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WSWS : News & Analysis : The Internet & Computerization
LinuxWorld Conference highlights corporate interest in alternative computer
operating system
By Mike Ingram
18 August 2000
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This years' LinuxWorld Conference and Expo in San Jos�, California took place
as US software giant Microsoft faces a court-ordered break-up and only days
after the European Union served notice of a number of antitrust actions against
it in Europe.

Not surprisingly, the conference drew the attention of technology writers keen
to gauge the extent to which Microsoft's woes have benefited the Linux
operating system. It would be more correct to reverse the question and ask to
what extent are Microsoft's troubles bound up with increased interest within
the computer sector in Linux and other open-source technologies?

Central to the anti-trust action against Microsoft is a fear by the US
government that the company's unrivalled control of the software market has led
to a stifling of technical innovation that leaves the US unprepared for the
next major advances in computer technology.

Even prior to the Microsoft case there was an increased commercial interest in
Linux and the open source technology on which it is based. Unlike Microsoft
Windows and other proprietary operating systems, Linux is the product of the
collaborative efforts of thousands of volunteer programmers around the world.
Not only the finished product, but also the source code is made available on
the Internet for anyone to download and modify. The only requirement is that
any new applications derived from the source code be made available for free.

The advantages of this type of system go far beyond that of cost. Because the
source code is readily available, the Linux operating system can be easily
modified to work on new devices that are emerging, such as Internet-ready
mobile phones, hand-held computers and set-top boxes for Internet access via a
television. One of the main contentions of the US Justice Department is that
Microsoft, in the interest of defending the dominant place of the desktop or
personal computer, has sabotaged such new technologies.

It was widely understood that the proposed break-up would generate increased
corporate interest in Linux. This has been borne out in a number of significant
announcements at or around the LinuxWorld Conference.

Computer manufacturer International Business Machines (IBM) announced August 15
that it has strengthened its alliance with Linux distributor Red Hat. This will
provide funding for programmers from both companies to integrate Red Hat's
version of Linux with several IBM applications, including DB2 database
software, Lotus Domino group projects applications, Tivoli management software,
WebSphere e-business software and a collection of small-business software for
Linux.

The same day, Dell Computer chief executive Michael Dell delivered the keynote
speech to the LinuxWorld Conference. He declared, �The open-source
collaborative development model is built to succeed in the Internet age, it
makes much more sense than the proprietary model.�

Dell announced that the company would be examining the viability of Linux as a
desktop operating system, in addition to the servers it already ships pre-
installed with Linux. Dell is currently in talks with Eazel, a company made up
of former Macintosh programmers working to make Linux easier to use and keep up-
to-date.

Earlier, Hewlett Packard (HP) announced that it had elevated Linux to the
position of a �strategic operating system� alongside HP's own version of Unix,
HP-UX and Microsoft Windows. HP general manager Jim Bell, who recently created
the Open Source and Linux Operation (OSLO), said HP-UX will go on high-end
servers (such as those running critical database and e-business applications)
that require top reliability and performance, and Linux will be used for
building Internet infrastructure such as Web servers.

An indication of the problems confronting Microsoft can be seen in the
projected release of the new IA-64 chip from Intel. Soon to be renamed the
Itanium; it is the first new generation chip to be introduced since the Pentium
in 1994. It promises greatly increased speeds and a massive leap in memory over
even the most advanced Pentium chips. In the past, Microsoft would have been
the only company to get advanced plans of the new chip. This time around, Intel
has been sharing its blueprints with most of the main Linux developers and has
even taken an equity stake in some of them.

An additional advantage for Linux is that the first use of the chip will be in
computers designated as servers, which is where Linux works best. According to
Netcraft, which surveys over 18 million active servers on the Web, Linux runs
30 percent of all web servers, while Windows 2000 and NT run 28.3 percent. The
Linux operating system has already been tweaked to work well with other types
of chips such as Sun's Sparc and Compaq's Alpha, whereas Windows was never
designed to run on those chips.

It is not only in the server market, but also in its traditional base of home
user and business desktop computers that Microsoft faces an increasing threat.
In the past, Linux was hindered in the desktop market by its awkward
installation, a lack of software applications for these target users and no
easy-to-use configuration programmes.

A central announcement at LinuxWorld was the establishment of the Gnome
Foundation, which seeks to address this. Gnome is one of the graphical
interfaces available as a front-end for Linux. Its main rival is KDE, which
ships with Suse Linux, one of the leading distributions in Europe. Made up of
an alliance of several major players, including Sun Microsystems, VA Linux
Systems, Collab.Net, Compaq Computer and IBM, the foundation looks set to
establish Gnome as a standard. Sun Microsystems has contributed 50 programmers
towards the foundation and says it will adopt a future version of Gnome as the
user interface for its own proprietary operating system Solaris.

Gnome Foundation board members will also include companies involved in the
development of Gnome, such as Red Hat, Gnumatic, Nenzai, Eazel and Helix Code.
The Free Software Foundation, a pioneer of open-source software, and the Object
Management Group, an organisation devoted to developing standards for programs
to work together, will also be included.

Some within the open-source movement fear that the commercial interest in Linux
could lead to the software being hijacked and the emergence of new proprietary
systems. Such concerns are legitimate. In their quest for greater profit, the
likes of IBM, Dell and Compaq are embracing open-source technology. With new
appliances such as mobile phones and wireless devices emerging at a fantastic
pace, manufacturers are demanding software that can be modified and extended,
i.e., that they have access to the source code.

As any one of these companies gains a leading position, however, such demands
for �openness� and �standards� will be cast aside. In their place will come
lawsuits to establish ownership of the new technologies. This would not be the
first time an open architecture has been hijacked for commercial gain. Early
Unix programmers, who had gained their skills through the highly informal
cooperation that was prevalent in the industry in the 1970s, saw much of their
work taken from them when AT&T began laying claim to intellectual property
rights relating to Unix.

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