Red Hat To Drop Boxed Retail Distribution 386
An anonymous reader writes "Red Hat, the leading American distributor of Linux, is abandoning the retail channel, the company is expected to announce Monday, says this story in Linux and Main. Non-Red Hat developers will be given a greater role in deciding what's in upcoming Red Hat distributions, too."
Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
Has it anything to do with the KDE Klash? (Not likely though)
Or is it just that this way they don't loose as much money?
The latter, in my opinion (humble as it is) is the most likely. Of course, it could be something completely different.
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
From reading the article it does seem likely that the KDE thing is part of the issue, since customizing of packages is one of the major things that's going to change.
I'm sure that the money they lose on boxed set is a major consideration as well.
This is not a good move IMO (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:4, Insightful)
Red Hat clearly aren't making money in the retail channel and it makes no sense for them to be there.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Informative)
You "may" be right, perhaps instead of being stocked at CompUSA, they need to go the Suse [walmart.com] route.
"ask any number of helpful people in any number of Linux forums"
I have never used direct support from Red Hat, but when I was new to Linux, some of my most basic question were met with impatience and arrogance, or haven't you tried "this" yet, when I had no idea how to do, "this". It was only after tinkering a bit on my own and asking an somewhat intelligent question were the board or irc channels helpful, paid tech support on the other hand, will hold your, er.. hand, for the most basic questions
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:3, Informative)
Are you kidding? I'm in Mexico right now and there aren't any "on the shelf" copies of RedHat anywhere near here, so I'm downloading RedHat9 as I write this via my 256k DSL. It's going to take about 7 hours per CD. I would definitely pay $50 (or whatever) if I could walk down to the local store and pick up a boxed set even if I know I can download it
Hey guess what (Score:4, Informative)
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Insightful)
1. anyone that doesn't have access to a distro of linux is entirely unlikely to buy one off the shelf. More likely they know an über-geek already that got them into Linux or they bought it at Barnes and Noble with a huge book with 5 different flavors, what have you.
2. This strikes me as being a genius idea. Putting those boxes on the shelves is in no way cheap. Do you ever see Red Hat flying off the shelves? Only when its time to replace the box with the next version.
3. Red Hat makes their money in providing service and support contracts to big companies. Not the little guy.
This is a money thing. removing the shelf space issue is good business sense. It might tick you off but it will make investors happy.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Insightful)
So far, that's probably not too far from the truth; but many folks expect or want it to spread farther. Shelf space is valuable advertising space, at the least; if people buying M$ products &c can see that Linux is a 'real product', with a large shiny box and everything, and that XYZ Computer Store is stocking it, then that gives it a certain cachet and respectability that may help it grow beyond the spotty-geeks-and-illegal-downloads that some are trying to tarnish it with...
It also makes it much easier for those who aren't on broadband, which includes a sizeable number of techies, as well as a much larger number of non-techies.
Well, they could always (Score:2)
Popular demand is an easy problem to handle, it's just not the problem they have now.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Insightful)
SuSE and Mandrake will still have boxed sets on the shelves for people to buy.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Interesting)
Agreed. At the officesupply "superstore" where I work, no retail boxed version of Red Hat (prior to version 9) has ever sold very well. At the most, we'd sell maybe 2-4 copies. Then they'd just sit on the shelf for months until the next version came out. Then rinse, repeat. Same with Mandrake, until we stopped carrying them.
But oddly, ever sinice version 9 came out we've sold about 10 copies, if not more. But if you compare that to the number of MS Windows we've sold, it's something like 10-1.
Re:This is RH saying the Linux Desktop Doesn't Exi (Score:4, Interesting)
Second, all that advertisement comes at a price.
Third, anyone that is going to be coming to Red Hat for a server solution isn't going to base their decision on the fact that they saw a box copy at Wal-Mart.
Fourth, there are thousands of magazines that do quite well without having a single newsstand presence.
