Novell CEO Gives Behind the Scenes Account of Microsoft Deal 215
raffe writes "Here is a Q&A with Ron Hovsepian CEO of Novell. He describes 'a love-hate thing' between the two companies." From the article:
"This past May, I picked up the phone and called Kevin Turner, the COO at Microsoft. I knew Kevin when he was the CIO at Wal-Mart. I said, "Kevin, I'd like to have a conversation about what the customer needs. If you could put back on your old hat as a customer, if I came in and started talking to you about virtualization on Linux, and this Microsoft guy showed up and started talking to you about virtualization on Windows, what would you say to us?""
I'd say (Score:5, Interesting)
OK which one of you would cost me less in TCO.
What I still don't understand is ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is this something that makes sense in CEO-land?
Because it sure doesn't make sense from where I'm at.
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Running Microsoft on Linux is only a fraction as bad as running Linux and no Microsoft. So were a company would have gone the direction away from Microsoft all together, it still lets Microsoft in the door to cause them to think otherwise. or at least for parts of their operations.
It isn't that Microsoft is winning the deals, they got lucky on a few. Microsoft knows this.
Who will do that? (Score:5, Informative)
And what company is going to deploy Linux just so it can virtualize Windows? Why wouldn't they save the time and expertise (and finger pointing) and just deploy Windows as the host and Windows as the guest?
But it was Novell's CEO who said that he lost deals to Microsoft, again and again and again. I don't often see Microsoft complaining about losing deals to Linux.
You might want to check your email server logs. It seems that 95%+ of the businesses we deal with are running Exchange.
And Novell's marketshare has been in decline for years.
Somehow that doesn't add up to "got lucky on a few".
Re:Who will do that? (Score:5, Interesting)
People who want a stable subtrate operating system on which they can deploy their Windows services? Think about it. A stable underlying OS allows you to stop worrying about the actual servers and focus on the VMs. This means you can do things like hot VM fail-over, for higher availability. Seems like a big win to me.
Not to mention developers who might want a Linux box as their core OS while they do Windows development. Or those doing cross-platform work.
www.vmware.com (Score:3, Informative)
WMWare already offers something like that.
And Linux, when administered by someone who does NOT know what he's doing is no more stable than Windows. But Windows can be as stable as Linux when you
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AFAIK, only the Player and Server are free-as-in-beer. The Player can't actually create the VM, or install a guest OS, etc...and I'm assuming that the free Server is crippled as well.
The Workstation is not free, but it is a reasonable price (~$200 US) for a single developer looking
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I'll assume you know nothing at all about virtualization, and ignore everything else you said in your post. Oh wait, I don't have to assume because you proved it! nice work!
Question 1) How can a 'player' that 'plays' be crippled? is Microsoft's Word Viewer 'crippled' because it can't make new documents?
Answer 1) And no, the se
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Actually, it's pretty trivial to set up new VMs and install Guest OSs using the free Player, it just requires editing simple text files rather than using a nice GUI. There's dozens of Howtos on the 'Net, most of which make things more complicated than they need to be.
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Theoretically I suppose that would be true. But competent Windows administrators deem to be quite rare compared to decent enough Linux administrators.
At least that's what I gathered from the several shops I've seen and numerous people I've met. Now I don't touch the Win
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Both Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer have said many times that one of the reasons why windows is cheaper to run is because you don't need to pay for an expensive sysadmin. Anybody can administer windows. Bill Gates says so and he would never lie.
Re:www.vmware.com (Score:5, Interesting)
I can keep a linux system up and running for years with a handful of services, and I'm horrid at unix. For instance, I know "dd", ":q", ":wq", "i", "a" from VI, that's IT.
On the other hand, I'm pretty much a windows expert. I can do pretty much anything with a windows machine EXCEPT keep it running for more than a month. I'm not talking windows expert as in the guy in your family that helps with PCs, I'm speaking as the guy who helps the IT department when they get stuck.
How about hackability? I don't think I've ever seen a rooted Linux machine (but as I said, I don't get a ton of exposure to Linux workstations, maybe I don't know?)--yet I find it rare when dealing with a PC over 6 months old to not have a rootkit or some such garbage installed. I keep a Linux machine at home and won't do financial transactions on any of my 4 windows PCs or this work pc I'm on now.
I admit I'm talking different uses. PCs I've used have generally had apps installed and uninstalled over time, and are in a pretty flakey condition within a year. The Linux pc's I've set up are generally fire-and-forget, but as I said, I do run one linux laptop where I load bunches of apps, delete bunches of apps, etc and it's still crashless (well, apps lock up sometimes and I'm sometimes not good enough to shut them down without rebooting the laptop, but it could be done if I was better with Linux.)
