All I can say, is be VERY careful (or liberal) with the wording you use
to get the certification. At a past employer, they were too literal
with their definitions and we were stuck at an old version of the OS
specified, and weren't allowed to upgrade without re-certification! So
just be careful.
I'd recommend Debian, but you'll get 20 different answers to which
distro to choose.
On Mon, 2002-08-19 at 11:13, Sundar wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Finally, I managed to convince our management to get a Linux based test
> system to test our products(Pacemakers, De-Fibrillators.....) . Now I
> have to decide on RedHat, SuSE or any other and get it approved by FDA.
> I know, it's going to be a long time(6 months to an year). Documentation
> itself is going to take atleast 3 months. But, I guess it is better
> late than never.
>
> Now to the question -- Have any of you implemented the systems like
> this(testing medical electronic equipments or electronic equipments in
> general). We will be using LabVIEW(from National Instruments) to develop
> the applications. I need your anecdotal experiences and others, if you
> have come across similar situations.
>
> And what do you think as the good company to go with. I have good
> exposure to RedHat, decent exposure to SuSE and played around with others.
>
> Any pointers welcome.
>
> Thanks,
> Sundar
>
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--
Blake Barnett (bdb) <blake.barnett@developonline.com>
Sr. Unix Administrator
DevelopOnline.com office: 480-377-6816
Learning is a skill, you get better at it with practice.