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Red Hat Linux 9.0 Professional

Red Hat Linux 9.0 Professional

List Price: $149.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Piece of Cake To Get Off The Other Upgrade Treadmill!!
Review: Absolutely Wonderful! Installed perfectly with no hitches. Includes just about everything anyone would ever want - word processor, spreadsheet, presentation graphics, firewall, fax software, CD burning software, games, beautiful desktop, infinitely configurable, no nagging for authorizations, server software, e-mail, web browsing, and on and on. This is so complete it isn't even funny. And the price is amazing considering you would spend hundreds if not thousands to outfit a comparable Windows system.

And the real beauty - it isn't so full of security holes.

This is simply excellent software. I still run dual boot but am now off the other guy's upgrade treadmill.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sometimes the easiest way is the best way, or vice versa.
Review: For years now, people have been asking me about Linux - how hard is it to learn? When will it be easy enough for a "non-techie" to use? My answer, as of Red Hat 8+ is pretty much - now.

If you use your PC to play on the web, "do" email, and use "Office"-type applications, it's probably easier these days doing so on Linux than on Windows XP. Go read the reviews of XP on this web site! The way they throw around acronyms: NTFS, ASPI, Microsoft "Product Activation" ("Dear Microsoft, is it okay for me to use my computer now?")... Red Hat 9.0 installs with a fairly simple and intuitive wizard. You can (the easiest way) decide to run only Linux on your machine, or, if you have a bit more technical acumen, you can run both Linux and Windows on the same machine (switching between the two by rebooting).

Some people are put off by the command-line interface in Linux (looks like DOS), but honestly, how often do you use DOS on your Windows system? Just like windows, everything can be done by clicking on an icon. Red Hat 9.0 ships with a graphical inteface called "Bluecurve" that looks and works VERY similarly to MS Windows - "Start" button, taskbar, icons on desktop - and puts everything near your fingertips.

Red Hat also comes with Mozilla (a web browser very similar to Netscape), Evolution (an Outlook-like email client and personal scheduling program), OpenOffice.org (a MS Office XP replacement that reads and WRITES your MS Word, MS Excel, and MS Powerpoint documents), and about 1400 other games and applications. Other standouts include GnuCash, the Linux version of Quicken, the Tux Racer game - if you haven't played it yet, there's demos for all operating systems on it's web site - suitable for all ages, and KStars, the desktop planetarium, and did I mention about 1400 other games and applications?

P.S. I'm guessing that with the recent Microsoft Blaster worm (and Slammer, and Nimda, and... ), the points about security risks in using Microsoft products - as opposed to Linux - is well made. *cough*

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sometimes the easiest way is the best way, or vice versa.
Review: For years now, people have been asking me about Linux - how hard is it to learn? When will it be easy enough for a "non-techie" to use? My answer, as of Red Hat 8+ is pretty much - now.

If you use your PC to play on the web, "do" email, and use "Office"-type applications, it's probably easier these days doing so on Linux than on Windows XP. Go read the reviews of XP on this web site! The way they throw around acronyms: NTFS, ASPI, Microsoft "Product Activation" ("Dear Microsoft, is it okay for me to use my computer now?")... Red Hat 9.0 installs with a fairly simple and intuitive wizard. You can (the easiest way) decide to run only Linux on your machine, or, if you have a bit more technical acumen, you can run both Linux and Windows on the same machine (switching between the two by rebooting).

Some people are put off by the command-line interface in Linux (looks like DOS), but honestly, how often do you use DOS on your Windows system? Just like windows, everything can be done by clicking on an icon. Red Hat 9.0 ships with a graphical inteface called "Bluecurve" that looks and works VERY similarly to MS Windows - "Start" button, taskbar, icons on desktop - and puts everything near your fingertips.

Red Hat also comes with Mozilla (a web browser very similar to Netscape), Evolution (an Outlook-like email client and personal scheduling program), OpenOffice.org (a MS Office XP replacement that reads and WRITES your MS Word, MS Excel, and MS Powerpoint documents), and about 1400 other games and applications. Other standouts include GnuCash, the Linux version of Quicken, the Tux Racer game - if you haven't played it yet, there's demos for all operating systems on it's web site - suitable for all ages, and KStars, the desktop planetarium, and did I mention about 1400 other games and applications?

