According to the SuSE rep, the Professional, Pro Upgrade and Personal CD-ROMs may be copied and distributed as long as there is no profit involved. That was this afternoon while I have been addressing these questions. He told me specifically, that I could not install it on a computer and sell the computer. I can Give away as many copies as I desire to give away. We did not discuss the ISOs and internet distribution. Buck -----Original Message----- From: fedora-list-admin@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:fedora-list-admin@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of griffisb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 7:54 PM To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: RE: Fedora and the System Administrator -- are my assumptions on SuSE incorrect? > Whoa whoa whoa whoa ... wait a second! Now I understand my query here > on a Red Hat list about SuSE might not be appropriate, but I'm going to go ahead and make it -- prompting for any corrections to my assumptions. > > I am currently very much under the belief that SuSE CDs (at least > through 8.x) are very much _not_ redistributable! Yes, you can pull down a "redistributable" version via packages from the Internet, but I have _never_ seen a SuSE CD (or CD image) that wasn't either a "commercial shrink wrap" for a single (or finite number of) system, or an "evaluation." > > SuSE's distro relies on non-100% redistributable components. Now you > _may_ be able to install it on a number of systems with your purchase, > but that is also the case with Sun StarOffice as well -- you can_not_ > simply "redistribute" it freely. > > Am I mistaken on SuSE??? I am running SuSE 8.2 Personal (also tried Mandrake 9.1 and briefly tried Debian Woody). I may be wrong, but I believe that YaST and YaST2 are not redistributable. Since YaST is the installer for SuSE, you end up with something you can not freely load on other machines. I -MAY- be wrong, but I think that is the whole reason behind not having downloadable SuSE ISO's, and why on the few occasions you DO find SuSE ISO's on a public FTP server, they are pulled quickly. That's part of the reason I am here. I am looking for a desktop distribution that is freely distributable, easy to install, and that will have good user guides. I would hope with a community project, you do not pay for up2date - but use a similar tool - although I'm often wrong. I feel that with the backing of RH, Fedora will meet all those requirements. Since I'm downloading Severn ISO's right now, take my above comments as a rank amatuer newbie. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list