


I hear you - though I don't have a SO who cares ATMArchangel1 wrote:Haven't read it yet, no - it's getting to that time of year where someone may want an idea for a Christmas present, and trouble ensues if I've already read it. Women...adaptr wrote: Have you read GP yet ?
Get a clue, supporting a corporation running oracle here... Muahahahahaha.nsahoo wrote:Thats sounds a little harshAthas wrote:I believe Oracle supports Red Hat and SuSE. That doesn't mean you can't get it running on other platforms, though, you'll just be on your own.but, i got your point. You'll be without Oracle support, but, I bet gentoo forum can more than make it up.
Well... Yeah, I guess. I mean, the guys on the forums will probably help you with every question, but corporations need their answers yesterday and depending on a forums is pretty much borderline crazy for them. I mean, theres no gurantee the forums will even be up...squeegy wrote:Get a clue, supporting a corporation running oracle here... Muahahahahaha.nsahoo wrote:Thats sounds a little harshAthas wrote:I believe Oracle supports Red Hat and SuSE. That doesn't mean you can't get it running on other platforms, though, you'll just be on your own.but, i got your point. You'll be without Oracle support, but, I bet gentoo forum can more than make it up.

{walks into corporate IT director's office}Chaosite wrote:Well... Yeah, I guess. I mean, the guys on the forums will probably help you with every question, but corporations need their answers yesterday and depending on a forums is pretty much borderline crazy for them. I mean, theres no gurantee the forums will even be up...squeegy wrote:Get a clue, supporting a corporation running oracle here... Muahahahahaha.nsahoo wrote:Thats sounds a little harshAthas wrote:I believe Oracle supports Red Hat and SuSE. That doesn't mean you can't get it running on other platforms, though, you'll just be on your own.but, i got your point. You'll be without Oracle support, but, I bet gentoo forum can more than make it up.

True... but there's a lot to be saved with standard clients, you can build one tbz2 and distribute it to all of them. But yeah, it's a bit silly - Portage makes installing/deinstalling applications so easy, but what it's actually doing is not what most home/corporate users want.malloc wrote:IMHO gentoo will never hit the corporate environment until it begins releasing binary packages for the most used applications out there. Let's face it, no sysadmin has neither the time nor the will to lose 30 min re-compiling gcc or X whenever they want to do an update. Like i've said time and time again, gentoo is THE distro for single desktops but from a corporate point of view it's probably the least wanted.
my 2 cents.
No, you don't! 30 is ridiculous.... hardbacks are normally $40-50ish here which is 20-25, and that's bad enough.adaptr wrote: I hear you - though I don't have a SO who cares ATM
Thing is, the hardbacks have steadily been increasing in price here these last few Euro-years, and I'll be lucky to get it below 30 anywhere...
I don't need to tell you it sux0rs.

More than not only an answer yesterday- deploy an ERP app and let it fail multiple times in short order- let the DB become corrupted once or twice a weak. Now try to trace the source of the error- you know its the ERP vendor's shitty programming but they blame it on OS issues. Meanwhile you paid 1million bucks for it and you are ready to sue and are talking to the insurance company who bonded these idiots. I've seen it first hand- seen vendors bring in their head developers and have them lie about error codes etc- I can only imagine the shit they would have been able to pull if the OS was non-standard.nsahoo wrote:Well .. corporati don't only need answers, they need "enterprise" OS with colored labels, printed manual, a support number where they can bitch and so on. It's not only an answer yesterday my friend. I can even say, a distro from a non profit organization will not make it to offices.
Gentoo is not an enterprise linux.