Linux Inc.  
      Linus Torvalds once led a ragtag band of software geeks. Not anymore. 
Here's an inside look at how the unusual Linux business model increasingly 
threatens Microsoft 

     
Five years ago, Linus Torvalds faced a mutiny. The reclusive Finn had taken the 
lead in creating the Linux computer operating system, with help from thousands 
of volunteer programmers, and the open-source software had become wildly 
popular for running Web sites during the dot-com boom. But just as Linux was 
taking off, some programmers rebelled. Torvalds' insistence on manually 
reviewing everything that went into the software was creating a logjam, they 
warned. Unless he changed his ways, they might concoct a rival software package 
-- a threat that could have crippled Linux. "Everybody knew things were falling 
apart," recalls Larry McVoy, a programmer who played peacemaker. "Something had 
to be done."

The crisis came to a head during a tense meeting at McVoy's house, on San 
Francisco's Twin Peaks. A handful of Linux' top contributors took turns urging 
Torvalds to change. After an awkward dinner of quiche and croissants, they sat 
on the living room floor and hashed things out. Four hours later, Torvalds 
relented. He agreed to delegate more and use a software program for automating 
the handling of code. When the program was ready in 2002, Torvalds was able to 
process contributions five times as fast as he had in the past.

The Twin Peaks truce is just one of the dramatic changes during the past few 
years in the way Linux is made and distributed. The phenomenon that Torvalds 
kicked off as a student at the University of Helsinki in 1991 had long been a 
loosey-goosey effort, with little structure or organization. Young students and 
caffeine-jazzed iconoclasts wrote much of the code in their spare time, while 
the overtaxed Torvalds stitched in improvements almost singlehandedly.

TURNING PRO 
Today, that approach is quaint history. Little understood by the outside world, 
the community of Linux programmers has evolved in recent years into something 
much more mature, organized, and efficient. Put bluntly, Linux has turned pro. 
Torvalds now has a team of lieutenants, nearly all of them employed by tech 
companies, that oversees development of top-priority projects. Tech giants such 
as IBM (IBM ), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ ), and Intel (INTC ) are clustered around 
the Finn, contributing technology, marketing muscle, and thousands of 
professional programmers. IBM alone has 600 programmers dedicated to Linux, up 
from two in 1999. There's even a board of directors that helps set the 
priorities for Linux development.

The result is a much more powerful Linux. The software is making its way into 
everything from Motorola (MOT ) cell phones and Mitsubishi robots to eBay (EBAY 
) servers and the NASA supercomputers that run space-shuttle simulations. Its 
growing might is shaking up the technology industry, challenging Microsoft 
Corp.'s (MSFT ) dominance and offering up a new model for creating software. 
Indeed, Torvalds' onetime hobby has become Linux Inc. "People thought this 
wouldn't work. There are just too many people and companies to hang together. 
But now it's clear it does work," says Mark Blowers, an analyst at market 
researcher Butler Group.

Not that this Inc. operates like a traditional corporation. Hardly. There's no 
headquarters, no CEO, and no annual report. And it's not a single company. 
Rather, it's a cooperative venture in which employees at about two dozen 
companies, along with thousands of individuals, work together to improve Linux 
software. The tech companies contribute sweat equity to the project, largely by 
paying programmers' salaries, and then make money by selling products and 
services around the Linux operating system. They don't charge for Linux itself, 
since under the cooperative's rules the software is available to all comers for 
free.

How do companies benefit from free software? In several different ways. 
Distributors, including Red Hat Inc. (RHAT ) and Novell Inc., (NOVL ) package 
Linux with helpful user manuals, regular updates, and customer service, and 
then charge customers annual subscription fees for all the extras. Those fees 
range from $35 a year for a basic desktop version of Linux to $1,500 for a 
high-end server version. The dollars can add up. Red Hat, which employs 200 
programmers, is expected to see profits triple, to $53 million, in its current 
fiscal year, as revenues surge 56%, to $195 million.

Those numbers are dwarfed by the winnings for computer makers that sell PCs and 
servers preloaded with Linux. IBM, HP, and others capitalize on the ability to 
sell machines without any up-front charge for an operating-system license, 
which can range up to several thousand dollars for some versions of Windows and 
Unix. At HP, sales of servers that run the Linux operating system hit nearly $3 
billion during the past fiscal year, almost double the tally three years ago.

