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Comments on: Wikipedia dumps Red Hat for Ubuntu

"where most of the iron is actually located" 

Posted Monday 13th October 2008 20:19 GMT

Paris Hilton

I digress, but it's funny that we use this term "iron" to refer to machines that probably don't have much of it, at least nowadays. Do they? Looking at my desktop and thinking about it, I don't see where iron goes in there. Don't seem to me like servers are much different, but...

Maybe it's like calling memory "core", and having "core dumps", I guess...

Ubuntu win 

Posted Monday 13th October 2008 20:57 GMT

Linux

First, I would like to congratulate Ubuntu on a great win. I have one question; Why run a Windows desktop to run Quickbooks. I am running Quickbooks under VMware Server with an Ubuntu 8.04 host.

Re: Ubuntu Win 

Posted Monday 13th October 2008 21:54 GMT

Stop

"I am running Quickbooks under VMware Server with an Ubuntu 8.04 host."

But if you have one person who does the books and nothing else then why run an OS as a virtual machine on top of another OS? Assuming x86 architecture, you now have to support 2 OSs and what is the saving? KISS?

@ Bart Reagan 

Posted Monday 13th October 2008 22:21 GMT

Coat

My guess is they want a dedicated box to stop anyone at any point *cough* Jimmy Wales *cough* rolling back to a snapshot when the account left for the day to fiddle the accounts .... and lets face its its their only windows box so the account is also flat out testing IE for them!

@Richard Stubbs 

Posted Monday 13th October 2008 22:47 GMT

This assumes the Windows machine is even networked. If it is nothing but the accounting computer, all it would need is a local printer and it could probably exist happily (not to mention safely) in isolation.

Good for Ubuntu 

Posted Tuesday 14th October 2008 00:34 GMT

Linux

As much as I have never thought the distro was much in the server department compared to others, it's still nice it won and maybe I'll have to try the server edition again sometime.

No surprise 

Posted Tuesday 14th October 2008 02:44 GMT

Style over substance in both form and function, then.

What are you talking about? 

Posted Tuesday 14th October 2008 08:28 GMT

Joke

Wikimedia has always used Ubuntu. There is no 'Red Hat'. All edits to the contrary will be reverted.

Wouldn't CentOS have been easier? 

Posted Tuesday 14th October 2008 15:06 GMT

Alert

If they'd mainly been on Fedora (and I'm guessing RHEL too) before, then wouldn't a migration to CentOS be the more obvious choice? Not only is it free to install, but you get 7 years of free updates matching those released by Red Hat for RHEL. At work, we've moved virtually all our Linux servers and desktops to CentOS now (previously they ran Fedora) and apart from having to track a few desktop apps manually (e.g. Firefox 3, OpenOffice.org 3), there's very little difference in the day-to-day admin of Fedora vs. CentOS - far less so than Fedora vs. Ubuntu.

Whoopie Linux for Linux 

Posted Wednesday 15th October 2008 03:47 GMT

It is ridiculous; rpm for apt-get slightly different config files, we don't need no recursive egrep, we can remember where all the config files are now.

Good luck to them, you never know they may start to mix it up, and run both flavours all Ben and Jerry style of them.

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