Free Red Hat 6.0 CDs 194
Anthony Fuentes writes "You can pre-order the GPL Redhat 6.0 CD at LSL for $0.00. "
This looks legit- shipping looks like about $8 for UPS, but
it does appear to be a free CD, so if you aren't blessed with
a T1, check this out.
Re:Pointing out $1.01 in savings? (Score:1)
Don't knock a buck when you don't have a buck. Such is the college life.
Ramen Soup recipe (food on the cheap):
1 Package, Oriental Flavor Ramen noodles
1 cup rice
Kimchee (available at your local Korean Food Store)
Cook rice. about 3 mintues before rice is done, (about 12-15 minutes), start cooking Ramen. Both should be done simultaneously (or thereabouts). Add water to Ramen (lots of it), add rice, add a little kimchee, bring to boil. You now have Ramen & Rice soup, staple of billions around the world. Enjoy, or go buy those
Free but not freely modifiable? (Score:1)
I wish Slashdot would promote that a "GPL CDROM" should include source code rather than promote a "GPL CDROM" just because it is $0.00 but which the packages can not be modified since the source code is missing. The again, maybe the Linux community isn't interested in widespread distribution and contribution to the source code anymore?
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
I do on my site, but there is an added expense for me (i'm just a nice guy). To enable people to pay online by check, there is an added $10 fee to the merchant services company.
Since check orders account for less than one percent of my total volume (and I'm probably typical of small businesses), it's easy to see why most places don't want to deal what's essentially another expense not likely to pay for itself.
Still, it's easy to get Visa debit cards, or secured credit cards. Like: http://www.fcnb.com/
No, this is NOT a spam. After a lot of hassle with child support I had to use a secured card for a while myself...
Re:It's the Handling, not the Shipping (Score:1)
i got bit by the handling... i checked the price of the shipping and quoted him that, then forgot that i had to buy a box and padding and take the time out of my day to go and pack it etc...
i used to bitch about handling, but not anymore, now i bitch when people charge $10 for handling.
henri
Why do I need UPS? (Score:2)
----
Re:GNU fund raising (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Now obviously there are some vast improvements to the system.
o Linux 2.2.5
o glibc 2.1 (which works great _expect_ for Staroffice 5.0)
o KDE 1.1.1
o Gnome 1.0
o XFree86 3.3.3
o Netscape 4.5
o GIMP 1.0
o Samba 2.0
o misc upgrades to all other packages
I really couldn't ask for a better suite of software than this! IMHO it was worth the time spent upgrading. I would encourge others, especiall pre 5.2 users, to upgrade to 6.0
Re:Pffft (Score:1)
so?
Re:Pffft (Score:1)
FreeBSD users include Hotmail
Not since M$ bought them! Hotmail has been slowly migrating to NT. Which means frequent headaches. I used there service for a while before the take over and rarely had problems but slowly but surely things have been going down hill. Problems include: not being able to access the site (period), frequent "We're sorry you caught use during maintence" (read: "Our system crashed") messages, a tone of messages about Netscape 4.5 not supporting cookies, frames, and the like (yes! I enabled cookies). Well anyways I gave up on them and went to Yahoo! mail.
Re:Slashdot News not on www.redhat.com (Score:1)
also looks funny on redhat.com when they have three debian freshmeat entries in a row
the web pages are ASP pages? (Score:1)
And htm extensions? This is a really weird plot. Dunno if I'd trust LSL at all
-phantom.
Re:Cheap NT (Score:1)
You were gonna buy NT anyway, now you just gave you a copy of VJ++ so they can tell the world how much you loved it and had to have it. You even paid $80 for it when you could have gotten another IDE for java from somewhere else.
Re:Its $6.99 plus $5 for $11.99 total at Cheapbyte (Score:1)
Re:[TROLL?]New and improved! (Score:1)
I assume the poster forgot to use the appropriate emoticon for the humor-impaired - it's rather obvious he was being facetious or sarcastic, since all of the packages he mentioned are available in virtually every distro.