In the Linux community, this kind of red-meat capitalism is combined with the 
sharing philosophy of the open-source movement. Dick Porter, a T-shirted coder 
who often works under an apple tree in his garden in Wales, is on the same team 
with Jim Stallings, a hard-charging ex-Marine who travels the world making 
deals for IBM. What they have in common is a keen interest in making Linux ever 
more capable. The result is a culture that's cooperative, meritocratic -- and 
Darwinian at the same time. Any company or person is free to participate in 
Linux Inc., and those with the most to offer win recognition and prominent 
roles. "Linux is the first natural business ecosystem," says James F. Moore, a 
senior fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law 
School.

STRANGE GROUND 
To understand the inner workings of Linux Inc., BusinessWeek took a journey 
through the fast-evolving ecosystem. The unusual trip included everything from 
sitting in on gritty developer meetings to interviewing dozens of tech execs 
and engineers from Germany to China. One stop was Torvalds' home, just south of 
Portland, Ore. The 34-year-old moved from Silicon Valley last summer, in part 
because he was hired by the Beaverton (Ore.) Linux advocacy group Open Source 
Development Labs Inc. (OSDL). He spent several hours talking about Linux as his 
three towheaded daughters played nearby. Something of a rock star in techie 
circles, he was preparing for a flight to Los Angeles for the premiere of Shark 
Tale -- which was animated on Linux computers -- and was taking along his 
oldest daughter, Patricia, then 7 years old.

What's clear from these interviews is that the organization supporting Linux 
has matured more dramatically than most outsiders realize. While Torvalds 
remains at its center, he has ceded some control and accepted lots of help, 
thanks to some prodding from individual programmers like McVoy and some coaxing 
from tech giants whose fortunes have become inextricably linked to Linux. One 
important step was the move by IBM, Intel, and others to set up OSDL as the 
focal point for accelerating Linux adoption.

Perhaps most surprising, the legal attacks on Linux over the past year have 
unified the community. There continue to be some internal tensions -- for 
instance, Linux backers fret that different versions of the software will 
become incompatible with one another. Yet a suit by SCO Group Inc., a software 
company that claims IBM handed some of SCO's intellectual property to Linux, 
gave Linux aficionados the motivation to coordinate their efforts as never 
before. Tech companies have opened their checkbooks to pay for administrative 
support, including a legal staff that scans every stitch of code to make sure 
it can bear patent scrutiny. Even Linux' original idealists, who have grumbled 
at times about the corporatization of the community, put their complaints on 
hold and rallied to defend their baby. The SCO suit against IBM is slated for 
trial late this year.

Put it all together, and Linux has become the strongest rival that Microsoft 
has ever faced. In servers, researcher IDC predicts Linux' market share based 
on unit sales will rise from 24% today to 33% in 2007, compared with 59% for 
Windows -- essentially keeping Microsoft at its current market share for the 
next three years and squeezing its profit margins. That's because, for the 
first time, Linux is taking a bite out of Windows, not just the other 
alternatives, and is forcing Microsoft to offer discounts to avoid losing 
sales. In a survey of business users by Forrester Research Inc. (FORR ), 52% 
said they are now replacing Windows servers with Linux. On the desktop side, 
IDC sees Linux' share more than doubling, from 3% today to 6% in 2007, while 
Windows loses a bit of ground. IDC expects the total market for Linux devices 
and software to jump from $11 billion last year to $35.7 billion by 2008.

In response, Microsoft has launched a counterattack against what it calls its 
No. 1 threat. The software giant's "Get the Facts" publicity campaign claims 
that Windows is more secure and less expensive to own than Linux. Microsoft has 
notched some victories. The city government of Paris, for instance, decided in 
October against a complete switchover to Linux, citing the costs of such a 
change. Now that Linux distributors are charging more for subscriptions, 
Microsoft figures that it can use the same cost-benefit arguments that helped 
bury old rivals, such as Netscape Communications Corp. "It's getting to be much 
more like the old world instead of the new world for us, and we know how to 
compete with that kind of phenomenon," says Microsoft Chief Executive Steve 
Ballmer.

But Ballmer may have a tough time persuading customers that Windows is cheaper 
than Linux. It often isn't. With Windows, end users pay an up-front fee that 
ranges from several hundred dollars for a PC to several thousand for a server, 
while there's no such charge for Linux. The total cost over three years for a 
small server used by 30 people, including licensing fees, support, and upgrade 
rights, would be about $3,500 for Windows, compared with $2,400 for a Red Hat 
subscription, say analysts. The situation where Microsoft can have an edge is 
when a company already is using Windows. Then, in some cases, it can be cheaper 
to upgrade to a newer version of Microsoft's software, rather than replacing it 
with Linux -- once you take into account the retraining expenses. Analyst 
George Weiss of market researcher Gartner Inc. says that Microsoft may trumpet 
those individual cases, but "there's no study that says Windows will be a 
better total cost of ownership in general."

