Novell Buys Suse was --- A distribution bytes the dust!
Jack Coats
jack at coats.org
Tue Nov 4 17:48:53 EST 2003
I spent the summer of 1999 in Boston on Y2K gig, and really enjoyed the
community. From what I saw where is quite a community spirit that could
support a BCL Distribution. To nail down the economics, I would suggest
using some of the folks at local universities (Babbson seem pretty good
for entrepenural things) and see it they could help generate a business
plan.
Some libraries, community centers, or other places around (check out SCORE,
folks are associated but not part of the SBA) to find a 'business incubator'
to get some room, possibly seed capital to get started.
Most of the work could be done at home/remotely.
I would suggest determining the niche that you really want a BCLDist to fill!
Desktop, Lindows is doing that OK, but could be done differently, and it is
commercial.
Server, well RH will still be there and SUSE.
Possibly a 'small business' Linux server/desktop. A good server base, with
firewalls, etc. A central database system, mail, file storage, backups, that
could be managed remotely or locally. With optional diskless desktops.
Possibly a 'entertainment' distribution with TIVO functionality that also
works as a desktop.
Possibly a 'family server'. Similar to small business but
with 'entertainment' and game server posibilities.
Also think of setting up 'payfor updates' similar to the KRUD distribution
that tummy.com sells. A full set of CDs every month of about $65/year with
the latest updates installed :)
... Just some thoughts. ... JC
On Tue, 4 Nov 2003 15:52:04 -0500 (EST), Rich Braun wrote
> Well, we've got a whole lot of under-employed and unemployed Linux
> geeks here in Massachusetts. What would the economics of a "Boston
> Community Linux" distro be, if we recruited a bunch of us to build a
> distribution, support it with a QA lab, and operate email-only tech
> support? Could we find a sponsor to set up the lab?
>
> Or is it truly impossible to break-even supporting software at all
> these days?
>
> Seems like a pretty good opportunity for a new startup. Millions of
> folks would pay at least a token amount to avoid Red Hat monthly
> fees and/or stay out from under the likes of Novell.
>
> Personally, I'm content to just compile everything from scratch--am
> not really a big fan of distros anyway. But I'm quirky that way-
> -starting out with Linux in '92, there were no stinkin' distros. In
> order for Linux to keep growing, it has to be nicely packaged and
> kept up to date. Dozens of new apps come out every year.
>
> -rich
>
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