FWIW, I do prefer Red Hat, and I ordered the Cheap Bytes CD of 6.0 recently.
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
It is illegal for anyone to put anything in the mailbox except for offical USPS mail. It is illegal for anyone to take anything out of a mail box if they aren't the owner/tenent. It is illegal to damage a mail box. These are federal offenses.
Oh, it is also illegal to ship anything via FedEX unless it absolutely possitively has to be there overnight. If you ship a regular letter or anything else that isn't time critical via FedEX or UPS, you are commiting a federal offense.
I once got a box of cookies from my GF, and she taped a letter to it. She just paid the bulk rate for the box, but when I picked it up, the USPS folks made me open the letter attached to the box and since it was a "letter", I had to pay the (then) $25 for them to ship a letter.
USPS sux.
Re:GNU fund raising (Score:3)
I am not sure how useful it is to donate money to free software projects, after all, the people involved aren't doing it for the money. Other things, like donating code, good detailed bug reports, donating documenations, etc. are probably much more effective.
If you do choose to donate money, I would highly recommend the FSF. I have tried to donate money to three free software projects and only the FSF routinely cash my checks. One project never cashed any of my checks and didn't even return email inquiries about them.
The FSF, on the other hand, has been very professional and seems to be the best organized. For example, the only "problem" that I had with them is that they sent me a new "GNU's bulletin" for each check that I sent them, which I considered a waste of money. One note to them fixed the "problem" completely.
If you do consider trying to contibuted non-code related things to any free software project, I would suggest sending them an email first asking them what would be most useful to them. If they say "money would be good", I would suggest sending them one small check and see if they cash it. If they do, send more checks and/or a larger checks. Remember, processing checks takes effort, and it isn't the "fun stuff" of the project. If a project doesn't cash your check or want your money, don't begrudge them. They are volunteers and are putting time/effort into the organization out of the goodness of their hearts.
Anyway, as I said in the beginning, contributions of your time/effort seem to be more effective than contributions of money.
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
FedEx rules.
Re:Distros with magazines? Actually (Score:1)
Re:GNU fund raising (Score:1)
Re:[TROLL?]New and improved! (Score:2)
That posting was kind of weird: Makes some good points based on facts (e.g. the Apache reference), yet mixes up some other important facts.
1st. You don't pay $80 for the actual OS, which is NOT "the RedHat OS", it's a Linux distribution. If you pay for the retail package, you get a manual, customer support, and other goodies. You don't pay for Linux itself, it doesn't belong to RedHat, always remember that.
2nd. RedHat 2.2 Kernel? There's no such thing! It's the Linux kernel. Even if the distribution is called RedHat Linux, it doesn't mean "RedHat's Linux" but "RedHat's distribution of Linux". Keep that in mind.
3rd. Here's the worst misconception: GNU/Linux is presented as a competing product. Repeat: There's no RedHat OS, actually, RedHat Linux is GNU/Linux as well. And that's why you can download it for free with source code included: That's part of the GNU GPL License. RedHat isn't being nice because of that, they have to offer it for free like that, otherwise they couldn't offer it at all. The fact that they write and donate their own enhancements and code under the GPL, that's the nice thing, very nice indeed. It also means that their "amazing features" can be used by any other distribution.
I assume the poster mixed this up because of a misunderstanding of OSS and the Linux concept. It can't be compared to commercial proprietary software. It's a totally new thing for most of us, an exciting evolution of software, so we must learn that new concept to fully understand the free software phenomenon.
PS: I'm a happy user of both RedHat Linux 5.2 & Debian GNU/Linux
Re:.iso image file for GPL RH 6.0? (Score:1)
There's really nothing to it. There is a detailed RedHat CD HOW-TO at the LDP that tells you everthing you need to know.
Tad bit expensive.. (Score:2)
--
Scott Miga
Shipping prices. (Score:1)
USPS Priority runs: $7.79
Those appear to be the cheapest.