Also: a "Good" windows admin will schedule reboots daily or weekly. I've never heard of a "Good" linux admin doing that. Doesn't that alone say a lot about general stability?
Did you have some different definition of stability than uptime (no crashes, no reboots) and a lack of degradation over time?
My definition of stability (Score:4, Informative)
Parent poster has it dead on about uptime...
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Last time I rebooted my FC4 box was about five months ago after a kernel upgrade.
Re:www.vmware.com (Score:4, Funny)
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People who want a stable subtrate operating system on which they can deploy their Windows services? Think about it. A stable underlying OS allows you to stop worrying about the actual servers and focus on the VMs.
All you are doing is adding an extra layers of complexity and points of failure.
This means you can do things like hot VM fail-over, for higher availability. Seems like a big win to me.
If your hardware is failing frequently enough for this to be a meaningful issue, you need to buy better hardwa
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That's an odd statement, as I've seen lots of production environments running in vmware.
Oh, I'm sure there are - I just don't see any real value in it, based on an evaluation of our environment and an extrapolation to what I would expect it to share in common with others.
When the average windows box runs around 5-10% cpu utilization 90% of the time, it's hard NOT to see value in it.
For things like DCs, maybe. But how many things like fileservers and Exchange servers aren't in need of large amounts of
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I dunno, the company that wants to sandbox their production environment and make sure that the latest windows virus that exploits a hole microsoft already fixed but no one is updating because it borkes allot of other items. Or maybe it is the company that wants to run get away form Microsoft but is held
Well .... (Score:2)
Well, the reason use virtualization is to get the most usage out of our existing hardware by running multiple low-usage instances
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We are linux based web hosting and development company and we are moving to exchange server for our emails. The boss wants customer relationship management software with a high level of integration with office software. What are the techies supposed to do? Refuse to do what we are told and get the sack?
There is only so much dissuation of the boss you can do before he says the security problem is something you will have to deal with, I ne
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I read the rest of your comment, and disagree. You are essentially arguing that the binary API is necessary so that closed-source drivers can be loaded in the kernel. However, closed-souce drivers CAN be loaded in the kernel without a stable binary API, as proven by the closed-source nVidia driver that is running on the machine I am typing this on.
There are excellent tec
What color is your parachute? (Score:2)
Then again, maybe he's just playing the role of abused spouse. Hitting me shows he cares!
Re:What I still don't understand is ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Hovespian gets to the meat of it in the first page: either J2EE stacks or .Net stacks. Novell has bedded down with Microsoft because the future looked rather bleak for them with Red Hat owning the Free Java space and acquiring JBoss and Novell wasting a lot of money and time on their .NET implementation. As a result Novell gets a couple of hundred million and in return Microsoft gets ...
Microsoft wins, Novell execs get a bigger pot of money to pay themselves out of, so they win. Novell gets some value out of what is otherwise a dead loss (Mono) and can make a stronger case for their GNU/Linux/.NET mashup. Every other business dependent on GNU/Linux loses because Novell's engineers are wasting their time doing Microsoft's engineering development for them instead of improving Free software.
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Of course I could be entirely full of compost. Any W-M insiders there? Oh, and I work for a retailer. Not Wal-Mart, different planet altogether. We sell noodles.
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From Hovsepian's point of view: "Dang - lost four huge sales. The Microsoft IP FUD is working. What can I do to break it?"
And your choices are 1) sit idly by. 2) broker a deal with the 800 lb. gorilla to pay you $108 million, and go on the record: the MS IP FUD doesn't apply if you buy SuSE.
From Microsoft's point of view: Which is better for Microsoft? Microsoft versus Sun, Novell, Oracle, RedHat, and the Linux community? or Novell versus Sun, Oracle, RedHat, and the Linux community?
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For example.... Company X is talking to Novell on a full-on linux migration. They get a second opinion from Microsoft, who says FUD and scares them. Company X tells Novell "Sorry" and goes with the all Microsoft solution to stay in the clear.
Now with this joint deal in place, Novell can confidently sell an all linux migration. If the customer says they believe the MS FUD, then Novell can confidently say SUSE works with Windows so there is no reason to go complet
If I were Ron H I'd say one of these things: (Score:3, Insightful)
- "In one contract I closed more Linux revenue at a higher profit margin than we make in most of a year; and as a new CEO it makes me look good regardless of what it does to Novell long term" or
- "Oracle's too strong on the lobbying side in the federal government business for us to compete with; so we needed someone like Microsoft to partner with there because Microsoft has good ties to lobbyists thanks to Gates's dad'
To quote I Love Lucy (Score:2, Funny)
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...what would you say to us? (Score:5, Funny)
Wow... (Score:3, Interesting)
If you didnt read it and pretended 2 marketers yakking, it was about as interesting.
