Red Hat Linux was discontinued in 2004 in favour of Red Hat Enterprise Linux for enterprise environments. However, Red Hat Linux still exists as "Fedora", free for home use, developed by "Fedora Projects", though the entire line is no longer commercial and only supported by the Linux community.
Yes. Redhat Linux is suitable for all kind of server needs.
Redhat is a Linux based operating system.
Not all version of Redhat Linux is free but you can download many desktop versions free.
Redhat Package Manager
Linux RedHat
Debian, Ubuntu, RedHat, Suse, ...
Redhat and Mandrake are not versions of any operating system. Both are itself standalone Linux operating systems.
You just have to plug the device and Linux will load the drivers automatically.
The term "main difference" is vague and subject to interpretation. I'll try to list a couple of what some folks consider "notable" differences. 1) Redhat Linux is normally purchased and various levels of support are also available for purchase. Fedora Linux is free (free as in beer as the saying goes). 2) Redhat Linux contains some features/enhancements not necessarily found in Fedora Linux or CentOS Linux - mostly these features are designed for enterprise environments. Hope this helps.
What is the difference between Redhat Linux EL4 and EL5.
He is the most impotent person in Linux,and specialized in Redhat 6... So on...
Oracle Primavera P6 support depends on the edition: Primavera P6 Professional (desktop client) is primarily a Windows application and is supported on 64-bit Windows operating systems, including Windows 10 and Windows 11 in recent releases. Primavera P6 EPPM (web version) is browser-based and can be accessed from multiple operating systems, including Windows and macOS, through supported web browsers. Oracle's current client requirements also list support for macOS for web access. On Mac, the desktop P6 Professional client is not natively supported; users typically access the web version or run the Windows client through virtualization.