FreeBSD Commercial Support From BSDI 35
As this release explains, BSDI are about to start providing support contracts for FreeBSD. Support options will include options from per-incident to 24x7 support. Linux already has a number of high profile companies providing support contracts, such as Red Hat, and IBM. It'll be interesting to see how much of an issue the availability of BSD support turns out to be.
Another checklist item completed (Score:1)
Are there any commerical support contracts available for the other *BSD variants?
Yes! (Score:2)
Another bad sign for Microsoft (Score:1)
Hah (Score:1)
you must be very, very bored, or very, very stupid (Score:1)
With every re-posting of it, my belief that it was a half-way decent bit of parody gets dimmer. I'm starting to lean toward the idea that maybe all of those spelling mistakes WEREN'T intentional.
(Yes, responding to it will only cause it to continue or even escalate.. but damn, i had to say something at SOME point.)
-The Reverend
Re:Another checklist item completed (Score:1)
This is a huge deal in the future of open-source software. It sort-of completes the business model:
Write software
Give it away free
Charge an arm and a leg to corporations who want support
This could be how open-source software goes mainstream, and (more importantly) how the practioners can start seeing real money. The money issue affects all sorts of things, but most notably licensing costs and the weird personnel-intensive testing stuff that people do to make decent UIs.
Free, FreeBSD/Linux/Unix support (Score:3)
They have a java chat client for the yoonix kiddies.
(No, I don't work for yahoo or make any money off of this, I do it cuz I like doing it.)
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blue
Why would I need this? (Score:3)
Sign of Things to come? (Score:1)
Well, as many (yes, not all) BSDers have been moaning about for some time, Linux is getting all the hype and BSDs have unfairly been left out in the cold. This oughta change that.
So the merger between BSDI and Walnut Creek (or whatever that was a few months back) has now resulted in a BSD getting commercial-grade support. perhaps now other companies will jump on this new bandwagon (hopefully for the right reasons, too) and we'll see BSD take its rightful place out there in the IT world.
This is a good thing for all of us who value a vital marketplace, where one has a choice about what to run. I don't see any negatives here for anybody.
FreeBSD competition with Linux? (Score:2)
I use Linux primarily, and happen to like it better than BSD. However, I also use FreeBSD on several boxen, and enjoy it.
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It seems that those folks who are pro-Linux and anti-BSD might be getting more competition from FreeBSD with this advent.
As mentioned, Linux already has quite a bit of corporate support - but from a corporate perspective, this might be even better. BSDI supporting FreeBSD will, IMO, be very attractive to companies interested in a free *NIX.
I just hope that the competition isn't so fierce that Linux gets shoved backwards on the acceptance ladder. I can't wait until I can walk in the door at a random company and see Linux on the desktop, BSD in the server room, and Windows in the boss' offices (we wouldn't want the PHB's to have a powerful OS, now, would we? :P)
Just my USD0,02
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interesting.... (Score:1)
Re:Why would I need this? (Score:2)
Re:FreeBSD competition with Linux? (Score:1)
Perhaps it would be better to send the PHBs into 'the field' with WinCE and let the sysadmins run the company for a while. :)
Re:Another checklist item completed (Score:3)
Walnut Creek has supported FreeBSD commercially for a long time, you could have bought a service contratc or even per-incident service from them.
FreeBSD support is not new, however BSDi has a good reputation in the business world for support on BSD/OS.
This is a good opportunity for some more exposure.
-Pat
Re:FreeBSD competition with Linux? (Score:1)
Well, if those "pro-Linux-anti-BSD" folks (hereby defined as Linux zealots) are getting more competition, then that is just too bad. If they don't like it, then it is their problem. Like all zealots, they can (and should) be ignored.
Competition is good, and it is only in the best interests of Open Source that FreeBSD, too, gets commercial support. One should not forget that, in the grander scheme of things, Linux and FreeBSD and in the same boat.
I'm a Linux user, btw, with little experience in using *BSD.
Re:Why Did John Katz Steal Our Posts (Score:1)
Moderation and BSD (Score:1)
generally BSD is getting alot of attention lately, however the majority of the slashdot audience is Linux oriented. Be happy we get the exposure we do on Slashdot.
-Pat
Re:Another checklist item completed (Score:1)
yup... the IPO checklist.
"Follow the money", All The President's Men `deep throat'
FreeBSD and 1st posts (Score:1)
This is great news! (Score:2)
FreeBSD is quite popuar in our labs here at my company, because the TCP/IP stack is considered better written than the Linux one. It's not performance problems, Linux is OK with that, it's some advanced features that don't work quite good on Linux, like OSPF and source routing.