Microsoft isn't shying away from brass-knuckle tactics in an effort to win this 
battle. Several sources say that its executives have been warning corporations 
that they're taking a legal risk by using Linux. A spokesperson for one company 
whose CEO met with Ballmer says the implication of their conversation was that 
Microsoft is considering suing outfits that use the software and claiming that 
it infringes Microsoft patents. Although legal experts doubt Microsoft would 
actually sue its own customers, Linux supporters say such warnings are an 
effort to spread doubt and uncertainty. "Our friends in Redmond [Wash.] are 
rattling their swords. They're trying to scare people into not switching from 
Windows to Linux," says Jack Messman, CEO of Linux distributor Novell. 
Microsoft acknowledges discussing legal risks with customers but denies trying 
to intimidate them. It won't say whether it believes Linux infringes on its 
patents.

COMMUNAL IMPULSES 
That Linux is more than holding its own against Microsoft's onslaught suggests 
it could become a model for others in the tech industry. Otherwise fierce 
competitors -- think IBM and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ ) -- are demonstrating that 
they can benefit from embracing the open-source philosophy of sharing work. By 
collaborating on the operating system, they all get a stable foundation on 
which to build tech projects and save millions in programming costs. "Much 
software will be developed this way. It's especially good for infrastructure -- 
stuff that affects everybody," says Torvalds. "In the long run, you can't 
sanely compete with the open-source mentality."

Linux Inc. has become so mature that it's clear it could continue to thrive 
even without Torvalds. Already his chief lieutenant, Andrew Morton, shares 
leadership duties and makes all the public appearances. >From 1997 to 2003, 
when Torvalds worked for chipmaker Transmeta Corp., putting out Linux wasn't 
even his full-time job -- yet its market share in servers rose from 6.8% to 
24%. Plus, this isn't the army: Programmers don't wait around for orders. 
Linux' legions know how the development process works, and they just do it. "I 
manage people, but not in the traditional sense," says Torvalds. "I can't say, 
'You do this because here's your next paycheck.' It's more like we know what we 
want to do, but we don't know how to do it. We try directions. Sometimes 
somebody disagrees and has a vision. They go and sulk in their corner for a 
year. Then they come back and say, 'I'll show you it's much faster if you do it 
this way.' And sometimes they're right."

This mix of commercial and communal impulses has its roots in the early days of 
personal computing. Academics and corporate researchers originally shared many 
of their software innovations. But that started to change in the 1980s as the 
industry took shape. In response, programmer Richard Stallman launched the Free 
Software movement. His answer: the GNU operating system, modeled on Unix, to be 
shared by a community of programmers. It was Torvalds who came along with a 
piece of software called the kernel, which is the control center of the 
operating system and coordinates the work of other pieces, such as the software 
that tells the printer to produce a page. Programmers called the kernel 
"Linux," a contraction of Linus and Unix, and Linux caught on as the name for 
the whole thing. Torvalds decided the group's mascot should be a friendly 
penguin, named Tux, partly because a pint-size Fairy penguin once nibbled his 
finger at an Australian zoo.

Stallman is still an evangelist for free software, but with his wild long hair 
and odd behavior, he doesn't fit in with the suit-and-tie crowd. He doesn't 
even speak to Torvalds anymore -- since Torvalds decided to use a piece of 
software that wasn't open-source to help develop Linux. "The place he wants to 
lead people is a mistake. It isn't to freedom," says Stallman of Torvalds. 
During speaking engagements, Stallman often adopts the persona of "St. 
IGNUcius," donning a robe and a halo made of a computer disk. Chris Wright, a 
young programmer for OSDL, recalls a group dinner at a restaurant where the 
trade group hosted Stallman. Wright was impressed with Stallman's beliefs but 
put off by his style. "He wanted to taste everybody's food, so it was a little 
awkward," says Wright.

Torvalds proved to be just the guy to lead the Linux charge. He was only a 
casual programmer in 1991 when he started writing software to run on a PC. But 
after he posted the first Linux code on the Internet for others to contribute 
to, he got the knack for spotting quality and handling the flow of fixes. 
Gradually, he developed a support organization of volunteers.

