While the desktop was charmingly primitive, the server capabilities were the true selling point of redhat-6.2-i386.iso.
To ensure your ISO isn't corrupted (or infected with modern malware), verify the checksum. The original MD5SUM for the official release is usually:
2c97b902b2cd9c3fb3b2ca577640ea34 redhat-6.2-i386.iso
(Note: Verify this across multiple sources as availability changes) redhat-6.2-i386.iso
Because Red Hat Linux 6.2 was open-source, redistribution is legal. You can find the ISO at: While the desktop was charmingly primitive, the server
If you are studying for an RHCSA or RHCE certification (on RHEL 9 or 10), installing Red Hat 6.2 in a VM gives you a shocking appreciation for how far system administration has come. You will learn to troubleshoot using init scripts instead of systemctl, and ifconfig instead of ip. While the desktop was charmingly primitive