http://in.rediff.com/money/2006/apr/08spec.htm

this is old hat (no pun intended!) to this list. nevertheless, text of 
article reproduced below:

Linux a BIG hit in India

Leslie D'Monte | BS | April 08, 2006 | 11:31 IST

It has been over a year since UTI Bank set up its call center that 
handles over 7,000 calls per day. The bank was looking for a robust 
platform that could guarantee it "high availability of services and 
uninterrupted call traffic". It had options but finally decided on Linux 
for its core business applications.

"Today, we are really happy with Linux that has delivered 99.99 per cent 
uptime so far," says Pritesh Thaker, AVP, IT, UTI Bank. The bank, in 
fact, is now planning to base its credit card-based system on Linux too.

UTI is not the lone player to swear by Linux. Eveready, a leading 
manufacturer of dry cell batteries and flashlights in India, has built a 
mission-critical resource system to automate all functionalities of its 
daily business using the Oracle e-business suite running on a Linux 
platform. Central Bank of India has implemented Linux in nearly 3000 
branches.

The Penguin (official mascot of Linux), it appears, has finally marched 
into enterprises like IDBI Bank, Canara Bank, New India Assurance, LIC, 
BSNL, IRCTC, ABN Amro, Airtel and even the governments of Maharashtra 
and West Bengal. The list, of course, is not exhaustive.

In most cases, though, the implementation of Linux in Indian enterprises 
is by Red Hat (primarily since Red Hat Linux has been popularised by the 
media and offers support for Linux which, being open source, can be 
downloaded for free and has no upfront licensing fee).

Otherwise, one can choose from the hundreds of other Linux distributions 
- Mandriva, Debian, Suse, PCLinuxOS, Knoppix and Ubuntu to name a few - 
for desktops and enterprises.

"All verticals are ready for Linux adoption today. However the banking, 
financial and insurance services (BFSI) and government markets have been 
pioneers of sorts in adopting Linux. The retail segment is also gaining 
ground quickly, along with verticals ranging from telecommunications to 
media and entertainment.

"In India, we are increasingly seeing corporates running ERPs and 
mission-critical applications on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux platform. 
Large databases and blade servers are being powered by Linux to run 
online share trading and lottery applications," says Javed Tapia, CEO, 
Red Hat.

The Indiabulls group is a case in point. Indiabulls runs its Internet 
trading platform - Oracle 9i - on Linux. This system, which handles 
40-45 per cent of Indiabulls' revenue transactions - nearly 10,000 
customers are online at any point of time and transactions are in the 
range of Rs 1000 crore (Rs 10 billion) - runs on Linux. The online share 
trading infrastructure at Indiabulls generates close to 150000 database 
queries per minute.

"Linux has become prettly stable. We never considered Windows because of 
the perception that it has a lot of vulnerabilities. Hence, we adopted 
the Linux route and are satisfied with the results," says Tejinderpal 
Singh Miglani, CTO, Indiabulls.

IDBI's Sanjay Sharma, Head IT, corroborates this view. IDBI has been 
using an Oracle HR management and financial accounting system, which 
runs on Linux. From Sharma's perspective, this is a "mission-critical" 
application. "We did evaluate options like Unix and Windows too. 
However, we did not want to be tied up to resource-hungry applications 
and any particular vendor. Besides, you hardly have a problem of viruses 
with Linux," he says.

Linux, indeed, is doing reasonably good business. IBM's business built 
around Linux, for instance, was worth $16 billion last year and is 
projected to be worth more than $50 billion, says the company's global 
head of public sector Linux sales, Mary Ann Fisher, who recently spoke 
at LinuxWorld, Australia.

She added: "Governments worldwide are spending more than $3 billion a 
year on Linux hardware, software and services, and this is growing at 35 
per cent a year. But it's the US military that is spending the most."

"Mission-critical" debate

Now, mission-critical applications, among other things, need servers. 
And for the first time, the server market in India is expected to cross 
the 100,000-unit mark in 2006. Servers are powerful networked machines 
for tasks such as handling e-mail, financial transactions, airline 
reservations and file storage.

Based on the price, vendors classify servers as small (anywhere from Rs 
40000 up to Rs 500,000), medium (from Rs 500,000 to Rs 1 crore) and 
large (over Rs 1 crore). They are identified as Intel (or X86 
processor-based), Unix (or non-X86 processor-based) and Blade servers. 
Linux and Solaris are flavours of Unix. Windows and Intel form the 
loosely-termed "Wintel" brand.

Back in 2000, India was primarily a Unix market in the enterprise. With 
the entry of certified and supported Linux solutions, Unix users in 
India found Linux an attractive proposition to migrate to. IDC has 
consistently reported Linux as the fastest growing OS in the world and 
predicts that the overall market revenue for Linux will exceed $35 
billion by 2008.

