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Re: Debian commercial support.



On 3/29/2014 6:19 PM, Ric Moore wrote:
On 03/28/2014 08:29 PM, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 3/28/2014 6:42 PM, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 29/03/14 01:11, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 3/28/2014 6:35 AM, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 28/03/14 21:08, Joel Rees wrote:
On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 9:36 PM, Jerry Stuckle
<jstuckle@attglobal.net
<mailto:jstuckle@attglobal.net>> wrote:

      On 3/26/2014 8:25 AM, John Hasler wrote:

          Jerry Stuckle writes:

              Debian consultants don't necessarily know how to
properly
              set up and
              maintain an e-commerce web site - it's a very different
animal.

Debian consultants *should* know how to set up a Debian site. This
*is*
a Debian list. And the listed consultants is moderated. Unlike
numerous
lists of so-called consultants without provenance, verifiable company
status, unknown liability coverage, etc.

Debian consultants listed on the Debian sites as supporting ecommerce
(websites etc) *should* know how to setup Debian sites for ecommerce.


Setting up a Debian site is far different than setting up an e-commerce
site.

And?
So?
What?

Many e-commerce sites *are* pure Debian.


Show me exactly what Debian packages are required to set up an ecommerce
site.  Complete and ready to go, of course.

Again, as I mentioned before, for a complete and ready to go working
site, use Proxmox and Turnkey Linux. Proxmox installs to bare metal, and
from it's interface chose from several HUNDRED canned websites that
merely require you add your password to the admin account. It doesn't
get any easier than that. And, as the added plus, they are all Debian
Wheezy based. But, you will not be running a desktop AND a website,
although you can run just about any distro via KVM within the Proxmox
running site. Journey to youtube and search on Proxmox. I'm a complete
idiot and I had my site up and running 5 containers in 30 minutes from
complete bare install. What was rocket science is now easy peasy. Ric


Proxmox is not an ecommerce package. And Turnkey Linux is not a "pure debian solution".

So neither satisfies the claim Scott made for a "pure Debian solution".


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