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AOL in Negotiations to Buy Red Hat?

Posted by michael on Fri Jan 18, 2002 11:07 PM
from the drm-coming-to-rpm dept.
bstadil sent in this rumor. The Washington Post isn't exactly a rumor site, so there's probably truth behind it. Wow. It would make a great deal of sense for AOL/Time-Warner to acquire an operating system for leverage against Microsoft - same reason they bought Netscape.
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  • Isnt this the beauty of the GPL, AOL already has the full source to RedHat.
    • yeah, but they don't have the ability to influence the direction that the company is heading.
    • by gorillasoft (463718) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:14PM (#2866461)
      Isnt this the beauty of the GPL, AOL already has the full source to RedHat.

      They acquire the talent, the distribution, and the brand recognition all in one move. It would save them money in the long run versus hiring knowledgeable people and creating a distro to capture the market share redhat already has.

      It just makes more sense (for a large conglomerate) when moving into a new market to buy an established company than it does to start your own division that knows nothing about the new market and spend time playing catch-up. They can spend those resources instead on going where they want to go from the established base.
    • by danheskett (178529) <danheskettNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday January 18 2002, @11:14PM (#2866463)
      But it doesnt but the programming talent or good name of a company.

      The GPL is a good start - but if you want to control future development the only way to effectively do that is either hire some programming staff or buy the company.

      Buying the company is usually cheaper.
        • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 19 2002, @07:53AM (#2867845)
          I use AOL. I read Slashdot every day, I've used Linux (waiting for my new hard drive before I dual boot - I just don't want to play around with partitions) I know the differences between most of the distros, and to be frank, I know more about Linux than anyone I know in person (sad but true).

          So why do I use AOL? I live in the UK, and AOL is BY FAR the best unlimited access dial-up service available. (Getting broadband is just too pricey right now.)

          What is the major thing stopping me from switching to Linux altogether? It's not Word or Excel, it's not Internet Explorer (LOL) it's the lack of AOL. I have about 7 years worth of saved emails in my AOL Personal Filing Cabinet, which I NOW realise are pretty much lost forever as soon as I switch services (this is unless someone has reverse-engineered the file format, which I haven't seen done well in AOL's case)

          At least I have a good computer. My father, who has a slower computer (ideal for Linux) will not swap, solely because of the lack of AOL. He's no dummy either. He's been using computers since well before the Commodore PET, and programming since then too. He doesn't want to leave mostly because all his friends know his email address.

          I guess this has got a bit long, but the point is PLEASE don't assume that all AOL users are idiots, and/or know nothing about Linux. In the US, you may have free local calls to your ISP. In the UK, unless you're on AOL, don't expect to do that and be able to connect even 1 out of 5 times that you dial up.

          I've posted anonymously, because my message is more important than my identity.
        • by lrichardson (220639) on Saturday January 19 2002, @08:42AM (#2867930) Homepage
          "You have to remember though that the people that run AOL don't have the foggiest idea who Red Hat is."

          Despite how bad it has been, AOL has made massive improvements over the last few years. Still got a way to go, but ...

          Switching to a Linux base would be another step on the road - faster, more stable, and no rebooting after the latest 'service pack' ;)

          If it goes through, I foresee a situation like IE vs Netscape, except, in this scenario, millions of homes get a CD with a 'free' OS. There are a growing number of people out there who only use their machine for the net (surfing, e-mail, IM, etc). And there's a small number of companies that sell machines that run from a single CD. MS is no slacker in the 'marketing dirty tricks' division, but AOL could do serious, long term damage with their 'CD in every household' approach.

          AOL managers may not know the technical side of Red Hat, but I'm pretty sure they understand what it means to the overall game plan. Two quotes come to mind, one about it's not necessary to make a large profit of every item you sell, as long as it means your competitor doesn't sell one; and from Netscape eons ago, to the effect that every time they sold a copy, it ran on Windows, so the two companies remained tied, but whenver a user opted for IE, then Microsoft won, so that Netscape could never win while it ran under Windows.

          The implication is quite clear - if AOL wants to 'win', the best way would be to support an alternative OS.

  • by Cogent (11506) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:10PM (#2866435) Homepage

    It's interesting: AOL has bought almost all of the coolest stuff on the Net: Netscape, ICQ, WinAMP. Don't forget that Gnutella came out of there, too.

    And they've let all of them, so far, mostly be their own companies.

    • by ekrout (139379) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:19PM (#2866492) Journal
      Except Slashdot. Are you trying to say Slashdot isn't cool? Are you? Huh?! Huh?!!!
    • by Cardinal (311) on Saturday January 19 2002, @04:14AM (#2867505)
      A few people have touched on this, but if put together, the strategy becomes clear, and simple.