Not Bad (Score:1)
Does it seem to anyone else that RH is thinking they can charge more because linux is more respectable now? $76.95 seems really high. I purchased RH 5.0 official for $21 or something like that. Just a thought.
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
We were very careful to properly route the bags full of little prerouted letters on to the right truck, since each piece inside counted.
Nowadays, I get to play with 480 volts up to 13,500 volts and computer controls in a manufacturing environment. The damn machines get to have all the fun. I used to gain weight in the upper body area, now it is sinking. I need a grunt job again...
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
I'm not sure where the Fedex hub was in Kansas City.
No, but UPS was on the other side of the fence from us. Next to both of us was an animal by-products plant that made dog food. On the typical long shift, the awful smell from that place started to smell good and make us hungry.
We did get one package addressed to a Hillary Rodhan Clinton one night that passed through...
Oh, what does this have to do with Redhat 6.0 and shipping the cd's? Nothing. If your package comes up missing or opened, just imagine someone had good use of it. If it is lost, ask if it got shipped by train... I heard of several cars of rice that got railroaded around for more than a few months while being lost.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
| that isn't time critical via FedEX or UPS, you
| are commiting a federal offense
As far as I recall, you're right about the first class letter. However, I don't think you're right about "anything else". It's perfectly fine to send anything that isn't a letter via any shipper you choose. If you, however, include a "letter" with the package, you're supposed to pay postage on the letter.
This is how the local shipper explained it to me, anyhow. Take with a grain of sodium chloride.
Re:Pffft (Score:1)
www.lsl.com is running Apache/1.3.4 (Unix) on FreeBSD
Apache is also being used by Javasoft, Financial Times, W3 Consortium, and The Royal Family.
FreeBSD users include Hotmail, Yahoo, and The Apache Project.
Mailordercentral.com is just handling their sales and shipping it seems.
Pointing out $1.01 in savings? (Score:1)
I just got done reading a news.com article about how the price of Windows is a rising percent of the OS, and then to see this discussion...
Let's just say that the OSS world is simply cooler.
scottwimer
Thank you-wasRe: ISO mirror list from Ars Technica (Score:1)
I was downloading RH6 over the company T1, but the dang server at the local Boston mirror rpmfind.net threw a recursive set of links to me. My NT system started acting wierd when it created a PATH\var\var\var\var\var\var\var\var\var\var\var\
Guess what happened when I told NT to delete the tree? "Cannot delete directory Gnome - directory too deep". What a crappy OS.... or maybe it's smart enough to know what I was doing??
(I was able to delete the tree in multiple passes, by going to the bottom, working up).
FAST server with RH6 .ISO (Score:1)
ftp://ftp.ens.utulsa.edu/pub/linux/redhat/RedHa
I tried this location last because I preferred a
Of course, I could do an FTP install and really conserve bandwidth, but I don't have a T1 at home and I do at work..
Re:New and improved! (Score:1)
Aside from that, the base Red Hat is equivalent to SuSe, Debian GNU/Linux, Caldera, Mandrake , TurboLinux and (yes) Slackware.
There is no such thing as RedHat 2.2 kernel. It's the Linux kernel, though it may contain patches by RedHat that haven't made it into the general 2.2 tree.
Now be a good rabbit, hop off and get your facts straight. Inflammatory rhetoric will not get you anywhere.
Re:Find a ecommerce package for Linux (Score:1)
Complete FUD. Linux can run mod-perl, php, etc, which are all comparably better than ASP.
As far as software that does ecommerce, I'm not sure.
At first I thought... (Score:1)
Re:Can Cheapbytes beat $0.00? (Score:1)
At the risk of sounding like a "Me Too!" loser, the same thing happened to me. In my case, Internet Junkbuster was clipping the cookies. (Netscape was still asking whether I wanted to accept the cookies, but IJB was keeping them from going out.)