P.S. I'm guessing that with the recent Microsoft Blaster worm (and Slammer, and Nimda, and... ), the points about security risks in using Microsoft products - as opposed to Linux - is well made. *cough*

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great, but sound needs work and problems with kdevelop
Review: I am also a reviewer from Alaska.
I really like RH 9, but seems I have never got sound to work on many different combos, whereas Mandrake had no problem with sound.
However, my main concern was when I installed "everything", kdevelop would not work correctly. In RH 7 it worked just fine...
Anyway, With the ease of installation you now get from the Linux distros, Windows needs to start getting it together, or it will slowly become history...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: WAY better than SUSE
Review: I have read the other reviews here and it's interesting to see the diverse knowledge gap with Linux. The bottom line is this version installs easily and configures quickly IF you read the install guide and TAKE YOUR TIME. It is important to understand what the machine will do before you install it no matter what OS you choose to use. There are tons of applications you can install and configure at install time that will make your life VERY easy. As for security - There is no way windows compares to this. Using firewall features such as iptables and TCP wrappers, you can lock down a RedHat Linux box a lot tighter than a windows box. Bottom line - Buy it. If you need help - ask and read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Too Easy
Review: I have read the other reviews here and it's interesting to see the diverse knowledge gap with Linux. The bottom line is this version installs easily and configures quickly IF you read the install guide and TAKE YOUR TIME. It is important to understand what the machine will do before you install it no matter what OS you choose to use. There are tons of applications you can install and configure at install time that will make your life VERY easy. As for security - There is no way windows compares to this. Using firewall features such as iptables and TCP wrappers, you can lock down a RedHat Linux box a lot tighter than a windows box. Bottom line - Buy it. If you need help - ask and read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Red Hat Pro is a great System
Review: I have Red Hat 9 Professional, and of all the Linux distributions I have tried it is my favorite.
It's all good news as far as setting up and using this distro. It detected ALL my hardware, (ls120 SuperDisk drive, Intel proV 100 onboard lan, onboard ct5880 sound, RAID/ATA/IDE bus channels, CD-RW, all 4 harddrives, etc...) It automatically configured my internet connection, sound, etc...
One caveat- if you have a broadband internet connection, (like me), you will have no problems.
If you have a slow internet connection, then getting the system up2date after installation would be a VERY long process.
If you have a slow internet connection, be sure to pare down the number of packages you want to use up2date to update.
If you have a slow internet connection, and install everything anyway :-), when you go to use the "up2date -u" command, (to update everything on your system automatically), you will be embarking on a very long journey because there's a lot of stuff on the 4 install CD's!
I heartily recommend this distro. It comes with good documentation, which is a dire neccessity with any Linux distro.
And it comes with 60 days High-Bandwidth acces for updates and downloads, so you can have a completely updated system as fast as your internet connection allows. Your 60 day high-bandwidth access also allows you fast downloads of any updated iso's in your channel, (your system architecture type, i.e. i386), see the "easy iso" section online, so you can download and burn an updated install cd, (or entire set), for instance.
I did that, and my download speed was a constant 200-210KB/second, which is as fast as my connection allows.

I recommend Red Hat 9 over Mandrake 9, Slackware, SuSe 8, and especially over Lycoris.

If you can't afford to buy Red Hat 9 pro just yet, consider Red Hat 9 personel, or download the red hat 9 iso's and use them for a while. You wont have the documentation on paper, but they will still give you a 7 day high-bandwidth access demo account to get up2dated with.
When you can afford it, buy the boxed set - for 3 reasons;
1. you'll be supporting a really good open-source company
2. you'll have the printed documentation
3. you'll have a full set of CD's, AND a DVD. 8 disks in all - 3 install, 3 source, 1 documentation, 1 multimedia and office apps, 1 DVD with all of the above on it, (I assume, I dont have a dvd drive :-))
Do yourself a favor and do NOT buy Lycoris Desktop/LX Amethyst 2.
Happy Linuxing!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Not very compatible...
Review: I just couldn't install it... apparently, even though my monitor is brand new, it's just not supported by the installation process. Instead of using this one, I had to turn to Mandrake, which hasn't given me any kind of trouble (I'm actually using it right now).

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Not very compatible...
Review: I just couldn't install it... apparently, even though my monitor is brand new, it's just not supported by the installation process. Instead of using this one, I had to turn to Mandrake, which hasn't given me any kind of trouble (I'm actually using it right now).

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: DO NOT TRUST LINUXWARES
Review: I received the fulfilled order from Linuxwares for the Red Hat 9.0 Pro. What was advertised was a new copy from Red Had containing 4 CD's(3 Auto-Install CD'S+ Full Docs CD with Boot Image + STEPBYSTEP QUICKSTART GUIDE)Generic copy RH LINUX 9.0+ OpenOffice under GP License. BONUS:10 CRITICAL LINUX APPS FREE.

What I received was 4 copies of CD's, No Open Office CD, and none of the CD's came from Red Hat. All I received are 4 CD's that appear to have been burned on a home PC with home made labels attached. This is NOT a NEW Red Hat Product. This is not what was advertised. This is totally misrepresented. I was expecting a New shrink-wrapped product produced by Red Hat. I could have downloaded these images and burned my own CD's for all the good this package is. Shoddy!!!!!!


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