      AOL needs to fight MS in every way it can. AOL's known this for years, which is why they partnered with Sun & Netscape, and why they're buying strategic projects. Think about the most visible points of contact with MS software.

      * MSN Service, IM
      AOL's got these, always have. But picking up ICQ was a quick way to buy up a bigger userbase. MS is actually the ones fighting back on this front, partnering agressively with broadband providers like Qwest to push MSN-branded net access.

      * IE
      AOL has used IE as long as they've had a browser, but you can be sure it's not because they liked the idea. There just wasn't a viable non-MS browser out there. You can be sure they'll switch to NS6 as soon as they feel it's ready.
      * Media Player
      A biggie. Especially with the changes made in XP. MS wants to push WMP as the RIAA-friendly media, figuring if they can get support from the labels, it won't matter what the users want, because WMP will be the one that has the copy protection the RIAA will support. AOL picked up WinAmp because it was the player with the best chance of pushing back against WMP.

      * IIS
      All three partners in the deal, AOL, Sun, and Netscape, went in with one goal in mind. Fight MS. Did it work? Eh, not really. But they've still got a lot of NS server software available for use at some point, if they can find a good use.

      * Windows
      So, picking up a Linux distro is perfectly logical for them. They're trying as best they can on all the above fronts, so why not pick up an OS and push it as an alternative? Imagine what a company with AOL's media control powers could do with RedHat. Build AOL services right into the desktop, stick it in a set-top (To fight WebTV).
    • by dhogaza (64507) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:42PM (#2868686) Homepage
      And their excellent AOLserver [aolserver.com] is open source, too. They bought NaviServer and shortly thereafter offered binary downloads for free, then switched to a fully open source model two-three years ago.


      AOLserver [aolserver.com]runs big parts of aol.com and digitalcity.com. Say what you may about the quality of AOL's services, but when was the last time you heard of either of those websites going down? Or getting hacked?

          • by luge (4808) <slashdot&tieguy,org> on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:25AM (#2866809) Homepage
            Umm... the Moz Public License allowed them to take it closed whenever they wanted after they bought it. And as much as I love Moz it was completely unusable when AOL bought Netscape. If AOL had cut off funding then, sure, the community would have source, but the community would have nobody who understood the source and no one with time to work on it. AOL has paid for hundreds of people to work on Moz for three years now. So... you'd have no Moz without AOL. Period.
      • by Jay L (74152) <.mf.yaj. .ta. .hsals+yaj.> on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:37AM (#2866858) Homepage
        Very untrue. CompuServe was floundering when AOL bought them, and so instead of letting them go off on their own, their service was merged into the AOL infrastructure (via CS2000) and their developers have been pooled on many projects.

        With Netscape, there's tight integration in some cases, where it makes sense (e-mail for NetCenter), and not others. And again, the development resources are often shared between groups when needed.

        Sometimes the integration can be premature, at best. There were many articles in the press about trouble when AOL brought TW employees onto the AOL e-mail infrastructure, which just wasn't ready to support the type of groupware features TW was used to. I argued against forcing it down their throats, but the merger team had already decided what a Good Thing it was, and there was no fighting it. Long term, though, it'll be a big boon to the AOL back end, forcing some feature development. And I believe there are other such ways they've leveraged support staffs (staves?) and other infrastructure since I left.

        In general, I think AOL's been fairly smart about when to integrate and when not to integrate.

        Jay the ex-mail guy
      • by KodaK (5477) <sakodak@gmail. c o m> on Saturday January 19 2002, @01:49AM (#2867173) Homepage
        They are a $$$ centric buisness.

        What else should they focus on? Skeeball tickets?

        ...see them for what they are.... a money grubbing buisness...

        Again, here you go with the anti-capitalisim. What, exactly, is wrong with making money?

        No offence, and I know you mean well, but you really need to lighten up on the money making thing. Money makes the world go around, and no matter what you want to believe, it's not evil. It's what you do with it that counts.

        AOL is not my favorite corporation, but they're doing well, that means they're doing things right for the majority of people who use their service. Yes, you and I know their service sucks, but THEY ARE MAKING MONEY! There's nothing more grand, more worthwile, and more deserving of our respect than profit. Nothing.

        Look at it this way: money gives you the ability to affect change in the way you desire. Therefore, if you gain a lot of money you can do what you wish. If in the process you are corrupted by the money then you weren't a person of the convictions you started out with. This isn't a bad thing (unless you fund things to further the "bad things" you are convinced of.) It's merely a barometer of what you really are, and most of us are selfish "bastards".