--Joe--
Re: ISO mirror list from Ars Technica (Score:3)
ftp://o su-linux.capital.ous.edu/pub/linux/redhat/iso/hed
ftp://pricie.ccl.kuleuven.ac.be/pub/rh 60.iso [kuleuven.ac.be]
ftp://ftp.s ervers.cx/pub/mirrors/linux/hedwig-27apr1999.i386
Re:What about LinuxPPC - any deals anywhere? (Score:1)
BTW, Prime Time Freeware did a similar thing with MkLinux if you bought the MkLinux2.0(?) distro with the book. It came with a free upgrade card that eventually could be used to upgrade to the Dev3 release.
How long are they going to keep this up? (Score:1)
Nope... (Score:1)
Nope. It's $1.99 plus $5 for $6.99 total at Cheapbytes.
Re:Can Cheapbytes beat $0.00? (Score:1)
Re:.iso image file for GPL RH 6.0? (Score:1)
Re:GNU fund raising (Score:1)
Many Free Software projects run webservers, which cost money as far as: registering the domain name, getting the hardware for the server to run on, and getting the server a connection to the net. At least two of those are not one-time costs.
But wayne does make some excellent points as far as how to go about donating money. I would definitely recommend checking with the person/project you wish to send money before you actually do.
Re:Can Cheapbytes beat $0.00? (Score:2)
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
It took exactly 45 days.
You'll easily spend more than $8 of your time explaining to a customer why his free CD hasn't arrived at all ever. Plus it'll cost you more than 80 cents to collect the 80 cents from him.
If they shipped via USPS, they'd probably still have to charge at least $5 for the handling and the cost to collect the shipping fee.
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
I'd love to see them try to enforce that one. Maybe I'll challenge it.
I bet my employer would back me up.
(I work for FedEx.)
Why can't I just buy the thing (Score:1)
I mean, I'm in a big city (NYC), you would think some little computer store would press a bunch of copies and sell them for $10. Does anyone know of a place in NY that does this?
multiple CDs only $8, that's it! (Score:1)
I just ordered Red Hat, Debian and Slackware distros, and it was $8 for the whole thing, not just for one CD. I was surprised, I thought it was $8 a CD too, but it's actually a really good deal!
KDE & GNOME (Score:1)
Its $6.99 at Cheapbytes (with shipping) (Score:4)
Re:Are the extras worth the extra buck? (Score:1)
Re:LSL USE WINDOWS-NT :-( (Score:1)
Re:It's the Handling, not the Shipping (Score:1)
Re:Pffft (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:1)
/ Haven't upgraded yet.
Can Cheapbytes beat $0.00? (Score:2)
I went to order the CD, and figured that since I didn't need it right away, priority mail, USA only (the last option on their shipping list) would be good enough for me.
Imagine my surprise when shipping proved to be $0.00.
I even saved the page to a file in my home directory as proof.
This is the page that says, "This is how much you will be charged, please enter your credit card number". If they charge more than what they say they will to your card, they'll get in rather serious trouble, don't you think?
I don't know if it's a mistake, or if they usually offer free shipping via the Postal Service (since it is cheaper/slower than other shipping methods), but that's what I got...and so help me if they charge me a penny more I'm really going to raise hell.
(Have you ever had to enter your credit card number so that you can be charged $0.00 to your account? That's a weird experience, but now I can honestly say I've done it.
Civic virtue? Spare us the lecture, please. (Score:1)
Hey, I paid my civic virtue by downloading and sitting through annoying IBM banner ads, getting spam from AOL, and wasting my time having to change the default home pages on all my browsers back after they've all been changed to NetCenter by Netscape. All of these companies have donated heavily to RedHat, so they can consider my civic duty paid many times over by proxy.
If they ever do make it difficult to obtain a RedHat version for free, I'll say, "Hello, Debian!" and kindly tell RedHat to take their request for "civic virtue" and stick it where the sun doesn't shine.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
It's the Handling, not the Shipping (Score:2)
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
Also, the $8 (actually, it's $9.37) covers quite a bit more than shipping. UPS for a CD is only three or four bucks. So that "free" CD is actually somewhat more expensive.
Remember that great economics acronym: TANSTAAFL.
