Red Hat offers 18-month term for enterprise maintenance

Be the first to comment | 18I like it!
December 18, 2008, 04:28 PM —  Macworld.com — 

Red Hat Thursday unveiled a new service aimed at making it more cost-effective for its customers to run and maintain one version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux for a longer period of time, reducing management and administration costs, the company said.

Extended Update Support (EUS), a new maintenance option for RHEL customers, allows them to standardize their IT environments on a version of RHEL for 18 months instead of six months, which is the current time frame for Red Hat's maintenance contract, said Gerry Riveros, product marketing manager for EUS.

Through EUS, Red Hat will support whatever standard version of RHEL a customer is on with bug fixes and updates for 18 months, which means customers won't have to recertify or update all of their applications and hardware for a new version of RHEL until that period is over, Riveros said.

This recertification process costs money and takes up IT resources, so EUS provides an option that is more cost-effective for customers than updating every six months, which is what customers usually have to do on the current maintenance contract, he said.

"There are a set of customers who would like to be able to run RHEL as long as possible without re-evaluation," Riveros said.

Customers with mission-critical environments particularly don't like to update their OSes too frequently, he said, because they are afraid that changes they make could cause performance problems in their IT system.

Stephen O'Grady, an analyst with Redmonk, agreed that "for customers with large, highly specific and standardized deployments, change is bad, even the kind of QA'd change that Red Hat and other vendors provide." By slowing that rate of change, the customer is able to reduce its overall platform risk," he said.

With the recession in the U.S., companies also are looking to cut costs from their IT budgets, and being able to maintain RHEL for a longer period of time will help them do that.

EUS costs the same as Red Hat's current maintenance service, which varies depending on how many machines a customer has. For up to 100 machines, maintenance starts at US$60,000 a year; for up to 500 machines, it starts at $80,000 a year, and so on, Riveros said.

Red Hat of course will continue to offer its current maintenance plan, which provides OS updates and bug fixes every six months, he added.

More information about EUS can be found on a blog entry on Red Hat's Web site.

(Chris Kanaracus in Boston contributed to this report.)

Macworld.com

I like it!
Post a comment
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Free books

Essential JavaFX
Get started building rich Web apps quickly with an introduction to the power of JavaFX key features -- scene node graphs, nodes as components, the coordinate system, layout options, colors and gradients, custom classes with inheritance, animation, binding, and event handlers.Enter now!

The Nomadic Developer
Consulting can be hugely rewarding, but it's easy to fail if you are unprepared. To succeed, you need a mentor who knows the lay of the land. Aaron Erickson is your mentor, and this is your guidebook. Enter now!

Featured Sponsor

AISO founders envisioned a Web hosting company that was environmentally friendly. While the company employed energy-efficient innovations like solar panels, its infrastructure produced unacceptable power and cooling requirements. Find out how AISO leveraged AMD technology to overcome their challenge in this case study white paper.

In this whitepaper, Scalar explores the opportunity to change the landscape with respect to mission critical databases built around Oracle. Leveraging technologies such as Linux, high-end commodity processing power and Oracle RAC technology to architect, design, build and maintain database infrastructure that delivers maximum availability, reliability and performance at a fraction of traditional cost.

On a typical day, weather.com, the Web site for The Weather Channel in Atlanta, serves up between 15 million and 20 million page views. But in September 2004, when back-to-back hurricanes ransacked Florida, the peak traffic on one day more than tripled: over 70 million page views by more than 7 million unique visitors. Read the full success story now.

Marketplace