I'm a freelance developer, and graphic designer. I live in Argentina. The monthly pay in Argentina is very low -$200 USD per month... Since I'm a programming beginner and can't sell my products for more than $200-400 USD, this is really kindness... Thank you Red Hat Team. Great Job, keep it up!
What benefits will I get when I will upgrade from Developer No-cost subscription to your RHEL Workstation / Server paid subscription - as a individual that wants to learn - and sometimes need to ask something to IT person, but don't have time to search forums etc? I sometimes need to install something from outside sources - Are Flatpaks and other configurations supported by you?
I don't think "I want to ask random technical questions to someone" is a reason to move a single machine to a workstation subscription. Here's why: * As a training or learning system, your support cases are going to be Severity 4, because they don't have "production impact". Severity rating impacts the speed at which support works and responds to your case, 4 is the lowest. * Support interactions tend to be very problem/resolution oriented. If the problem is "I don't know how to do a task" the resolution is generally "Here's a document to read to tell you how to do that task." * The support you get with a Workstation subscription is not training, the goal of support is to help resolve a problem, not teach someone how to do a thing. (Red Hat has an entire, different department dedicated to training). Further, I'd say, if you're interested in learning, spending time doing research to answer your own questions is worth while. It certainly does not feel that way at the time, but you'll start to develop the ability to perform better searches and get better results, while also being able to more quickly look at a result and see if it's appropriate for your situation. Nate and I just did an episode of Into the Terminal on this: th-cam.com/users/live-D71wBEEVYs?si=YEH2vCInRAZnCsRs To your flatpak question. RHEL includes flatpak capability. We ship flatpak, and we even have our own software packaged as flatpaks on our own repository. However, you also ask about third-party software, that's something different, and we describe how this is handled in this very long document here: access.redhat.com/third-party-software-support Essentially, we'd help if flatpak (the literal software provided by Red Hat, not the stuff someone has packaged in this format), which we ship, was causing some weirdness. But you'd be expected to work with the other software provider on if the archive, format, or content in that flatpak was the suspected cause of the problem.
I have two scbcription Red Hat Beta Access and Red Hat Developer Subscription for Individuals will it charge me anything ? And how to remove those subscription ?
The Red Hat Developer for Individuals subscription is free. Any Red Hat subscription (including the Developer for Individuals) also includes access to Beta software. If you want to remove the subscription, possibly contact Customer Service? access.redhat.com/support/customer-service
How many machines does a home dev licence allow as currently I have a home PC and home server. I want to switch them from Fedora to Rhel as fedora become a bit to much of a childs play ground currently.
An excellent question, which has a multi-fold answer: 1) having an account allows for complementary use of other services, like Red Hat Insights, which are included in the subscription, but not the install media. 2) It provides a contact email for Red Hat to send product updates to (this is separate from marketing related content which you can also set preferences for using your account). As an example, for about a year prior to RHEL7 going end of maintenance we were sending emails to users telling them the end of maintenance dates for RHEL7. We also sometimes use this contact for specifically terrible CVEs to alert users that they should apply updates to their systems. 3) This account is used by the web content team to dynamically build redhat.com pages based on your previous interactions. It’s also used as a passthrough for any of the materials we have behind a registration page (so you can get whitepapers, ebooks, lab content without having to fill out the registration form). 4) It has a very specific procedural flow in its creation where users are offered to review and accept the End User License Agreements that govern Red Hat’s access to software and services.
@@RedHatEnterpriseLinux Sorry. We pay too much to Red Hat. We were actually awarded one of the top innovation companies utilizing Red Hat. I think I should stay here. ;) But my first distro was Slackware downloaded from a BBS over a month. So I may still have some cred. Love it!
@@CreachterZ Fair enough, but that's how we all got our Fedoras. At some events, like AWS re:invent, the events team gives away something called an 'event fedora' which is similar. You might find one at a Red Hat booth at a conference near you!
Want to learn more? Check out the RHEL Blog! www.redhat.com/en/blog/channel/red-hat-enterprise-linux
I'm a freelance developer, and graphic designer. I live in Argentina. The monthly pay in Argentina is very low -$200 USD per month... Since I'm a programming beginner and can't sell my products for more than $200-400 USD, this is really kindness... Thank you Red Hat Team. Great Job, keep it up!
