Today, Red Hat Linux 9 has been "officially" released to the masses via the FTP servers, and we host here a mini-interview with Matt Wilson, Manager, Base Operating Systems at Red Hat, Inc.
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The man's answers sounded like he was responding to a lawyer's probing. The questions are interesting, but but the answers are neither informative nor useful. This is very poor PR.
Anyways, Redhat 9 is more like Redhat 8.00001. You can barely notice any difference between 8 and 9. In fact, coming from 8, Redhat 9 is totally anti-climatic. Redhat would have to be the one catching up now, because the new Mandrake and Suse are both much better than Redhat 9. On the desktop anyhow.
The man's answers sounded like he was responding to a lawyer's probing. The questions are interesting, but but the answers are neither informative nor useful. This is very poor PR.
Anyways, Redhat 9 is more like Redhat 8.00001. You can barely notice any difference between 8 and 9. In fact, coming from 8, Redhat 9 is totally anti-climatic. Redhat would have to be the one catching up now, because the new Mandrake and Suse are both much better than Redhat 9. On the desktop anyhow.