Corporate Business
Say you have a company with several hundred to several tens of thousands of employees. What do you need? The answer is quite simple. The first choice you have Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
Why? Since Red Hat is powerful enough these days.
Red Hat has the support of big business and it's easy to get certified technicians, administrators, and engineers are competent on RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux). It is supported on a variety of hardware support. Are you using x86 rack servers, blade servers, IBM POWER systems, or mainframe, there RHEL for you. In short, Red Hat is the best standard of Linux business.
Is RHEL is too expensive for you? Here, you get what you pay for. But there are two others who enter the business category of Linux distributions to note that Oracle Linux and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES).
Oracle Linux is basically a copycat version of the Community Sector RHEL.Tetapi most prefer RHEL. SLES, on the other hand, features the admin setup, YaST, which is very useful to make the size of the branch office and the addition of another branch.
Let's say you already have a team of staff who do not embrace Linux RHEL, Oracle, or SLES. In this case, you may want to consider Debian. This is the Linux community, but, for those who understand its ins and outs, Debian works very well. Debian, however, reserved for the non-expert Linux
Let's say you only have a few hundred people in your company or even just a few dozen. What do you do now? Well, all the above options are still valid. Here you can estimate the budget you need. RHEL servers are easier to manage when you are dispersed office locations, but more SLES intended for small offices. Please you use both options and the decision is in your hands.
At this point, if you've had a tough few Linux administrator and want financial efficiency, you can use Red Hat, SUSE and Fedora and openSUSE (http://www.opensuse.org / en /). Unfortunately you can not be supported from Linux companies because you choose to downsize. But, if your IT staff understand Linux well, you probably do not need support from the company Linuz above. For example, there are twenty-four office PCs and servers - using open SUSE OS and works well.
What about Ubuntu, the most popular brand for the Linux desktop. There is also Ubuntu Linux Server. You can use Ubuntu Server for large companies. However, for large-sized enterprises should be the choice fell to Oracle, Red Hat, or SUSE, which has a lot of experience in handling large data-center installations. For a server rack or two (at most), Ubuntu may be an option.