        I'm too drunk now to spout out some sort of disertation , but remember this: you're only as corrupt as you allow yourself to be.
  • A carton of feces (Score:4, Insightful)

    by perdida (251676) <thethreatproject AT yahoo DOT com> on Friday January 18 2002, @11:11PM (#2866438) Homepage Journal
    is about what this here is worth for AOL.

    What happened with Netscape?

    Microsoft edged it out. Netscape lost its competitiveness. In a straight comparison, IE kicks Netscape's ass now. The innovation departed from Netscape.

    The purchase of Linux by AOL will come with a big PR campaign about AOLinux or whatever. There will be a standard, SINGLE image of Linux in the brains of most consumers, and then AOL will take that up against Microsoft, which will easily defeat it in many consumer-level preference comparisons.

    Then, the consumers will forget Linux, not knowing that there are dozens of different flavors out there.

    I recommend keeping all linices entirely without involvement by non Linux corporations, for these cultural reasons.
    • by yerricde (125198) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:22PM (#2866508) Homepage Journal

      In a straight comparison, IE kicks Netscape's ass now.

      Netscape 4's perhaps, but with regard to IE 6 vs. Mozilla 0.9.8 (effectively Netscape 6.3; 0.9.8 is due to be released in a week), I have to hand this round to Mozilla. Mozilla starts faster than IE, supports more CSS, supports XHTML (as opposed to IE just bailing and dumping the XML tree), allows for Opera-style tabbed browsing (which saves Windows user and gdi resources compared to the one window per page paradigm of IE, especially on Win9x/ME where user and gdi heaps are only 64 KB), works on platforms other than IE's Windows, Mac OS, Solaris, and HPUX, and even comes with a rudimentary IRC client (which IE+Outhouse does not).

      What does IE 6 have that Mozilla lacks (other than market share, which can change once the next version of Concept Virus hits)?

      • by Carnage4Life (106069) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:57PM (#2866690) Homepage Journal
        Netscape 4's perhaps, but with regard to IE 6 vs. Mozilla 0.9.8 (effectively Netscape 6.3; 0.9.8 is due to be released in a week), I have to hand this round to Mozilla. Mozilla starts faster than IE, supports more CSS, supports XHTML (as opposed to IE just bailing and dumping the XML tree),

        My webpage is Fully Compliant XHTML 1.0 Transitional [w3.org] and renders better in IE 6.0 than in Mozilla (as text and images not this "dumping the XML tree that you speak of). Mozilla is a great browser but when I see people spreading lies in an effort to spread its usage I feel disgusted.

        Let the browser stand on its own merits instead of spreading FUD to promote it. This sullies the name of Mozilla and all that work on it.
        • by CondeZer0 (158969) on Saturday January 19 2002, @01:20AM (#2867031) Homepage
          Who is spreading FUD here??

          As someone else have already pointed, may be you should try to validate your CSS.

          And "Fully Compliant XHTML 1.0 Transitional", means nothing,
          you aren't supposed to make new pages using Transitional,
          try to make it compliant with XHTML 1.0 Strict...

          Anybody that knows a bit about CSS and HTML will tell you how much better
          support for them Mozilla have.

          Does IE already support CSS1?
          I remember when some one from MS said that they would never support
          100% CSS1, because "no body really want it", that one was funny..
          And how much of CSS2 do they support?

          :after, :before pseudo classes and "content" attribute?
          No

          All the table formating options?
          No

          etc..

          I have a big respect for you, I have read some very interesting comments written by you,
          but I think you should check your facts better before spreading this kind of FUD, you may
          prefer IE, but it's an accepted fact that the standards support in Mozilla is very superior
          to IE. (and I don't mean that Mozilla is perfect, I should know, I helped to run hundreds
          of CSS test in Mozilla a while a go)

          Best regards

          \\Uriel

          P.S.: Please, let me know when IE is ported to
          FreeBSD so I can look at your page, or may be you will fix it first?
    • Then, the consumers will forget Linux, not knowing that there are dozens of different flavors out there.

      Oh, come on! Most consumers today either haven't heard of Linux, or they think that "Linux is a company", and know virtually nothing about it except that it's considered a threat to Microsoft because some article they read said so.

      I don't dispute that AOLinux would probably edge out other Linices in the consumer consciousness, but Linux's current presense in the consumer consciousness is next to nothing, so would AOLinux really do any harm? Even if Microsoft Windows trounced AOLinux, and Linux in general subsequently receded from Average Joe's mind, Linux would be in no worse a position on the desktop than it is today. Besides, while AOLinux's would be unlikely to defeat Windows, it would probably make more progress than today's laughably techy "consumer-oriented distributions".

