As far as charging goes, that's a good question.  After all, what parts of 
iSeries Access for Windows are no charge, and what part are chargeable 
items?

Rob Berendt
-- 
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary 
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." 
Benjamin Franklin 




Scott Klement <klemscot@xxxxxxxxxxxx> 
Sent by: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
09/24/2003 01:41 PM
Please respond to
Midrange Systems Technical Discussion <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>


To
Midrange Systems Technical Discussion <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
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Subject
RE: Check this out. iSeries Access for Linux!!








Even if they decided to support SuSE and Turbo, there are still dozens on
Linux distros that they don't support.  Even if they made it work on every
Linux, it still wouldn't work on the BSDs, Solaris, OS X, etc, etc.

I wish IBM would release these things as open source products!   Then,
none of these compatibilty issues would be a problem.   What does it gain
IBM to make their free software proprietary?   Why limit people if they're
not going to make money on it anyway?

Or were they planning to charge for the Linux versions in the future?


On Wed, 24 Sep 2003, Wills, Mike N. (TC) wrote:
>
> We hadn't tried on any other platform yet, that isn't good that they are
> hard coding it. We where thinking they where developing it for all of 
their
> supported distros (RedHat, Suse, and Turbo).
>
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