On Mon, 2005-06-27 at 11:27 -0400, Jeremy Hogan wrote:
1a)What is Fedora?1b)Who is it for? (Today).
Yes.
Answered partly on the homepage nicely:
"The Fedora Project is an open source project
No. That's the Fedora Project. Not Fedora the distro. Which isn't being
marketed at all.
Developers, hobbyists,
enthusiasts, professional IT interested in the future direction of
RHEL, etc.
Sounds like a good audience.
I'd add the 'Linux curious' to that space.
2)Who else is in that space?
Only SuSE is built this way (community feeding and fed by a big
publicly held sugare daddy with a large install base, and market cap
of 3-5Billion.
Is Suse really that community fed? From discussion here, I'd say Ubuntu
is the distro closest to Fedora - both distros aim for the 'ordinary
person who may or may not have unix experience' market without the whole
'not being Unix' of Lindows. Community based, but with some corporate
backing, tho Canonical is tiny compared to Red Hat.
And you can add more Ubuntu-esque users. If Fedora definition
were to stretch from "proving ground for Red Hat" to "proving ground
for Linux Innovation" or similar, then you can add small IT companies,
tech savvy internal IT staff, and even an eco system of VARs for
SMB/SME -- *cough cough* -- I mean people deploying and supporting it
for others. And the verbage invites spin-off projects. (Still seen as
to Red Hat's benefit).
Indeed. Many folk use Fedora in this space already - they're happy with
the 2 years of community support.
Mike