Well, that and Virtualization is the next key word. Add that to Web 2.0 and Beowulf cluster.
Zzzzzz
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On the contrary, it was very illuminating. Novell started the process first and, on top of that, they have illusions of technical collaboration with MS. So, either they are really desperate and needed cash ASAP, or are thinking of somehow double-crossing MS on the deal.
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Hell, Id rather deal with Windows and MS than the Bindery. Egads.
So, big whoop they're bending over to MS, thinking they might try to screw them.
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They've got this new (circa mid 1990's) thing called a Directory. Microsoft have a bad copy which they say is active. I don't even think you can install bindery even for legacy apps in the current netware.
Your view of the outdated file server is outdated.
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And I dealt with Win31 when it came out. Big surprise.
Last time I had to deal with Novell was when my high school had it installed on their servers and IPX as their network proto.
I tend to stay away from stuff like that.
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I can't believe that in this day and age, someone can in good faith go see Microsoft and ask if they want to collaborate on a project.
The closest image that comes to mind is some sort of tribesman peeking inside the cannon of a shogun while tickling the trigger wondering what that little comma shaped metal thingie is for.
What is wrong with you ?? Don't they teach you anything at school ??? Do not
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That image is absurd an unrealistic!
I mean, since when would a tribesman know about commas?!
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Still, the first page had some interest: how the two companies started to talk, customer-centered.
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As I recall, he actually said the same thing during the press conference (I sucked it up and listened to the audio since Quicktime decided it didn't know how to decode the video).
From the transcript [microsoft.com]:
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good puppy (Score:3, Insightful)
here's a $100,000,000 bone
the guy sounds like an MS soundbite now
There ya go, Ron Hovsepian admits to misconduct, (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:There ya go, Ron Hovsepian admits to misconduct (Score:5, Insightful)
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What is the point of trying to agree a deal to ward off patent litigation when you believe any litigation to be bogus and needless and you haven't performed at least a modicum of due dilligence to establish whether such claims would actually be bogus? For Novell, due dilligence would primarily be performed on Mono, Open Office and possibly Sam
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Ballmer has recently stated that they are ready to start suing people who USE linux if that linux was not purchased from SUSE/Novell. This mean you could be sued by MS, I could, anybody could.
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Would you also condone paying al-Qaida for not bombing your business? Where exactly would you draw the line? You don't give in to terrorists and you trust that the authorities deal with them. The same way you don't give in to the software patent mob and trust that IBM's nazguls will deal with them, since IBM is betting their business on GNU/Linux. Any IP doubts about GPL software are
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Re:There ya go, Ron Hovsepian admits to misconduct (Score:2)
I find it annoying when people think Novel only does Linux now. They have tons of other products that are not free as in spirit or beer. Their group ware application could probably benefit from tons of Microsoft IP seeing how Microsoft's product generally run better then others on Microsoft's operating systems. A
Re:There ya go, Ron Hovsepian admits to misconduct (Score:2)
Now replace government with customers and you have a Novell-Microsoft deal.
Re:There ya go, Ron Hovsepian admits to misconduct (Score:2)
One less major piece of FUD to be spread.
-m
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This is a classic "If you can't beat them, join them" scenario. But with the added bonus of having "them" pay us. Straight business. I think the open source community needs to get more comfortable with "business".
-m
A man walks into a bar (Score:2, Funny)
Bad joke, eh? At least now you get the deeper meaning of the Novell/Microsoft deal.
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Yes, but I don't get it. We can already run Windows on Linux with virtualization (e.g. with Xen 3.0), and Linux on Windows with virtualization (e.g. VMWare). What do we need Microsoft and Novell signing deals for? IIRC, Xen is even packaged for SuSE (Novell's Linux distro).
Microsoft uses software patents against Linux (Score:4, Insightful)
Software patents are such a fantastic weapon for monopolists who have lots of lawyers. No surprise Microsoft is pushing so hard to get them legalised in Europe.
Debian is the second largest GNU/Linux distro (Score:2, Interesting)
From the Netcraft's GNU/Linux distribution share [netcraft.com] stats:
RH - 34%,
Debian - 25%
Suse - 11 %
Re:Debian is the second largest GNU/Linux distro (Score:4, Informative)
That chart is only for webservers. Debian has nowhere near that much of the Linux market overall, though distros derived from it might.