  • by Ars-Fartsica (166957) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:11PM (#2866439)
    For the same reason AtHome bought Excite - because John Doerr told them to. Yes VCs have that much power. KPCB made huge investments in both Netscape and Excite, and once they saw their stock turning south, they simply employed other members of the KPCB "kieretsu" (sp?) to convert the shares into what was perceived to be more valuable assets.

    KPCB has a long history of leveraging his full constellation of companies to maintain KPCB influence - and this is why he is often referred to as the most powerful man in Silicon Valley.

  • by Saeculorum (547931) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:11PM (#2866442)
    You've got Linux!
  • Good and Bad. (Score:4, Flamebait)

    by thesolo (131008) <slap@fighttheriaa.org> on Friday January 18 2002, @11:12PM (#2866449) Homepage
    This is great and awful news at the same time.

    While AOL could provide a huge shot in the arm to Linux (it wont make a huge jump to the desktop without being able to run AOL, sad but true), what geek wants to run an AOL OS?? Would AOL/TW put their icons everywhere, or try to include DRM in it?? AOL/TW isn't much better than MS after all, they cater to the lowest common denominator.

    Oh well, if they do, I'll just go to another distro, I suppose.
    • Initially I was horrified at the thought of AOL adds all over the place, but then look at what AOL did with winamp - basically nothing. Same development team, I haven't seen any AOL logos or anything of the type (though I haven't used it much), etc.

      AOL did buy Nullsoft right?
    • Re:Good and Bad. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Some Dumbass... (192298) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:33PM (#2866569)
      While AOL could provide a huge shot in the arm to Linux (it wont make a huge jump to the desktop without being able to run AOL, sad but true), what geek wants to run an AOL OS?? Would AOL/TW put their icons everywhere, or try to include DRM in it?? AOL/TW isn't much better than MS after all, they cater to the lowest common denominator.

      There's nothing wrong with a "lowest common denominator" version of Linux. Why should Linux be just for geeks? This will just be another distro, and there can be as many Linux distros as are needed. The geeks will just use a different one (Slackware, Debian, etc.)

      Even the people who are presently using RedHat wouldn't be hurt much by this. I bet that if AOL bought RedHat, some community-supported distro based on the last release of RedHat would emerge (minus any proprietary software, of course) and fans of the "old" RedHat would just shift over to using that.

    • Oh my God (Score:4, Insightful)

      by twilight30 (84644) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:36PM (#2866594) Homepage
      This scares me. Yes, it would be good for the mainstream, if they bought into it.

      However, I think this would be disastrous for the Linux community at large.

      Part of the cachet of using a Red Hat distribution amongst the fringes of 'our little group' comes from its perceived independence -- I know it has plenty of investment from other computing companies, but it's a whole new ball of wax to consider the media giants of today.

      Ultimately, it is this part I dislike the most about the rumour. I understand that Linux going mainstream means a move towards some form of meme shift. What I am worried about is the perception will be when America's biggest Linux firm becomes part of that media machine. Do we really need to have a Linux vendor in the grip of a media company? [thenation.com]

      On the other hand, this could represent AOL's desire to pull an OS X shift in the minds of x86 computer users. It's a flawed idea, not least because they have no 'sophisticated' computing experience to draw from, but an interesting one.

      Unfortunately, the thought of it makes me quite ill.

    • You've got Linux! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Erris (531066) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:21AM (#2866788) Homepage Journal
      I don't see the problems. You will still be able to modify things to suit you. AOL users will get what they want. Red Hat will be assured survival under the world's largest ISP. Microsoft will improve or die.

      There is no way for AOL to destroy the modular design of Linux/GNU software. To do so, they would have to custom modify and maintain far too many packages. Why would they go to such effort and cost? The average AOL user never ever bothers to venture furthers that far, so "digital rights management" and advert cramming will be maintained by default, just like they are on M$ platforms today. AOL useres actually use AOL's client and browser there and they will under Linux. You will still be able to replace bogus packages and use the ones you want.

      What this is going to be, is AOL being able to send out a shiny new CD when M$ breaks their customer's machines. The customer can sit happy knowing that they won't have to buy a new computer and that they can get the things they expect from AOL. My mom is a good example. She has used her computers for three application and only three applications. She has used AOL, Word Perfect, and Quicken. I'm not sure she uses Quicken any more. She uses AOL's instant messenger and email. The rest of her computer means nothing to her, and could be running anything. When ME meets it's two year obsolescence and her flaming nice PIII laptop starts spitting chunks, I hope AOL sends her a nice Red Hat CD. The other stuff, like Netscape, Electric Eyes, Gimp .... might have her actually use her machine some more and definatly enjoy it more. If AOL bought Correl, she would be very happy indeed.