Globally, Windows narrowly overtook Unix in 2005 to claim the top spot 
in server sales for the first time, according to IDC. Computer makers 
sold $17.7 billion worth of Windows servers worldwide in 2005 compared 
with $17.5 billion in Unix servers. Linux came third. The Unix market, 
though, is still huge. Sun is trying to restore Unix fortunes as well by 
making Solaris an open-source project and bringing it to the x86 servers.

The battle for Unix customers (traditionally, the server King) is not 
new, with IBM, HP and Red Hat all pushing Unix-to-Linux migration plans. 
This definitely has hurt Sun's profitability. Sun, in turn, released 
Solaris 10 last year as a free download (it has close to 5 million 
downloads).

Praveen Sawkar, country manager, Solaris, Sun Microsystems India, admits 
that "Linux has gained some traction in the x86 server space and has 
managed to break Wintel combination's stronghold on this segment of the 
market".

However, he adds, that most mission-critical applications in the world 
"continue to be deployed, almost without exception, on the SPARC platform".

He opines it will be a long time before the industry will start basing 
their mission-critical applications on Linux. "In the BFSI industry, one 
of the largest users of mission-critical applications, Linux is used for 
end-user banking, algorithmic and analytical work (derivative analysis 
and risk portfolio assessment). It is yet to be used in core banking 
environments, something that can be classified as being 
mission-critical," asserts Sawkar.

Microsoft concurs with this view. Sanjiv Mathur, director (customer and 
partner experience), Microsoft Corporation India, notes that according 
to IDC, 42.3 per cent of mission-critical applications worldwide run on 
Windows server platform.

"With a 69.5 per cent market share, Microsoft has a strong foothold 
across all verticals including BFSI and government. Linux has a much 
smaller share of the market, which is limited to specific areas of 
high-performance computing and other workloads like security and edge 
servers, which have traditionally been on the Unix platform. So this 
whole perception of Linux posing a threat to Microsoft does not hold 
true. Linux growth is more from the re-platforming of Unix," he adds.

Frost and Sullivan (India) - director ICT, Alok Shende, too, appears to 
be in agreement. "Linux is definitely getting into the enterprise. 
However, enterprises today need end-to-end solutions. Second, the price 
of the OS is a small part of the end-to-end solution. People should look 
at the total cost of ownership, which included long-term costs like 
services and people availability. Linux has to create a whole market 
around the product. While it has matured as a technology, it is wanting 
from a business perspective. And that will take some time," he opines.

However, there are major companies that stand aggressively by Linux. 
Sandeep Menon, director, Linux Business, Novell West Asia, opines that 
Linux is increasingly being used as a platform of choice for 
mission-critical applications.

"Several mainframes and super computers are running Linux. Linux is also 
been embedded in routers and telecom equipment. It is used by some of 
the largest banks, airlines and Internet engines in the World. What else 
can be more critical?" he asks.

He adds that with proprietary software, the customer is totally at the 
mercy of vendor. If the vendor discontinues support for any reason, the 
customer can't do anything. In the case of Open Source Linux, even if 
the vendor stops support, the customer can go to anyone else for support 
or even support it using his/her own resources, given that the source 
code will be available.

Ashutosh Dhanesha, country manager, Linux Business, IBM India, concurs: 
"Linux gives customers choice. Our philosophy on "Freedom of choice" for 
software, hardware and services and leadership in industry standards 
provides customers with security, flexibility and control of their IT 
infrastructure and applications. We see Linux moving to mission-critical 
applications such as ERP and even high end applications such as Seismic 
data analysis."

"Linux is the most proactive as far as security is concerned. With a 
million eyeballs looking continuously at the code, bugs are fixed faster 
than they can be exploited. As opposed to a licensing approach that 
proprietary platforms follow, we sell subscriptions, wherein customers 
are automatically covered for upgrades and updates," says Tapia.

Experts opine there is a Rs 600-crore (Rs 6 billion) market for open 
source software which is growing at a compounded annual growth rate of 
35-40 per cent. A sharp rise in enterprise-wide adoption of Linux or 
Open Source is one of the primary reasons for this optimism.

Gartner predicts that by 2008, 95 per cent of Global 2000 organisations 
will have formal open-source acquisition and management strategies. The 
Penguin, it appears, will give its competitors an icy path to walk on.

Penguin facts

    *
      Linux is expected to have a 15 per cent share of the ERP market by
      2007 (Peerstone Research)
    *
      55 per cent of all companies deployed Linux by the end of 2005
      (AMR Research)
    *
      There are over 1.2 million developers with Linux skills (Evans
      Data Corp)
    *
      IBM has more than 7000 services professionals working with Linux
    *
      Robert Francis Group (IBM-sponsored research) found security
      levels in Linux generally exceeded those in Windows, providing a
      more secure and manageable environment out of the box with
      significantly more functionality in terms of security integration
      and management
    * The Linux kernel programming code is better and more secure than
      the programming code of most proprietary software - based on a
      four-year analysis of the 5.7 million lines of Linux source code
      conducted by five Stanford University researchers



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