Fifth, the very fact that a year of telephone support is supposed to be a big buying plus is insane. The average consumer isn't going to jump and buy based on that. That would most likely scare them off. You might as well put a warning on the box saying, "This software is so incredibly difficult for the average person to use that we include a year of free tech support after which you'll still probably need help and buy three of four books on Linux at exorbitant prices if you're still using the software after a month."
Re:This is RH saying the Linux Desktop Doesn't Exi (Score:3, Insightful)
I may be feeding a troll here, but since this has come up more than once....
Could we please try to expunge this inane "Linux desktop is dead" meme? First off, it isn't -- or else my desktop is an illusion -- and secondly, you could only believe this if you hadn't been watching the evolution of Linux over the past ten years. I've been using it since the SLS days, and I can unequivocally state that the Linux desktop has been improving (at an increasing rate) ever s
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:3, Insightful)
(In all fairness, I haven't tried RH 8 or 9. For home use, I'm using Gentoo now.)
Newbies of any stripe don't install OS! (Score:3)
To even begin considering installing an operating system takes them out of the league of the complete newbie and puts them in the realm of the half-clued. Even people with half a clue can click "OK" or make a choice from a menu of options.
I've run Red Hat 7.1 and now 9.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you, but there are other distros that cover this marketspace. Mandrake is probably the most popular newbie distro, though my personal preference is SuSE (and yes, I do mean for newbies). There are numerous others with retail presence as well, like Lindows, TurboLinux, etc.
I don't pay that close attention to the others, but I very much doubt that SuSE will be giving up on the retail market any time soon. Their free online distro is not the same as their boxed distro, and that differentiation probably helps their sales. Truth be told though, everyone I know who uses SuSE buys the box for the kickass manuals. I don't know anything about the quality of Red Hat's printed documentation, but I suspect that's the main thing that would be missed.
In my experience, anyone who is ready to try an alternative to Windows is going to be more turned off by the price of a boxed set than the amount of time it takes to download ISOs.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:5, Interesting)
I didn't realize Windows XP [pricegrabber.com]....was only $89(Oem)...this makes it even harder for the boxed product of Red Hat [pricegrabber.com] to sell...Joe Consumer would probably opt for a more known name anyway and its advertised ease of use, but when he wants to write a simple document is when he pays the piper! [pricegrabber.com]..after reading some of the comments and checking the price of both Boxed products, perhaps it does indeed make sense for RH to leave the shelves....
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/linux/
Disclaimer: I work for RedHat, but the first thing that turned me on to RH as a distribution was the documentation.
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:2)
It's not so easy when money becomes a factor. If one knows they can burn the ISOs at home, the web method is much more attractive.
Personally, I think ya'all should push Knoppix more. It boots straight off the CD and doesn't make any changes to your machine. Not only that, but its hardware detection was surprisin
Re:This is not a good move IMO (Score:2)
Well, there are online stores that will burn stuff like this and send it to you through the mail for a couple of quid. It seems that would be the answer for people on dial-up, interested in giving Linux a try (also cheaper.)
When I first saw Red Hat on store shelves, however, in PC World (UK) I was quite surprised.
When was the last time you bought windows? (Score:2)
I have never had the need to buy a copy of windows in a store.
Effects for other players (Score:4, Insightful)
This is a gigantic opportunity for Lindows (Score:3, Informative)
Redhat was just there because they thought they had to be, not because it was making them any money. Linux won't die from the Compusa shelves if Mr. Robertson moves fast.
What about SneakerWare? (Score:3, Informative)
The only thing that bothers me is that I think that RedHat needs to court small hobbyists as well as large enterprises. This is how they keep thir name recognition. I am wondering how long before they abandon their standard distributions all together. That IMO would be a very bad thing... I am NOT going to buy RedHat Ente
As long as I can download the ISOs from Finland (Score:2, Interesting)
I dont' really care. Redhat's disto is great;
but their concentration on the server market
will hurt their reputation amoung the home
and desktop markets.