      This could kill Microsoft. It's one thing for my mom to have some friends and her son using Linux, it's another thing when she gets it, it works and does everything she wants it to. AOL has 100 million clients, think of the change in perception the world will have if just 1% revive their dead machines this way instead of buying a new $1,000 computer. AOL users, the scorn of M$ elitist derision having computers that work and cost less. Supposedly the most clueless computer population on earth suddenly having tools and stability M$ loosers pay big money for but never recieve. Surely word of mouth will sweep the world, and M$'s already weakened position with hardware makers will collapse.

      Reasonable hardware standards may yet see light of day. Without M$ to hord up ever changing API's and that magic flag on the box, we may see hardware maintains stable open interfaces. I am trully filled with hope today. This is great news.

  • by sultanoslack (320583) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:18PM (#2866489)
    AOL won't really use Linux, just like they don't really use Mozilla, but it will give them something to hold over Microsoft. "If you don't intergrate us into Windows, we'll stop using it and take a few million users with us." Microsoft isn't stupid enough to let that happen. If there's one thing they're good at it's preserving their monopoly and they'll do what it takes to keep AOL from switching to Linux.
    • What would that be? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Erris (531066) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:41AM (#2866869) Homepage Journal
      f there's one thing they're good at it's preserving their monopoly and they'll do what it takes to keep AOL from switching to Linux.

      What, pray tell, will M$ be able to offer AOL? Microsoft never ever held anything back. It's apparent that MicroSquish is trying to conquer all media on the PC with their goofey and inferior "standards". It's apparent that they are trying to move all PC users to the M$Notwork, with invasive advert cramming, spyware and general sleezyness for all. It's also apparent that they are trying to use their desktop share to force such bizare and awful protocalls as activeX on everyone. What will be left for anyone else in such a world? What can AOL do to help M$ achieve this, and what would they offer AOL for their complience? Will they offer to not break Netscape again? Right, who believes that one? M$ thinks it does not need AOL, and their corperate strategy makes no provisions for any other ISP but themselves.

      How wrong they are. If any sizable portion of AOL users moved to Linux, M$ would be doomed. There are 100 million or so AOL users out there, almost all of them on M$ platforms. Every year, a substantial proportion of them feel forced to "upgrade" their computer due to M$ induced bit rot. What AOL can now do is offer a free OS that works to those people, who are going to throw the old computer away! Why would they not give it a try? Then swoosh, millions of Linux users are born. Did you hear that? It's the sound of M$'s PC share going to hell and all their power with it.

  • Obligatory Errata (Score:3, Informative)

    by corby (56462) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:21PM (#2866499)
    ...Sony Corp.'s PlayStation 2 video-game console. Linux also runs the Sony product.

    The Washington Post may not be a rumor site, but they are not exactly Scientific American, either. Playstation 2 is not run by Linux, of course, although some of their development tools are.
      • Everybody who has posted this obviously didn't read it correctly. It is said soon after the author mentions an AOL product for Sony's PlayStation 2. Thus the sentence "Linux also runs the Sony product" means "Linux also runs AOL's Sony product" which I assume is factually correct seeing as how the product they are referring to is an AOL for the PS2 running Netscape under Linux.

        So it seems AOL may actually have a method to its madness. It seems they are interested in buying up as many technologies as possible to drive their online subscribtion service.

        People, this makes /so much/ business sense. AOL is in the business of getting repeated revenues. Every month they get $23+ from almost every subscriber. They offer a service that many computer users find usefull. Usefull enough that they are willing to part with over $20 a month for it while other ISPs tried to price compete and most are dead.

        When AOL bought Netscape everybody groaned. JWZ left and everybody said good for him, fuck working for AOL. But AOL didn't care. They had no rush to get the new version of Netscape out. They didn't fall into the trap of trying to get as many people as possible to use their free (as in price) software like MS did with IE. No instead what they did is basically sat on it while they continued to make buckets of cash (did I mention revenue at over $20/month for almost every subscriber).

        Now they've got a bunch of subscribers, mostly inexperienced computer users, who mostly use their computer for running AOL and probably MS Works (not Office, just Works, plus maybe plain old Word without the rest of Office). These are the people that are easy to move to a different OS. These are the people who don't care as long as they can get on AOL and they can type up some stuff in a word processor. It's never the OS that people care about, it's always the applications.

