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On January 23, 2004 09:57, Marcel Lecker wrote:
> http://www.techuser.net/index.php?content=36
>
> Nice read.

finally got around to reading this and what can i say besides... bullocks.

Q. what has changed more in the process of monetizing Free Software: Open 
Source dynamics, or corporates that are betting on Open Source products?

corporates.

Q. when Red Hat had ~60% of the distribution market (and growing), did other 
distros continue to shrink, or was there a self-balancing mechanism that 
kicked in to restore parity to the market?

the market self-balanced and we see more diversity in the distribution vendor 
market today compared to 24 months ago. less than 5 years ago, perhaps, but 
with more large distros that have better individual futures.

(i'll bet we could even find a few bits of math from ecological science that 
would describe this proliferation-domination-reduction-proliferation-etc 
cycle that seems to be approaching a limit of equilibrium.)

Q. who is successfully shipping sizeable #s of Linux desktops?

Mandrake, Lindows, Sun*, SUSE, Xandros, Red Hat. 

* Sun's actual desktop shipments are far, far fewer (by orders of magnitude) 
than their PR claims (millions in China, a million in the UK in just one 
deal, etc), but they are being deployed, even here in Canada.

Q. what company controls the majority of Open Source software development?

none.

Q. what products does Novell have that are Open Source and will remain that 
way?

primarily stuff in the SUSE product line, along with Evolution and some other 
scraps of stuff from the Ximian purchase. but the lion's share comes from 
SUSE, which is remaining rather independant as a business unit (unlike 
Ximian, btw).

ok, so... summing up ..... the article poses a possible future where Novell is 
the king of Linux by purchasing Red Hat and having the backing via 
investments of the Big 5 PC vendors.

this is a tidy and neat summing up of the game, but one that follows directly 
from a simplistic connect-the-dots-in-my-preferred-world-view sort of manner.

corporate interests are what are changing, yet the article claims that it will 
be the Open Source world that changes most. bzzt.

the article claims that $ alone can impose arbitrary artificial order upon the 
Free Software market. bzzt.

the article claims the big players are Red Hat and Novel, despite the reality 
of many other major distribution players. so again, bzzt.

the article ignores the effects of OSDL, Sun (well, they are perhaps 
ignorable), and a HUGE host of non-distribution players (from the SAPs and 
Oracles to the Codeweavers and MySQL ABs of the world). the author instead is 
happy to play as a child with marbles in his room with some very simple 
objects that he has plucked out of the complex reality for whatever reasons: 
IBM, Novell and Red Hat.

furthermore, the author's "calm down" justifications for his Unified Under 
Novel theory are totally naive. the idea that because you have a bunch of 
investors in a company, you can't do stupid things is quite wrong. the more 
investors you have, the less likely you have to listen to any one of them; 
and to be honest, a modern corporation does not fare well when run by 
external committee (which is what he is suggesting). 

and this is all predicated on the idea that companies will invest in Novel to 
maintain leverage, but they would only do so if Novel is successful, which 
will raise the price of that investment and make Novel hesitant to enter into 
any such agreements (since Novel won't need them; remember, Novel is in it 
for themselves, not for the betterment of mankind or IBM). investments are 
accepted when a company is in trouble, not successful (which is why IBM 
popped into the Novell kitty: to ensure they could survive and afford SUSE at 
the same time; IBM was more interested in SUSE than Novel). at the point Dell 
would wish to get their greasy fingers on Novel's decision making process, it 
would be too late.

so, yes, having a single entity be THE Linux company is a bad idea. there are 
no "calm down" justifications that are realistic.

here's my bet: the author is a rah-rah Novelite (Novel fans often are often 
only a step or three down from Apple fanatics in their rah-rah-ism) and would 
love to see Novel conquer all. to fit his ideal, he is constructing a safe, 
naive and happy world in which it could occur without it being a bad thing to 
everyone else.

his understanding of the seeming anti-MS push (punishment?) and desktop needs 
(one desktop == good for Linux desktop) only further the embarrassment that 
is his article.

- -- 
Aaron J. Seigo
GPG Fingerprint: 8B8B 2209 0C6F 7C47 B1EA  EE75 D6B7 2EB1 A7F1 DB43
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