Well (Score:3, Insightful)
--
The company hopes that the changes help to overcome the long lead time needed to produce boxed sets. With a six-month release cycle, and with the rapid pace of Linux development, many packages shipped on CD are obsolete before they ever reach retail shelves.
--
Kinda valid, but sounds more like their boxed versions simply aren't selling that well. Not blasting them by the way. I always buy my Linux distros just to support the company, and this is the now only company I get my Linux distro from. I trust they won't go away...
Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)
And if places like Virgin are trying to sell something like Linux to the general public (I can't imagine most regular Linux users would be buying out of date and overpriced box sets from a music & video games store), an 'old' version is going to have a Linux newbie bringing it back because it trashed their brand new Gateway PC.
I think perhaps this is for the best.. I just download Red Hat ISO's through the 'Instant ISO' thing on the Red Hat Network anyway!
Re:Well (Score:2)
Is this problem due more to time-to-shelf, or due to a the very short 6 month release cycle?
As a home RH user, I'm a little peeved by the 6 month release cycle. I want a stable release with incremental updates.
Upgrading from 8->9 was a bit of a pain, and I wonder if differences in the binaries really needed such a intensive update script.
(Yes ye
Can't possibly be right (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:2)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:2)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:2)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:5, Interesting)
You will however have to wait until Monday
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:5, Funny)
I happen to have the scoop now, for those who can't wait:
Red Hat has been taken over by aliens from Perseus Omicron 8. Future releases will be forcefully installed by tentacled monsters on all machines in existence to enslave the pathetic humans...
and they will drop RPM in favor of apt-get.
Remember, you heard it first on /. and that is a pretty good source.
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:5, Funny)
Don't wait until Monday, read more here (Score:3, Informative)
Red Hat to change development model, abandon shrinkwrap [linuxandmain.com]
The company's next major release, codenamed "Cambridge," will not be provided in boxed, retail form, according to company communications with employees and developers, which have been made available to Linux and Main.
Additionally, Red Hat plans extensive changes in its development and distribution model. The changes will begin with development lists being made public, and will be followed by return of package maintanence to the developers themsel
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:2)
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:2)
You actually have to RENT the shelf space for your products. If your sale profits are small, this can easily become a money-loser. Cutting that expense might improve their short-term balance sheet; what it will do to consumer awareness long-term is a different question.
Re:Can't possibly be right (Score:2, Insightful)
Which means that they'll get fewer new users than they otherwise would have done - many people are more likely to buy the products that they see, rather than go hunting around to find a better product on the internet somewhere
Bad move PR-wise (Score:5, Interesting)
There is enormous PR value in having a retail product available, even if it is not particularily profitable.
Example: Ericsson is widely known as a "cell phone manufacturer". Actually, they make very little money off selling consumer products like cell phones. Ericsson has always made its money off the sales of system hardware. (switches and whatnot)
But it's the consumer products that have given them brand-recognition, and that is worth a lot.
I think Red Hat should take note of this.
Re:Bad move PR-wise (Score:4, Insightful)
Operating systems are different. The vast, vast, vast majority of people use whatever comes with their computer. Those who wish to try something different, are by definition not mainstream. The problems with the boxed sets are many - they are expensive and complex to produce, and are rapidly obsoleted at a rate most people would not be happy about.
Basically, with the increase in broadband penetration it becomes increasingly likely that if you want Linux, you either have, or know somebody that has a fast link, so you can download the ISOs.
I expect you will still be able to buy CDs of the distro, just that you will have to get them from online shops.
Anyway, IMHO this move makes sense. RHL is no longer a "product" as such, certainly not one that makes money. It would seem to make sense to make it more a community thing - after all, in terms of software freedom it's just as good as Debian.