        The only thorn in AOLs side is that all of these subscribers must have MS Windows and MS Internet Explorer to do this. But wait.. they bought Netscape a few years ago and do you think that reports of them using Netscape in some internal betas were just leaked mistakenly? Think again.. that was a big fuck-you to Microsoft. The only thing left is to replace Windows with something else. What worked before will work again... so go look for a company to buy. Let's see.. who has an OS with small but somewhat increasing market share and has the technical know-how to make it work right... hmm.. how about Red Hat. The people here saying they should have gone after Mandrake are forgetting that (I hate to say this and start a flamewar) Mandrake blows. Remember that article earlier about moving from RH6.2 to Mandrake 8 saying that the kernel 2.4 that Mandrake uses just wasn't stable for production use. RH is very active with this. RH knows their kernels and employs several developers who know what they are doing. I don't mean to say that Mandrake is a bunch of morons either. But from my experience Red Hat has had a more quality product (if even only slightly).

        Also, to you people who think that AOL is gonna attempt some coup d'etat with MS... think again. Believe me they'll keep their current customers happy. But at the same time they'll hype the hell out of their new improved product that just boots you directly into AOL. Also, don't think they won't test this first. What do you think the whole PlayStation 2 thing is about. That looks to me as if it is blatantly a testbed to see how customers will respond to basically just running AOL on their computers.

        AOL seems to me to be doing business the right way. Get lots of repeat customers and keep those customers happy and continue to get lots of repeat revenue. Also: diversify. Own as much different shit as you can. This will keep your profits stable. The company I am working for now (no it's not AOL) follows the diversification strategy. Any good company does. My dad has drilled this into me. He worked for an electric/gas utility company and always pointed out that the best thing they could do was keep it as both electric and gas because that means pretty much no matter what happens they got the bases covered. They also had a company which installed generators into places of business which wanted to generate their own power and not depend on the utility. Basically in direct competition with themselves but.. hmm, wait.. that means they get the money either way, especially considering they weren't just selling the product, but the expertise with maintaing it (on a recurring basis of course). ;-)

        Just remember, money and self-interest are not all bad. When balanced properly with ethics capitalism makes the world go 'round.

  • Nice ... (Score:3, Funny)

    by antis0c (133550) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:23PM (#2866513)
    Then they can finally rewrite Linux so it can support skins and built in ecommerce links. Then they can remarket it under Linux XP to catch up with Microsofts versioning schemes, and bundled hundreds of little AOL trial links in it. I can hardly wait.
  • by nadaou (535365) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:25PM (#2866523) Homepage
    This may be a prelude to the great battle of the set-top boxes.

    The positioning of the .Net enabled XBoxes; TiVo patent lawsuits; embedded Linux.. yea, this could be big.

    "CNN watchers who haven't registered with Passport were left in the dark today as XboxTV blocked coverage, claiming CNN used incompatible digital rights management protocols. MSNBC was displaying fine though, for anyone who needed to see the latest news."
  • by Publicus (415536) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:25PM (#2866527) Homepage

    I really think that the market is going to be ready for something like this to materialize in a few years. If AOL did buy RH I think you would see a lot of GUI work (that wouldn't be GPL) go on top of the rest of the OS. I wouldn't be surprised if it ends up being an i386 version of Mac OSX (similar, at least). Technically and aesthetically I think OSX beats Windows, imagine if it or something like it ran on cheap PC hardware...

    It would be cool. But I'd still be a Debian man...

  • by chip_s_ahoy (318689) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:28PM (#2866540)
    Alan Cox works for AOL?...Dude! You've got patches!
  • Negative Feedback (Score:5, Interesting)

    by donglekey (124433) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:28PM (#2866542) Homepage
    I can't believe all the negative feedback from this. What is so bad about AOL? They aren't for you and me, it is annoying having to delete them off a new computer for someone, and they sugar coat everything, but who cares? If there is one thing that could dramatically change the history of computing and put power back into YOUR hands, this is it. Quit compaining about the best thing that could realistically happen to computing right now.
  • Be? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by jso888 (114340) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:30PM (#2866553) Homepage
    Kind of makes you wonder if AOL considered purchasing Be instead. It certainly would have been a cheaper buy.

    It also would give them a more user friendly operating system with a familiar, functioning, and coherent/unified WIMP interface (yes, Linux with KDE or Gnome is IMHO still not ready for the average user's desktop).

    And finally, it would give them an OS that is certainly cutting edge multimedia-wise.