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I don't think most Linux users run a web server, though they have the capability. And yes, many people use more than one distro, using stable distros on servers and up-to-date and easy-to-use distros on the desktop. You won't see many Ubuntu webservers, for example, despite it having a large amount of the Linux userbase.
Memo From Turner (Score:2)
We know the rest.
Admissions my arse (Score:5, Interesting)
Slimy toad. The question should to follow this should have been. "Are you personally aware of any violations of Microsoft patents having been identified as present in Linux code." None of this wishy washy "I haven't admitted to anything" nonsense. Bloody admit to it or state for the record that you aren't sitting on something that you'll "admit" later.
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I would say (Score:2)
You betrayed us. I hope you crash and burn in hell for your SINS.
You're going to pay a heavy price for your transgressions. Better dust off those resumes, you're all about to be out on your asses looking for work once Novell goes tits up..
Traitors..
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Okay, sorry! OW! Stop hitting me!
All jokes aside, Novell hasn't been a choice for me in some time. I grew up on Netware 3.11 and 3.12, all the way up until 5.5. I look back fondly on those days, but Novell hasn't been the same for some time. My recent experiences with it were anything but pleasant, with a lot of strange issues cropping up. A part of me wishes that Novell would get back to their former glory, but I doubt that's going to happen.
haha (Score:2)
I'll Take Shareholder Lawsuit for $300 (Score:2)
I predict there will be no shareholder lawsuit.
Yet another example of how the Executive Class in America have long ago passed the point of accountability for their actions.
What a Total Idiot (Score:5, Interesting)
So you called Microsoft out of desperation because you had no idea how to get Novell out of the cesspit it has found itself in? Why don't you just say that? No one calls the company who is taking business off you hand over fist and is the source of all your woes unless you're effectively conceding defeat. There's no deal you can do with them. They're just going to laugh at you and have you on.
Yet again, we get this virtualisation nonsense which seems to be Novell's answer to everything these days. In what possible way is virtualisation a stumbling block to anything?! Somebody, tell me. We've been able to virtualise Windows quite happily under VMware for years without any trouble - no thanks to Microsoft. Xen won't yet virtualise Windows, but it can, and when the right hardware support is in place it will do without any help from Microsoft.
Again - what on Earth is the problem apart from your own business and your own strategy?!
Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. You wait until Xen works with the hardware it needs to make virtualising Windows possible, or in the meantime, you grab a copy of VMware and install Windows or Linux on it? You could even partner with VMware. Fancy that. *Puts phone down*
That's not the way Microsoft views it.
From Microsoft's perspective, absolutely nothing, because they don't care about interoperability. They must be doing something right, because its worked for them. All the useful Java and .Net interoperability software is already being sold successfully via smaller software companies, and most are doing quite well out of it. It's a pity that Novell isn't a part of this, isn't making any money out of this and can't put Mono to some actual good use.
To do with what exactly? Cluestick: people are already doing it.
So the deal was about interoperability, what there is to actually talk about, and Microsoft wanted to talk to you about patents and IP and you agreed, which serves their own ends? Brilliant. What a bunch of clueless idiots. I'm sure you're now part of another long running office joke in Redmond.
And you thought that gave you the upper hand, and you never once asked why Microsoft were willing to go along with something that they just didn't need to do?
Your explanation (Score:3, Insightful)
Good ol' boy. Just trying to figure out to make a bunch of money. It has nothing to do with customers or Novell surviving.
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You seem to ignore the fact that Microsoft isn't above dirty tricks to break their competitor's products. By getting Microsoft to agree, in writing, to collaborate on interoperability, Novell is protecting themselves.
Just because it is in a VM, doesn't mean it is invulnerable. It makes sense to me that Novell would like to have legal assurance that sabotage isn't just an accident, but "breach of c
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Don't Believe it for a Minute (Score:2, Interesting)
Even if he did have some initial thoughts regarding the matter in that way clearly Microsoft did not, even from the beginning.
Several factors will hurt this deal. It will potentially taint the developers and their contribution back into the linux development cycle. It will give Microsoft some control on the development of Linux.
Microsoft knows they can't compete so they wanted to control the development and then
Making Up For PR Loss (Score:2)
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I think there is overreaction, but I don't think it's to a ridiculous level.
The deal buys Microsoft nothing from a legal perspective. So, all the noise about patents is mostly about perception (which is all that problem is anyway) than reality. Novell screwed up majorly I think because they miscalculated and thought this would make the illusory patent problem better instead of much, much worse. The really irritating thing is that it makes it better for just them, but much, much worse for everybody else.
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This is an interesting Real Politic analysis. And I think it is flawed in one important way. FOSS isn't about what a bunch of companies are doing. It's about what a bunch of developers are doing. This is a misperception many people have, and feeding it only serves to delay understanding.