=h=
Re:Not Bad (Score:3)
I bought RedHat 5.1 for $50. Ditto for 5.2. Yeah, it's a 50% increase in price, but I think that I'm still getting good value for my money.
$76.95 is the MOST that you'll pay for Red Hat. Or you can buy it for a couple of bucks from CheapBytes. Or you can download it for nothin' from that high speed ethernet connection at school.
Why do you suppose that RedHat charges what they do? Because it's not a slap-dash mix of whatever Linux-related stuff is out there. They do compatibility testing and fix what doesn't work. They paid the programmers to develop Gnome. And they pay a ton of money to have a call center to answer installation questions.
The thing that I find so remarkable is that they've added tremendous value to the product, yet you or I can download it for nothing on the Internet. With the source code. Nobody else does that.
And for what it's worth, pop over to your local computer store or out onto the 'net and see what Windows 98 full version sells for. Then decide who's charging too much money. As a hint...it ain't Red Hat!
Re:Free but not freely modifiable? (Score:1)
I also think source CDs are often obsoleted so quickly that sometimes they're not worth having around, unless the upstream author provides diffs (rare--the kernel being one of the exceptions). Particularly with a distro you're almost always better off downloading the source for the packages you want to hack on. I think most free software advocates (particularly our friends at the socialistic end like RMS, if they were logically consistent) would prefer that we avoid waste (giving people what they don't want, and using natural resources to produce CDs that half our customers don't want to use) than universally distributing source code.
And no, I'm not just saying this because I'm tired of duplicating source CD-Rs for people
Very nice, (Score:2)
You read past the part... (Score:1)
the free CD offer. Woops...
And I quote:
"Limit 1 free copy per customer.
Shipping and handling charges apply."
I fink we bwoke it (Score:1)
Re:It's the Handling, not the Shipping (Score:1)
I'm wondering if this could be considered fraud at all. It sure as hell doesn't cost that much to ship USPS.
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
Re:GNU fund raising (Score:1)
Re:.iso image file for GPL RH 6.0? (Score:1)
http://www.linuxcountry.com/article.php3?sid=99
or just go to ftp.linuxlab.org/pub
eli
Re:Distros with magazines? Actually (Score:1)
I became a Linux convert the day that NT crashed five times on me.
Distros with magazines? (Score:2)
I buy CMJ New Music [cmj.com] every month just for the included mix CD; I'd do the same for something like Linux Journal.
Thoughts?
Its $6.99 plus $5 for $11.99 total at Cheapbytes (Score:1)
Re:But ya don't get WP 8 at CheapBytes (Score:1)
Mike
--
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
Sorry that you had a hard time.
Re:GNU fund raising (Score:2)
Here's a section from the ''GNU Manifesto'' [gnu.org] by Richard M. Stallman:
At RedHat Software, Inc. there are (according to my latest information from #gimp
GNU fund raising (Score:5)
Most programmers and technical writers can contribute by writing software and documentation for GNU. That is the most direct way to contribute to the GNU Project. But if you can't or don't contribute in that way, please donate money to the FSF instead.
To donate to the FSF, simply mail a check to:
Free Software Foundation
59 Temple Place - Suite 330
Boston, MA 02111
USA
Re:Distros with magazines? (Score:1)
Check it out - Really cool.
periscope
Re:Pointing out $1.01 in savings? (Score:1)
Buy something else. (Score:1)
Plus redhat 6.0 yippee
Re:Wow (Score:1)
but two of my friends are switching to linux or at least trying it out for the first time, and they were impressed by the ease with which the install went. Even the sound worked right away (on one of them at least), but X was the real deal. RH even added a tcl message "are you seeing this correctly, click yes." and xdm prompt is more and more like something you could just sit down in front of and login to. Although, Xconfigurator, which I think is the selling point of redhat easy install, does not probe the cards and the monitor correctly yet, one can still easily specify the video ram info and the refresh rates if any.
really awfully close to a painless newbie install. a painless install being clicking yes or hitting enter about 15 times before you get a fresh and operational machine.
