I've grown to dislike dealing with software licenses for my systems. Microsoft is a chore. Redhat is no fun. Suse is a disaster. Cisco is a mess. I'm sure there is probably some certification path for software licenses nowadays. What a pain.

Ubuntu for servers is a big ball of awesome.
Mint (Ubuntu derivative) for desktop/laptop is fantastic.
Centos for servers if you want that Redhat-like experience. 

I run a public mirror for all three of these distros at my work to help give back. 

<div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: Munir Nassar <nassarmu at gmail.com> </div><div>Date:01/05/2015  9:49 PM  (GMT-06:00) </div><div>To: TCLUG Mailing List <tclug-list at mn-linux.org> </div><div>Subject: Re: [tclug-list] Which linux do you use? </div><div>
</div>On Mon, Jan 5, 2015 at 3:34 PM,  <tclug at freakzilla.com> wrote:
> For business-use, Red Hat goign "too commercial" is a good thing. If I was
> running a business that actually made money, I'd be using RHEL.

Why? What does Red Hat provide that is so essential for running a business?
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