Begun as a meritocracy, Linux continues to operate that way. In a world where 
everybody can look at every bit of code that is submitted, only the A+ stuff 
gets in and only the best programmers rise to become Torvalds' top aides. "The 
lieutenants get picked -- but not by me," explains Torvalds. "Somebody who gets 
things done, and shows good taste -- people just start sending them suggestions 
and patches. I didn't design it this way. It happens because this is the way 
people work naturally."

One reason that Linux Inc. bears little resemblance to a traditional company is 
that Torvalds has almost nothing in common with classic, hard-driving, and 
autocratic tech-industry leaders. He rarely appears in public and largely lets 
other people set priorities for development. Once others come up with 
improvements, he shepherds them along. "Linus has power, but he doesn't have it 
by fiat," says Havoc Pennington, a Linux contributor who works for Red Hat. "He 
has power because people trust him. As long as he keeps making good decisions, 
people won't take it away from him."

Yet for all of his seeming passivity, Torvalds is a strong leader. He stays 
scrupulously neutral, never taking one company's side over another. He focuses 
on the open-source development process. There, he demands high-quality work. 
Things must be just so, with the least amount of coding. As a result, Linux has 
few errors that can be exploited by virus writers. That gives it an edge on 
Windows, which has become a favorite target of hackers -- largely because it's 
so widely used, but also because it has vulnerabilities that Linux doesn't. "He 
has set a compelling vision and inspired people to follow it," says Larry 
Augustin, a venture capitalist at Azure Capital Partners and an OSDL board 
member: "It's leadership by example, rather than leadership by hype."

Even today, Torvalds operates in a virtual world of e-mails and Web sites. He 
works almost entirely from a roomy house that sits on a wooded Oregon 
mountaintop and is decorated with taxidermic specimens, including a piranha and 
a crocodile. He gets up early, making strong cups of coffee for himself and his 
wife, Tove, a former karate champion in Finland. Then he settles in for hours 
of reviewing code and snapping off e-mail messages in his basement office. It's 
lined with science fiction and fantasy books, including classics such as Dune 
and the Wheel of Time series. In the afternoon, he coasts down the hill on his 
bicycle to a quaint village, stops at a Peet's coffee shop for a latte or Chai 
tea, and pumps back up the hill. Then he returns to his computers.

Although Torvalds is physically near his comrades at OSDL, he almost never sees 
them face to face. He visited the organization's office only once in his first 
three months in the Portland area, and he rarely meets with Morton, an Aussie 
who lives in Silicon Valley. "It's a long-distance mind-meld," says Morton. In 
a rare encounter last summer, they shook hands and made small talk at a picnic. 
The Linux community, Torvalds says, is like a huge spider web, or better yet, 
multiple spider webs representing dozens of related open-source projects. His 
office is "near where those webs intersect."

The Linux development process begins and ends with the programmers. While there 
are still some individual volunteers and government agencies that chip in, more 
than 90% of the patches now come from employees at tech companies. Many of 
those workers are formerly independent aces who have been scooped up over the 
past few years. Some of these people simply submit code, and others, called 
maintainers, are in charge of improving specific functions.

>From there on, it's a continuous cycle. Individuals submit patches; 
>maintainers improve them. Then they're passed off to Torvalds and Morton, who 
>review the patches, ask for improvements, and update the kernel. Every four to 
>six weeks, Torvalds releases a new test version so that thousands of people 
>around the world can probe it for flaws. He puts out a major upgrade every 
>three years or so. Unlike at traditional software companies, there are no 
>deadlines. The Linux kernel is done when Torvalds decides it's ready.

Linux Inc. is a series of concentric circles radiating out from Torvalds. In 
the first circle, you have Open Source Development Labs. The top tech companies 
with a stake in Linux -- including HP, IBM, and Intel -- have technical people 
on the board of directors. The board sets priorities, such as getting Linux 
running better for huge data centers and desktop PCs. In addition, the board is 
responsible for raising $10 million to protect customers from potential 
intellectual-property claims.

TAKING THE SUBWAY 
The second circle is a dozen or so Linux distributors. Spearheaded by Red Hat 
and Novell, this group also includes such regional players as Red Flag Software 
in China and MandrakeLinux in Europe. They pick up the latest version of the 
kernel about once a year and package it with 1,000 or so related open-source 
programs, including the GNOME graphical-user interface, the Firefox browser, 
and the OpenOffice desktop application suite.

