On 25 Jun 2001, Trond Eivind [iso-8859-1] Glomsrød wrote:

> "Thalis A. Kalfigopoulos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > On 25 Jun 2001, Trond Eivind Glomsrød wrote:
> > 
> > > "Thalis A. Kalfigopoulos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > 
> > > > Always a first time for everything bad. Anyway, not wanting to be the
> > > > pessimist of the bunch, I'll hold my horses and hope that none of my
> > > > "fears" turns into reality. The issue is that none of the other open
> > > > source projects RH supported was anything major they could make real
> > > > money out of, at least not compared to what they can make out of the
> > > > DB arena. 
> > > 
> > > Uh? The database project is small FTTB (moneywise) compared to other
> > > things like the kernel, gcc and glibc which are core parts of our base
> > > product.
> > 
> > But kernel/gcc/glibc don't comprise a market by themselves. 
> 
> But you called them "not major" and something we couldn't make money
> from. We make quite a bit of money on gcc, to give one example -
> through contracts to add features, support for architectures, support
> etc. We are the number one company in that area (remember, Cygnus is
> now part of Red Hat).
> 
> > They are just components of the OS market as a whole (if there is any such
> > thing left anyway).
> 
> But the core on which the rest is built.

I may use a ladder to gather cashew nuts of a tree. They are expensive. That doesn't 
necessarily mean that ladders are expensive although this may bring some value to 
their market :o) 


cheers,
thalis

> -- 
> Trond Eivind Glomsrød
> Red Hat, Inc.
> 


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