I'd be a bit worried that it might stagnate though - I hope Red Hat still take a lead in developing it. Would BlueCurve have happened in a community driven distro? Probably not. Yet I still like it.
Downsizing... (Score:5, Interesting)
This sounds like they are downsizing some of their workforce to me. Yes, I know that the article said this move was to improve release cycle times but it sounds like they are just plain getting rid of the retail line and there will be some layoffs too as certain people are no longer needed.
Re:Downsizing... (Score:2)
If you are correct about them planning on reducing their workforce, you could take the announcement this way:
RedHat Trademark (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe this will make RedHat make like Debian in regards to trademarking, etc. Maybe not since they should still be selling the support packages.
They can't do it. (Score:2)
How this is supposed to be legal in face of the GPL is questionable. Any trademark onwer has a right to prevent you from replicating a trademark. For Example: I can't print up Coca-a-cola tee shirts
Makes sense.... (Score:2, Informative)
Nothing to see here, move on.
Re:Makes sense.... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you particularly like a certain distro and use it for day-to-day use, I suggest you do the same if you want it to survive. Or if it's something like Gentoo, give them the amount it would cost if they had a boxset once a year or so, which would be about $60.
Chris
Re:Makes sense.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I also purchase boxed sets of linux, and have for several years. I may or may not use them for very long (latest iso's get downloaded, checked out, and often installed... I can't count how many linux CDs I have laying around), but I believe in supporting the distros.
I use redhat primarily, but I'm also a MandrakeClub member, and I believe in supporting people who provide a valuable service. Now, college students living on Ramen noodles may not have the cash in their paypal account to do this, bu
oh yeah? (Score:3, Interesting)
Who's the leading distributor period?
Re:oh yeah? (Score:4, Informative)
2. Red Hat: 21.33%
3. SuSE: 18.67%
4. Debian: 5.33%
5. Corel: 2.66%
6. Caldera: 2.66%
Others: 3.33%
Linux World Magazine
June 2003
Re:oh yeah? (Score:2)
Re:oh yeah? (Score:3, Insightful)
I teach an Intro to Linux course at a community college (using RedHat, mostly because of it's popularity). Even though one of the first things I mention is that Linux is free and sho
And The Winner Is... (Score:5, Funny)
I believe that would be www.linuxiso.org [linuxiso.org]
Re:oh yeah? (Score:2, Funny)
>-~
Betting the Farm? (Score:2)
The two options are not mutually exclusive.
Re:Betting the Farm? (Score:2)
I don't know anyone who has every purchased a boxed linux distro. Everyone just downloads the ISO's so the retail boxes are a complete waste of money.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Betting the Farm? (Score:2)
Re:Betting the Farm? (Score:2)
Not always. Sometimes purchasing a boxed set is cheaper then time spent downloading and burning the ISOs. Time is money.
In the time it takes to download and burn the ISOs, I can walk/drive over to CompUSA, buy the boxed set, walk/drive back to the office and be finished with the install before the ISOs are done downloading.
If I want to install now, the boxed set can be very valuable.
It's a Good Thing (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a novel conect in the IT economy.... focus on what actually makes your company money, and dump what you loose money on. Red Hat isn't a Microsoft... they don't have the capital to piss away to maintain market share. They *need* to focus on what makes money.
Red Hat is right Re:It's a Good Thing (Score:2)
I am firmly in the camp that Red Hat is doing the right thing.
I remember many years ago during my college days when I first saw the Red Hat boxed version in a Best Buy. I was looking at the games and other software in the windows section, mainly to decide what warez to get later that evening. It used to be so hard browsing for titles on the net, and it was better to make decisions of what I needed or wanted and then go find it.
Looking at the Red Hat box with the "free software" Linux in that Best Bu
Re:Red Hat is right Re:It's a Good Thing (Score:2)
Red Hat *had* the capital (Score:3, Insightful)
Red Hat had the capital...but instead they just chose to spend $700 million of it on a compiler company and some questionable dot coms.