So, I have been looking around for some commercial backing, like the one Linux enjoyed in recent times. This seems to be the first one, and I hope there will be more. Congrats to the *BSD community.
(On a side note: I am also a BeOS user, and for some reason the typical BeOS network will have FreeBSD as a server, and same goes for a pro-BeOS site.)
Re:Another checklist item completed (Score:4)
For what it's worth, I'm a BSDI support rep, and I think this'll be a great deal. Most of us know a couple kinds of Unix, and 90% of support work is based on troubleshooting skills, not system-specific knowledge. You'd be amazed at how many calls are resolved with "Did this work before? What's changed since then? Is there a typo in that file?".
Anyway, this isn't "the first", but it's certainly going to get more publicity than the Walnut Creek support did, just because of marketing.
Other BSD's? I dunno. I believe OpenBSD's guy at Comdex was saying that some company with a name like "netsec" was doing support for OpenBSD. There are lots of consultants doing NetBSD support.
Obviously, you're all going to want to know whether BSD, Inc., is planning *BSD support in general. Anything I say on that could turn out to be wrong in the future; about all I can say is we don't have a press release announcing it, and we don't have a press release denying it. It is somewhere between "impossible" and "guaranteed". I will say nothing more, and I want you all to know that that doesn't mean we will, and doesn't mean we won't. Stop trying to second-guess me. I'm a professional support rep; if I want to talk for a paragraph without saying anything, I can, and you'll never get a useful shred of information from me I'm not willing to give out.
And another thing I just noticed: (Score:2)
ftp.slackware.com is running Apache/1.3.11 (FreeBSD) PHP/3.0.14 ePerl/2.2.14 Perl/5.005_03 on FreeBSD
sez netcraft
Not much difference ... for now (Score:1)
Used to be, if you were really wound round the axel about support, you'd get BSDI. This doens't come as much of a surprise after the merger.
Re:And another thing I just noticed: (Score:1)
Re: Another checklist item completed (one to go) (Score:1)
All my PC's run BSD/OS. The other computers run NetBSD (or PalmOS).
Could you use Chuck instead of a newspaper? (Score:2)
Software as service (Score:1)
Even one-off programming like games is really just a service; it's just done on spec ahead of time, in the hope that people will pay you to instruct their computer how to do stuff (animate aliens decapitating people or whatever) later on. Software was never a "product", and the attempt to sell it as one oughta be pretty much over in five years. And when you think about it it was a pretty short burp - people have been selling the service of computer programming for about fifty years (Ada Lovelace was a volunteer, but the women who figured out how to program the ENIAC were paid, albeit poorly as human adding machines), and we hopefully have thousands of years left to go where people will no longer be able to try and sell it in shrinkwraps.
Different tech support needs for Linux and *BSD (Score:4)
All that translates to less of a need for tech support, but it's just as important to note that what support *is* needed will have to be that much more expert and focused. Not that BSDI will have any problem with that, but there's simply a higher expectation of sanity and function from a FreeBSD sysadmin than a Linux one, kind of like the difference between a Mac and Windoze user where consistency and ease of use are concerned.
Re:Could you use Chuck instead of a newspaper? (Score:2)
Re:Another checklist item completed (Score:1)
Re:FreeBSD competition with Linux? (Score:1)
There is *no reason* to use one of them as desktop, the other as server. If you use one of them, it'd be a waste of resources to do this; you'd better spend your time on only one of them and use both on the server and the desktop.
Purely as hobby I use both though.
What Linux can do on the desktop, FreeBSD can too (partially through the excellent Linux emulator that can even run vmware or Oracle or Netscape+plug-ins, i.e. everything that is available for Linux at native speed).
OTOH, there isn't much difference between both for server stability/performance nowadays (BSD used to lead but with kernel 2.4 coming...). Just use what you like most. Personally I find BSD easier to maintain and keep up-to-date (never had to reinstall in 5 years time; constant incremental updates where possible).
Re:MS (Score:1)
I'm not sure why you object so much to the poster's comment.
It wasn't blind criticism, it was a valid parody of the
actual "support" you get if you ring MS. Reboot, Reinstall,
Upgrade. That's the advice you'll recieve much of the time.
Re:Another checklist item completed (Score:1)
OpenBSD support can be obtained from NSTI [netsec.net]. They use OpenBSD in their operations and have donated resources to the group.
Re:"FreeBSD Support" = Switch To Linux (Score:2)
Apparently, my sense of humor (or lack thereof) doesn't translate well over 56K.
Bowie J. Poag
BSD Goes Commercial (Score:1)
http://www.zdnet.com/sr/stories/news/0,4538,255
Steven
Editor at Large: Sm@rt Reseller