What benefits will I get when I will upgrade from Developer No-cost subscription to your RHEL Workstation / Server paid subscription - as a individual that wants to learn - and sometimes need to ask something to IT person, but don't have time to search forums etc? I sometimes need to install something from outside sources - Are Flatpaks and other configurations supported by you?
I don't think "I want to ask random technical questions to someone" is a reason to move a single machine to a workstation subscription. Here's why:
* As a training or learning system, your support cases are going to be Severity 4, because they don't have "production impact". Severity rating impacts the speed at which support works and responds to your case, 4 is the lowest.
* Support interactions tend to be very problem/resolution oriented. If the problem is "I don't know how to do a task" the resolution is generally "Here's a document to read to tell you how to do that task."
* The support you get with a Workstation subscription is not training, the goal of support is to help resolve a problem, not teach someone how to do a thing. (Red Hat has an entire, different department dedicated to training).
Further, I'd say, if you're interested in learning, spending time doing research to answer your own questions is worth while. It certainly does not feel that way at the time, but you'll start to develop the ability to perform better searches and get better results, while also being able to more quickly look at a result and see if it's appropriate for your situation. Nate and I just did an episode of Into the Terminal on this: th-cam.com/users/live-D71wBEEVYs?si=YEH2vCInRAZnCsRs
To your flatpak question. RHEL includes flatpak capability. We ship flatpak, and we even have our own software packaged as flatpaks on our own repository. However, you also ask about third-party software, that's something different, and we describe how this is handled in this very long document here:
access.redhat.com/third-party-software-support
Essentially, we'd help if flatpak (the literal software provided by Red Hat, not the stuff someone has packaged in this format), which we ship, was causing some weirdness. But you'd be expected to work with the other software provider on if the archive, format, or content in that flatpak was the suspected cause of the problem.
I have two scbcription Red Hat Beta Access and Red Hat Developer Subscription for Individuals will it charge me anything ? And how to remove those subscription ?
The Red Hat Developer for Individuals subscription is free. Any Red Hat subscription (including the Developer for Individuals) also includes access to Beta software.
If you want to remove the subscription, possibly contact Customer Service?
access.redhat.com/support/customer-service
How many machines does a home dev licence allow as currently I have a home PC and home server. I want to switch them from Fedora to Rhel as fedora become a bit to much of a childs play ground currently.
The Developer for Individuals subscription allows for up to 16 self-support RHEL systems.
Why don't you just have a downloads page where you can just download it. Why sign up, it's just another layer of complication that no one needs.
An excellent question, which has a multi-fold answer:
1) having an account allows for complementary use of other services, like Red Hat Insights, which are included in the subscription, but not the install media.
2) It provides a contact email for Red Hat to send product updates to (this is separate from marketing related content which you can also set preferences for using your account). As an example, for about a year prior to RHEL7 going end of maintenance we were sending emails to users telling them the end of maintenance dates for RHEL7. We also sometimes use this contact for specifically terrible CVEs to alert users that they should apply updates to their systems.
3) This account is used by the web content team to dynamically build redhat.com pages based on your previous interactions. It’s also used as a passthrough for any of the materials we have behind a registration page (so you can get whitepapers, ebooks, lab content without having to fill out the registration form).
4) It has a very specific procedural flow in its creation where users are offered to review and accept the End User License Agreements that govern Red Hat’s access to software and services.
I want one of those little red hats!
Become a Red Hat employee! Fedoras are one of the things new hires receive to welcome them to the company 🙂
@@RedHatEnterpriseLinux Sorry. We pay too much to Red Hat. We were actually awarded one of the top innovation companies utilizing Red Hat. I think I should stay here. ;)
But my first distro was Slackware downloaded from a BBS over a month. So I may still have some cred. Love it!
@@CreachterZ Fair enough, but that's how we all got our Fedoras. At some events, like AWS re:invent, the events team gives away something called an 'event fedora' which is similar. You might find one at a Red Hat booth at a conference near you!
Awesome!!!