Setting aside a fraction of that $700 million to continue to provide an easy way for consumers to get their distribution from retail channels would have been the strategically correct thing to do. But then again, that would be acting like a desktop software company (as opposed to the server software compan
Acutally a good move - service oriented (Score:5, Insightful)
Moveover since the developers will be actually the one doing the packaging as well, Red Hat's job will become in including those packages in their ES/AS/WS distributions. Making the developer list open to all, will in-turn help them making their ES/AS/WS services better.
They want to be a service oriented company, rather than a product oriented. And this is the only Open Source Model that will survive.
Two strikes for Red Hat (Score:2, Interesting)
#1 was the one-year end-of-life policy:
I'm perfectly willing to pay extra for ongoing support on old Red Hat versions. I'm perfectly willing to upgrade remotely every year a-la FreeBSD buildworld. I'm perfectly willing to pay extra for a "Small Biz Server" product.
However, all Red HAt has to offer me is "hobbyist version" and an "advanced workstation".
Luckily, Linux is not Windows, I switched all servers to FreeBSD except a few that belong to clients. When they end-of-life, you can guess wha
Re:Two strikes for Red Hat (Score:2)
There's still
SuSE
Mandrake
Debian
Slackware
Knoppix
etc......
Wait for the real release on Monday, as Alan Cox said.
Having said that I tried RH once (v.7) - got totally hacked off at the circular dependency hell (reminded me of dlls) and gave up. I re-formatted the HD and installed SuSE - I went back to that which I knew worked. The improved internet update for SuSE is a breeze too, the old one was a bit painful but they fixed it well. The support mailing lists are also excellent.
any difference? (Score:2)
So how will they get my money now? (Score:2)
Was going to happen sooner of later (Score:5, Informative)
Then look at RH's support model they are like Sun they don't want to deal with the lower tier customers, they only want to deal with the large corporations. Guess you could say Red Hat is turning into a traditional Unix company.
Re:Was going to happen sooner of later (Score:2)
Then look at RH's support model they are like Sun they don't want to deal with the lower tier customers, they only want to deal with the large corporations.
That is really too bad. I read a fascinating book, several years ago, called "Wall Street Money Mahcine" by Wade Cook. The guy has apparently made a boatload of money in the stock market (the book was written before '95). He got the idea for his theories on investing while he was working as a cabbie in NYC.
Basically, he had a bunch of buddies wh
Re:Was going to happen sooner of later (Score:2)
The moral of the story is that Red Hat should not underestimate the value of the consumers plunking down $100 for a Red Hat boxed OS with each new version. If they did it right, that initial purhcase would mean more to them than the recurring RHN subscriptions.
If it hasn't worked so far, what's likely to change? It's pretty hard to sell low-end consumers on a product they can get for free.
Businesses are a bit different. A lot of people are more willing to "donate" their employer's money to Red Hat than t
Re:Was going to happen sooner of later (Score:2)
This doesn't really matter... (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's face it, RH is *NOT* targeted at the types of users who are going to pick up software at Best Buy and CompUSA. Even people who want to try linux are going to be put off by RH.
It's just not desktop/home friendly. No flash, no mp3 abilities, and GNOME, while much improved, isn't quite there yet. (File selection dialog, you know it)
This means that the only distro you're going to find at BB and CompUSA is going to be SuSE, at least until or if Mandrake ever manages to find another retail distributor.
RH is choosing to concentrate on the business space. Which is good, since their efforts there are somewhat lacking. (RHAS is dreadful, but with improvement it'd be decent)
Re:This doesn't really matter... (Score:2)
RHAS actually has a lot of nice features... the ability to push patches onto servers on your network using their utilities is really, really nice. The 800 hoops you need to jump thru to keep your servers up to date via registration is not as nice.