    Julian
  • by long_john_stewart_mi (549153) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:30PM (#2866556)
    "... a rival operating system that works exclusively with the media giant's own Internet service provider, its Web browser or proprietary content."
    Now that's what I call a dumb terminal. =)
  • by smoon (16873) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:35PM (#2866578) Homepage
    Given that (for better or worse) RedHat is one of the cornerstone linux distros out there, forming the basis of Mandrake and many others, and Given the 'pay per view' mentality of cable combined with the 'enslave the idiots' mentality of AOL, do we have a potentially explosive mix coming together?

    Just suppose that this transaction went through -- given the millions if not billions that AOLTW could piss away on legal fees, would this pose a serious challenge to the GPL? I don't doubt that the FSF, EFF, RMS, and a whole bunch of people would get ticked off about it, file suit, and generally raise a lot of hell. But when push comes to shove and RedHat becomes AOL 8.5, closed source, $xyz per copy (or per view) -- what are we going to do about it? Heck, they could just stall long enough to buy politicians, not unlike how MS has been behaving lately.

    On the other hand, perhaps it would just cause RedHat to simply stagnate, too busy integrating corporate systems and dealing with lost employees to do much of anything else. Certainly the Netscape buyout hasn't exactly set the world on fire yet.

    And lest I be branded an eternal pessimist, maybe they will instead piss away the budgeted fund earmarked for legal fees related to destroying linux on Free software development and contribution back to the community. To their credit the Mozilla project is still going.
  • by istartedi (132515) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:36PM (#2866588) Journal

    Customer: I can't connect.

    Tech: What's your operating system?

    Customer: AOL.

    Tech: (trying not to laugh) No sir, that's your browser. I need to know what comes up when you turn on your computer.

    Customer: I told you. AOL.

    Tech: Maybe AOL is in your startup folder. What comes up before AOL?

    Customer: It's the first thing that comes up.

    Manager: Can you put the customer on hold?

    Tech: Can you hold please?

    Customer: OK.

    Tech: Sorry this is taking so long. I've got a real idiot. Thinks his OS is AOL.

    Manager: Didn't you get the memo?

    Tech: What memo?

    Tech 2: Hey did you see that guy go postal in cubicle 6?

    Tech 3: No. By the way, there's some kind of memo. Have you read it?

    Tech 2: Nah. I was gonna wait until break...

    • Re:Tech Support (Score:5, Interesting)

      by mini me (132455) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:08AM (#2866742)
      Maybe that's why AOL wants to useLinux, for tech support reasons.

      Customer: I'm having trouble doing X...

      Tech: Just a minute:
      ssh client.aol.com
      ~# `fix problem X`
      ~# exit

      Tech: That should do it. Thank you for using AOL.
  • Stallman?! (Score:5, Funny)

    by rice_burners_suck (243660) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:01AM (#2866715)

    Richard Stallman will go on a shooting rampage when he hears about this:

    It's not GNU/Linux anymore! It's AOL /Linux!

  • by A_Non_Moose (413034) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:29AM (#2866828) Homepage Journal
    1) Red hat AOL user (aka RHAOL...pronounced RAH-OOL) fires up the AOL security check and hears "you got owned".

    2) Just when you think it can't get any worse, they place ads on TV with Scooby Doo as the spokes 'toon saying "Red Rat Ray-roh-rel rits rumber run!'

    3) The Red hat on the Redhat symbol gets down to the "chin level" to hide its shame.

    4) A vulnerability in sendmail allows a script kiddie to parse all the email from AOL thru the "borkinator" script (inserts Swedish Chef comments into text)...oddly enough, no one notices for 2 years even when calling tech support and "this is (insert name of tech) how may I BORK! BORK! BORK! Help you".

    5) World-wide several BSD and Slackware users are hospitalized for asphixiation from laughing so hard they could not breath for several minutes.

    Just a few thoughts.
  • by Sleepy (4551) on Saturday January 19 2002, @12:32AM (#2866840) Homepage
    Why do people talk out their asses in regard to AOL's handling of subsidaries?

    1) AOL was "embarrassed" when Nullsoft produced Gnutella, and forced them to stop. http://www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/2752.html

    2) Nullsoft was interviewed somewhere (sorry no URL), and they complained that they WANTED to compete against Napster, and add download plugins to winamp, but AOL forbade it.

    Sorry, that sounds like stifling innovation. AOL wants to be Microsoft, but office politics and infighting will just slow these companies down. Microsoft on the other hand has a clear cut mission... to become a world power.

    I don't believe these rumors one bit. It's a lame rumor, and Red Hat is not in trouble (unlike Netscape).

