system
administrator, who in the first place ain't too sure himself :P

i know ... some of you are going to say that we are already introducing
linux, foss and opensource into the schools and institutes of higher
learning so perhaps things are not so bad. yes, that's a great step in
the right direction but that's only a beginning. there is a need to
follow-up and continue to make sure that these individuals are kept
abreast of the what's happening in the ever-changing linux, foss and
opensource environment. 

on a daily basis, locally, we are stuffed with advertisements, articles,
sales material that all carry that all too familiar term "Windows
XXX" ... why can't we see "Linux" "Opensource" "FOSS" for a change?
can't "we" get media coverage as well? can't "we" point the editorial to
successful case studies of someone migrating away from M$ and to a
linux, foss and opensource alternative? is the local linux, foss and
opensource environment too small a market to be deserve some attention?
singapore is a place for many firsts and leads in many areas - sadly,
linux, foss and opensource doesn't seem to make the list 

... to put it bluntly, if you think that the article deserves an
"advertisement" tag right at the top ... then i would like some day to
see an "advertisement" for linux, foss and opensource ... 


roy ong.
- business-owner whose business functions runs on centos/rhel
- end-user whose desktop/laptop runs on fedora
:P

_______________________________________________
Slugnet mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.lugs.org.sg/mailman/listinfo/slugnet

Reply via email to