As far as i can see the only real difference from what we have today is:
a) You can't buy a boxed set of Fedora b) You can't buy support for it either. c) The average developer can be more involved.
Other than that, everything else will be the same.
No, Benjamin has a point: another change (d) is that the free version will not be "branded" Red Hat, as I also mentioned earlier. This _could_ believably slow down adoption due to brand recognition, both in the case of newbies choosing the well-known Red Hat for their Linux, but also of people like Benjamin's boss (and mine, by the way) who choose or would choose RHEL after seeing RHL at work, but who will not see Fedora in the same light.
-- Rodolfo J. Paiz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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