A recent article on rediff.com [main page and elevated font] says this about
the Redmond giants new line of thought

Microsoft may share source code in India Microsoft Corp, which plans to
invest $400 million in India, is considering sharing the closely guarded
source code of its Windows platform with its Indian clients, a company
official said on Monday.

The world's largest software company, facing challenges from the free,
"open-source" Linux platform, may distribute the technology in India under
its "Shared Source" programme.
Microsoft began the Shared Source Initiative last year in an effort to
counter the image that it zealously guards its products.
The programme is running in more than 30 countries where the source code has
been shared with software developers, governments and specific academic
institutions.
"In line with this approach, Microsoft is constantly assessing key markets
where this initiative would be best suited," Sanjiv Mathur, group marketing
manager at Microsoft's Indian unit said in a statement.
"In India, too, we are currently evaluating the prospect of introducing this
initiative," he said.
While the Shared Source plan has not yet arrived in India, part of the
Windows CE code that runs in handheld devices is available to Indian
developers, Mathur said.
Microsoft's statement on its Shared Source follows a four-day visit to India
in November by Chairman Bill Gates who announced a three-year investment
plan in the country.
India's Economic Times daily reported last Friday that Microsoft planned to
share its code with a government agency.
Analysts view India's booming software industry, fast becoming one of the
biggest in the world, as a key territory in the tussle between the Windows
and the Linux operating systems.
Officials expect the number of local developers to grow to 1.3 million in
four years from 400,000 now, which would make India home to more software
programmers than any other country.
Unlike Microsoft, Linux's creators allow their system to be freely copied,
used and modified. An increasing number of technology giants, such as
International Business Machines, have switched to Linux.
India's cost-conscious market has seen growing corporate use of Linux while
a debate is also raging on what platform state governments should use in
their march towards e-governance.


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