Re:Not Bad (Score:2)
Re:Why do I need UPS? (Score:1)
Your half-assed guide to distro ISOs (Score:2)
mirror scripts.
In the case of RedHat, there's a mirror perl script that's used to make a local copy from either the distribution server (assuming you can stand the lack of speed) or one of the mirrors. It's not too hard to set up, and if memory serves, there's a decent HOWTO about burning a bootable CD from your mirror files.
There are ISO images out there, but all of them seem to be on slow servers, alas. Nobody's managed to get an ISO up on a speedy server like wcarchive.
Debian alludes to being able to do much the same thing, but it was easier for me to just snare the ISO.
I hear tell that Mandrake also distributes official ISO images.
Histoically, Caldera has done the same thing, but so far I haven't come across the actual files for the most recent release (but then, I'm not looking too hard).
No sign of ISOs for SuSE or Stampede.
I wouldn't know squat about TurboLinux because... well, does anyone even use TL?
It's also noteworthy that one almost never finds ISO images of the various BSDs. Seems like the BSD folks are image-averse, preferring (like Debian) to guide folks towards mirroring and (unlike Debian) not distributing an ISO at all. This is vaguely understandable given the size of the thing.
Re:The prices AREN'T bad (Score:1)
Re:I burned it.. again.. (Score:1)
Re:Distros with magazines? Actually (Score:1)
Re:It's the Handling, not the Shipping (Score:2)
It might be for tax reasons. In Australia we aren't (yet) taxed on services so if the product is free and the service is what you pay for then the earnings are tax free. I'm not an accountant or anything but that is my understanding of it.
PS: I've ordered from LSL Australia and found them great. Much cheaper, faster and more accomendating than InfoMagic.
Re:$7.79 via USPS (Score:1)
Kimchee (Score:1)
$7.79 via USPS (Score:1)
Re:Bad impression with LSL (Score:1)
Also, I'm the local source of Linux propoganda at work. Hence, I'd like to see how the other distros hold up to Redhat in terms of producing a usable system quickly, and completely. I'm getting closer every day to having production linux machines in use!
Bad impression with LSL (Score:2)
While the binary distro CD was fine, the other two were next to worthless. The contribs CD obviously had not been reviewed at all. Both KDE and Gnome had mixed RPMS for different versions--making them useless. The 'Catalyst' had a very small handful of trial versions, but was almost entirely HTML files with broken links, which seemed to have just been saved off different vendors web sites.
Needless to say, I'll not be throwing away any more money with LSL. Next paycheck, I'm trying out Cheapbytes (their mondo pack looks good =)
Vrallis
Shipping Now at Linux-support (Score:1)
The cost for either CD is $12.95 per CD plus $3.55 shipping (USPS Priority Mail, Delivery Confirmed) per order.
Find a ecommerce package for Linux (Score:1)
Re:Not Bad (Score:1)
Still, even $77 isn't bad for an operating system when it comes with all sorts of useful software (GPL'd and otherwise) and support from the company. Even the academic version of Windows NT costs over $100, and includes fewer bundled programs.
And last of all, yes, college Ethernets do rule.
Are the extras worth the extra buck? (Score:2)
I'd be very interested to hear from people whether this minor change makes a big difference, whether for good or for bad. RPM's can be tied to specific kernels and/or distributions, and Red Hat's install procedure works almost entirely with RPM, if memory serves correctly.
Lastly, I wonder how intuitive KDE and GNOME might be. I've seen mixed reaction to LSL's handling of it in prior distributions.
Personally, I'm sticking with CheapBytes... although I could download it over my cable modem (provided I had enough free HD space), they gave me excellent service when I bought from them last.
Cheap NT (Score:1)
Not that I endorse buying microsoft operating systems, I just find that kindof funny.
Get them at CheapBytes for less (Score:1)
Re:Shipping prices. (Score:1)
Re:Pointing out $1.01 in savings? (Score:1)
:-)
-cebe
Re:Distros with magazines? (Score:1)