But, some things aren't as good. They've applied a lot of patches to their kernel and glibc to make it more of an enterprise-grade distro, fair enough. They also ship with IBM's JDK as opposed to sun's JDK. Fair enough. Apparently their patches break IBM's J
Hmm.. manuals? (Score:2)
Also, with the whole "Linux is good for use in poor areas, third world countries and countries like india / china", how easy is it to get the software when dialup or internet cafe is the only way to access the net ?
Re:Hmm.. manuals? (Score:2)
Speaking of which, does red hat sell manuals? I'm pretty sure Mandrake does...
Relevant Question (Score:2)
I think you got it (Score:2)
Is anyone but SuSE real competition in the commercial space? I can't see Debian in corps...
Re:Relevant Question (Score:2)
If you want to shell out money for a commercial Linux distro, I'd recommend SuSE anyway -- some very powerful configuration tools, a damned nice installer, and some of the best-produced and most thorougly documented paper manuals I've ever seen.
Lets face it ... (Score:2, Interesting)
They want the desktop??? (Score:2)
I don't get it. How can they have made all these moves to become a desktop distro (such as bluecurve and the ensuing controversies) and then they walk away from retail? Retail == desktops!
This move sounds to me like a concession that SuSE and Mandrake have won that market.
Re:They want the desktop??? (Score:2)
Reason I've never bought a boxed set (Score:2)
Smart Move (Score:2, Insightful)
I have to acknowledge them for a good business move.
They have obviouly looked at the retail market and made the same observation as the rest of the software world: Don't attempt to compete with Microsoft in the channel.
Understand that Microsoft eats software companies for lunch by luring them into a den where the buyers for Office Depot, CompUSA, Best Buy, etc.don't know RedHat, Corel, Claris, etc. from the $1 CD's they sell from CD Specialists, Inc.
Microsoft pulls software companies into the retail
Hey, the DEVELOPERS will maitain the rpms ! (Score:2, Insightful)
RedHat is simply recognising, like Microsoft, that is has t
Microsoft take notice (Score:4, Interesting)
For instance if someone buys a retail box of XP today, they get the original release without the most current bug fixes for the OS and IE. It seems it would be more convenient if they could just purchase a completely updated and fixed version of XP online and just download it. I'm sure they won't do it, because there are plenty of reasons not to, many of which have been mentioned by other posts here already, but nonetheless, it would be nice to have that option.
Personally, I would never buy a retail box of Linux because I always the very latest, and I can get that in a downloaded iso(usually).
Why it's a sensible move (Score:2)
Unlike Microsoft, who have a major OS release every year or two and release patches and SPs galore in the interim, Linux changes fast. It's been said before, but one of Linux's major problems from a user's POV is the short release c
Out of Sight, Out of Mind. (Score:5, Interesting)
And flame me all you want, but what is bad for RedHat in most ways is bad for Linux. They are the lead flagbearer, like it or not.
Value for money (Score:2)
Important Distinction (Score:2, Interesting)
Next release, not permanently.
At the moment, Red Hat doesn't control enough of the market to warrant a full-blown retail version. True, a boxed set at least implants the Red Hat name in the small brain of Joe Simian, but as none of his butt-scratching cohorts are using it, he'll opt for Win
Re:Important Distinction (Score:2, Interesting)
And this ladies and gentlemen is why "Joe Simian" is so phsyched over dropping "Windoze" and jumping to "that Linux thing".
You either want "Joe Simian" or you don't, dude. There's no middle ground. And until you and your friends get over things like these, you sure as hell ain't gettin' him.
Clearly, this will hurt Linux (Score:5, Insightful)
Dialup users have CheapBytes and others (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Off Topic - Minimal Distro (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not accurate (Score:4, Informative)
The headline is inaccurate. The information that will be released on Monday is regarding the development direction of Red Hat Linux. Further information on the retail product line will be forthcoming closer to the product launch plan this fall.
Havoc Pennington
Red Hat, Inc.