The distributors race one another to be first out with Linux updates, but their 
engineers spend most of their time on projects they share with everybody else. 
For example, Novell employs open-source pioneer Miguel de Icaza, who is both a 
Novell vice-presi- dent and the leader of the Mono project -- software for 
building applications to run on Linux. The 34-year-old Mexican coordinates 25 
Novell employees plus more than 300 other programmers, many of whom work for 
other tech companies. So far, de Icaza says, there have been no conflicts. His 
explanation: "Cooperating gets you further along than screwing your neighbor."

These Linux companies have little in common with their brethren from the 
dot-com boom. They're typically frugal. Matthew J. Szulik, CEO of Red Hat, 
takes the subway rather than a cab when he visits customers in New York and 
Boston. And rather than being motivated by big money, Linux programmers say 
their goal is making Linux an ever-bigger force in computing. Red Hat's 
Pennington doesn't covet expensive wheels, proudly pointing to his 2001 Toyota 
Corolla in the parking lot, which he jokes is "fully loaded."

For his part, Torvalds has been amply rewarded for his role, but he's no Bill 
Gates billionaire. OSDL pays him a salary of nearly $200,000. In addition, he 
sold initial public offering shares that he got as gifts from a couple of Linux 
companies, including VA Linux Systems. That helped him afford his house and put 
money away for his daughters' educations.

ALL-PURPOSE SYSTEM 
In Linux society, there's no bowing and scraping before the rich and powerful. 
Executives and product managers at HP, IBM, Intel, and Oracle (ORCL ) don't 
even try to pressure Torvalds and Morton to further their interests. Instead, 
their input goes through their engineers, who, as members of the open-source 
community, submit patches for the kernel or other pieces of Linux software.

The tech powerhouses have learned to play by new rules. You can't meet in 
private, come up with new features, and then drop massive changes on Torvalds. 
A handful of companies, including Intel and Nokia Corp. (NOK ), learned this 
lesson the hard way when they went about making Linux capable of running 
telecom gear. About two dozen of their engineers worked on the "carrier-grade" 
Linux project, and then, in late 2002, they posted hundreds of thousands of 
lines of code on a Web site. The response: outrage. "We were offended by the 
whole process," says Alan Cox, a top kernel programmer. The posting was quickly 
removed.

Still, the cultures of open-source and commercial software are melding 
together. Red Hat used to scatter employees around the world, the typical 
open-source approach. Now the company brings its workers together so young 
programmers can cross-pollinate with gray-haired veterans. It works. Not only 
did 46-year-old Larry Woodman bond with 26-year-old Rik van Riel by teaching 
him how to drive a car, but the two are working in tandem on improvements to 
memory management in Linux. "We complement each other," says Woodman.

These collaborations are turning Linux into an all-purpose operating system. 
It's secure enough that Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory loads it not 
only on desktop and server computers but also on supercomputers it uses to 
simulate the aging of nuclear materials. "Linux is definitely more secure than 
Windows," says Mark Seager, the lab's assistant department head for advanced 
technology. "There aren't as many ways to break the system." With the latest 
improvements, Linux now works on servers with more than 128 processors and can 
run the largest databases. The newest versions also have features, such as 
power management, that make them more suitable for laptop PCs.

Linux is so solid that staid corporate purchasers are adopting it aggressively 
for run-the-company applications. Holcim Ltd. (HCMLY ), the Swiss cement giant, 
just switched from Unix to Linux for some of its accounting, manufacturing, and 
human-resource applications. The attraction: 50% savings on hardware and 20% on 
software. "It was a no-brainer to go with Linux," says Carl Wilson, chief 
operations manager for the company's North American data center.

Cost isn't the only reason that companies are switching to Linux. The data 
processor Axciom Corp. recently shifted some servers to the operating system, 
after using Unix in the past. Alex Dietz, the company's chief information 
officer, says he's thinking about replacing the Windows operating system with 
Linux on the company's desktop computers. One important reason: Axciom doesn't 
want to be too dependent on Microsoft. "[Linux] has an innate guarantee that 
you won't be held hostage," says Dietz.

Torvalds takes tremendous satisfaction in seeing his baby grow up. "It's like a 
river. It starts off a bouncy small stream and turns into a slower-moving big 
thing," he says.

Indeed, Linux Inc. has emerged as a model for collaborating in a new way on 
software development, which could have reverberations throughout the business 
world. Its essence is captured in one of the mottoes of the open-source world: 
Give a little, take a lot. In a business environment where efficiency rules, 
that's a potent formula -- maybe even strong enough to knock mighty Microsoft 
down a peg.


By Steve Hamm 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]






 
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