This deal is good for Novell at the expense of everybody else. But, really, it's bad for Novell for that reason. Novell relies a heck of a lot more on software developed by others than its own software. It needs the
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What do other people lose through this deal? It's legally meaningless as far as patents are concerned, and it probably won't get Novell any more business.
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Actually, I guess I disagree with your statement that it won't get Novell any more business. Though, I think in aggregate they will lose business for PR reasons, I do think there are a few businesses who will choose Novell because they think patents are an important consideration.
IP and indemnity issues (Score:3, Informative)
I don't believe for a second that Microsoft wasn't acutely aware of exactly that! They understand very well that they win deals due to FUD about Linux IP and indemnity issues, and that is exactly why they entered into this agreement.
This deal is serving as a major catalyst to make that very problem worse, not better!
The Question (Score:2)
In other words, he answers the all-important question:
What the hack where they thinking?!
So, what's the big mystery? (Score:2)
"We are almost broke, and wrong or right, Microsoft can sue us until our kids are geriatric."
"Or, we can take a hundred mil or so from Microsoft, and have some black ink on our balance sheet, and I wont be the 20th Novell CEO to get fired."
"But, I run the risk of losing the love, respect and admiration of the Linux Community, be labeled a sell-out, and be forced to eat alone at trade shows."
Novell CEO's wife:
"What would your cut be of that hundred Mil?........Really?..........Well,....loo
J2EE and .Net (Score:2)
``My point of view is that customers are going to have J2EE stacks and
What they _should_ have done was to keep things compatible in the first place. In fact, Microsoft did something along those lines with Visual J#
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Novell did: Mono provides seamless integration of CLR and JVM code. So, on Mono, you can run Microsoft
Foolish (Score:2)
``Obviously, I was disappointed, because the heart and essence of the deal was around the technology collaboration and what we want to get done for the customer.''
Perhaps that's what you (Novell CEO) thought, but if Microsoft finds a way to exploit this and rape you or your customers or the rest of the world in any way, you still made a foolish deal.
I'm glad we're all friends now (Score:2)
*Ron, we smell poniez: http://techp.org/ [techp.org]
I don't get (Score:3, Insightful)
What a weirdly constructed phrase. If I was the customer I would say, wtf are you talking about? Or I might say, get the fuck out of here, I'm not interested in your virtualization marketing-speak.
What I need as a customer is for things to become mre clean, simple, consistent, stable, secure, etc, I don't need yet another layer of shit on top of the layers of poop that are already there.
If I'm a CIO, that's what I'm dealing with: "What are you guys doing to make my life easier to make those things work together?" I saw virtualization as a key to us being able to do that in a different manner than we have in the past.
Why? So instead of two dual core systems I can now buy one quad core? Except the two dual core systems would always run smoother because there's less resource contention?
Is virtualization really what the market demands nowadays??
One has to wonder (Score:5, Interesting)
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Mono has been around for 2 years and yet winforms is still not finished the last time I took a look at it last spring. Winforms has been around since
Now since java is GPLed its time to abandon Mono. Its be
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Until very recently, the legal situation surrounding Java was much worse: Sun owns patents and copyrights up the wazoo on Java. That issue won't be addressed by open sourcing Java. The legal situation surrounding
Now since java is GPLed its time to abandon Mo
Winforms? (Score:2)
One version of Winforms was around in .NET 1.0, there were a lot of changes with 2.0. I think the reason it has taken so long though is because the community actively avoided it since it was ti
Dumping linux (Score:3, Insightful)
We never changed our position. All I cared about was, I lost a deal with a large retailer to Microsoft for the first time about 12 or 18 months ago. It was going to be an all-Linux deal, and I lost it because they were unduly influenced, in my opinion, to be fearful of these [IP and indemnity issues]. From my point of view that was really too bad, because Linux lost. Then I watched it happen three more times.
Perhaps he would have been better off reminding them that Microsoft customers don't get IP idemnity either. IIRC, Microsoft's customers were sued by Timeline for using code which Microsoft improperly integrated into SQL server. Then, the Eolas suit caused Microsoft to issue a patch which removed functionality from Internet Explorer. I am not aware of Microsoft compensating its customers in either case.
I think Ron really failed Novell with this recent Microsoft deal. Actions speak louder than words; no matter what he says, he's sent a clear message to the world that Novell believes Linux infringes on Microsoft IP. Microsoft agreed to the deal because they knew it had a strategic advantage against Linux, not because they wanted to help Novell.
It never was about IP - his lost customers were bluffing. He might have won the deals had he been a better salesman:
Snark is everything! (Score:2)