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Red Hat Drops Free Linux

Customers asked to move to paid Enterprise Linux products.

David Legard, IDG News Service

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Prominent Linux vendor Red Hat is dropping its free Linux product range and asking customers to migrate to its priced Enterprise Linux, the company said Monday.

In a statement posted on its Web site, Red Hat said it will end maintenance and errata support for Linux versions 7.1 through 8.0 on December 31, 2003, and for the most recent version 9 on April 30, 2004.

Red Hat Linux can still be downloaded free but the boxed versions that were on sale for between $39.95 and $149.95 are no longer available. No future versions will be developed, the company said.

Red Hat has characterized its free Linux product, which has been available since 1994, as "a general purpose, low-cost solution that ... attempted to be all things to all people."

Certified Software

By contrast, Enterprise Linux has been certified by a wide range of hardware and application software vendors, Red Hat said.

The company is offering its users a choice between two upgrade paths, either to the stable Enterprise Linux product which starts at $179, or to its developer-oriented Fedora Project, which is available as a free download.

The Enterprise Linux product comes in three versions: AS for large corporate environments, ES for smaller offices, and WS for workstation/desktop use. Each of these products is offered in basic, standard, and premium editions depending on the level of support required.

The basic edition of Enterprise Linux WS costs $179, while the premium edition of AS for IBM zSeries and S/390 costs $18,000, according to Red Hat.

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