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LXer -- Linux and Open Source News

  • Extending Nautilus, Scripting Your Way To UI Bliss
  • Local hero: Stefan Lesicnik on Linux and Ubuntu
  • Reliable Linux netbooks for Black Friday
  • S3 Announces New GPU, Magical Linux Driver
  • Anonymous Proxy Using Squid 3 On CentOS 5.x
more

Linux Today

  • Passive Checks and NSCA (Nagios Service Check Acceptor)
  • Setting Up Master-Master Replication On Four Nodes With MySQL 5 On Debian Etch
  • Plain English Explanation Of An Awk Statement For Linux Or Unix
  • Can't Print in Evince, GEdit, Claws-Mail
  • Kubuntu Moves Forward: You Can't Please Everyone, All the Time
more

Linux Insider

  • No Love, but Plenty of Like, for the G1
  • Mozilla Cautions Against Experimental Firefox Plug-Ins
  • By the People: Citizen Involvement the Open Source Way
  • The Rocky Legal Landscape of Virtual Worlds, Part 2: Patents
  • The Linux Licensing Labyrinth
more

Where Red Hat (And Its Partners) Profit Most

Submitted by k4tz on Tue, 08/19/2008 - 10:52
  • Linux
  • Linux World
  • Red Hat
  • Ubuntu

Source: http://www.thevarguy.com/2008/08/18/where-red-hat-and-its-partners-profi...

Ever wonder why Red Hat spends so much time focused on the JBoss middleware market and so little time trying to make Linux a desktop standard? The answer involves some simple but startling open source math. Check out this little piece of Red Hat financial info, uncovered by The VAR Guy.

Here’s the simple formula: For every dollar a customer spends on JBoss (the product), that same customer typically spends another $10 to $12 on related JBoss consulting and integration services, notes Mark Enzweiler, VP, global channel sales at Red Hat.

“JBoss middleware is like a central nervous system,” asserts Enzweiler. It’s so mission critical that customers are willing to pay Red Hat or the company’s integration partners roughly $11.12 in consulting fees for every $1.00 they spend on JBoss itself, estimated Enzweiler.

In stark contrast, Enzweiler hasn’t been able to make a strong business case for signing Linux desktop OEM agreements.

Sure, Canonical’s Ubuntu Linux and Novell SuSE Linux (to some extent) earn headlines each time they win a new business deal. But during preliminary OEM negotiations, Enzweiler determined that PC companies “basically wanted it [desktop Linux] for free.” At such low prices, Enzweiler worries that Linux distributors may wind up compromising their support models to gain market share on the desktop.

Still, The VAR Guy wonders: Should Red Hat find a bit more time for desktop Linux? Remember, Microsoft used its desktop position in the 1990s as a springboard onto the server. Canonical hopes to do the same with Ubuntu Linux.

But so far, Red Hat doesn’t appear concerned. Indeed, Enzweiler continues to evangelize server Linux — and JBoss middleware — to Red Hat’s integration partners. So far, simple math shows that Enzweiler’s strategy is a good one.

Source: http://www.thevarguy.com/2008/08/18/where-red-hat-and-its-partners-profi...

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