    It would make MUCH more sense for AOL to purchase Linux-Mandrake, or the Corel 2.0 assets (which I never used, but Corel 1.0 was seriously ahead of its time). Red Hat is a server OS, and their desktop marketshare is just a side-effect of their server success. Most Red Hat users have never TRIED another distro, and so could not tell you how RH is better or worse than another distro (they're not all the same!).
  • by Compact Dick (518888) on Saturday January 19 2002, @06:36AM (#2867728) Homepage
    This could turn out to be a good thing for Linux. Why? AOL can infuse their vast resources of capital into the one thing Linux sorely lacks, namely a decent set of true-type fonts.

    X11R6's default font set is so atrocious it's no surprise it repels PC users weaned on Windows' splendid set of TT fonts. Fund the development of a LGPL'd set of core fonts [similar to Microsoft's Core Web Fonts [microsoft.com]] and you have cleared one of the biggest obstacles in the way of Linux's widespread adoption.

    I'm sure the zealots wouldn't mind this too much either :-)
  • GPL to the rescue (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ogerman (136333) on Saturday January 19 2002, @03:01PM (#2869263)
    If anyone has been looking for a good example of why the GPL's anti-proprietary protections make it superior to the BSD license, here's a great one. (from a community perspective at least..) Imagine if Linux and associated GNU software used the BSD license instead. AOL could buy RedHat and then release a proprietary kernel, libc, etc. with DRM integrated throughout, backdoors as desired, phone-home capability to reap marketing data, forced advertisements, and other horrible evils. With GPL, the worst they can do is include a proprietary version of Mozilla and perhaps a DRM kernel module, which both can be easily removed. So if AOL ships out GPL'ed software, you can be rest assured that it is the real thing or at least come with full source to document any potentially undesirable changes. With BSD, we'd be screwed.

    Saying that the GPL is less free than BSD is like saying the US is less free without slavery.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 18 2002, @11:15PM (#2866473)
      .. a Linux distro with an AOL client strapped on

      For some reason, that sounds . . . arousing.

      ~~~

    • by KC Swan (254596) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:21PM (#2866500)
      Think about it...to many people AOL IS the internet. How many of those people would by an AOL PC? Give them a machine that runs AOL, a basic word processor and spreadsheet, and what more do they need? To the great unwashed masses, it would be the ultimate information appliance.

      Remember the days when people didn't want "PC Compatible", they wanted "Lotus 1-2-3 Compatible" and "Microsoft Flight Simulator Compatible". The problem with the various attempts at internet appliances has been that the target audience knows what they want, and what they want is AOL.
      • by danheskett (178529) <danheskettNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday January 18 2002, @11:31PM (#2866558)
        Thats exactly it, really. I was being utterly serious when I suggested it.

        Think about. Take AOL, with Mozilla for the web, mail, and a shared family calendar. Throw in the instant messenger aspect of it. Throw in Winamp and a nifty CD player. Throw in all the proprietary features and content. Throw in a little special version of Abiword. Throw in a special version Gnumeric.

        Bammo, Batman. An AOL-based subscription funded OS that provides 95% of the day-to-day functionality that most people (AOL people, actually) tend to use.

        That'd be a good thing. And the end of the MS monopoly for both geeks (who can already run Linux) and for non-geeks (who could just use AOL-OS).
    • by Enahs (1606) on Friday January 18 2002, @11:21PM (#2866502) Journal
      "I got me Linux 7.2!"

      I guess you're new to the world of Linux, so I'll be charitable. Red Hat merely produces a distribution centred around the Linux kernel, GNU tools, and a raftload of other software.

      Linus Torvalds, father of the kernel and current head honcho of kernel development, works for Transmeta, not Red Hat.

      How does that work, you ask? Simple. The only person who "owns" anything related to Linux is Linus, who holds the trademark for Linux. If Red Hat (or, in the future, AOL) were to get too asinine with the use of the Red Hat name, as they have done recently, it's conceivable that Linus could simply tell them they haven't the right to call their product "Red Hat Linux" anymore.

      The world of Linux is far more complex than the world of Microsoft, for many reasons.

    • AOL/TW has no idea what to do with an enterprise computing asset like RH. Look at what they did to iPlanet (now officially kaput).

      On top of that, its not clear that RH needs to be bought. What are they missing? They seem to have decent capital available to them, and they are slowly cleaning up in the linux distro market. I would think IBM would be a better partner for them.

    • If AOL wants a Linux distro why don't they just make their own?
      Probably because Redhat has a huge talent base. If you're going to enter a new market, wouldn't you want some talent, like Alan Cox, working for you? Yes, there are scores of distros out there, but only a few with people high up in the Linux chain of power. Besides, Redhat is The Name in Linux; they'd be able to better negotiate with third parties if they had Redhat in their posession.
      After all, AOL has been all about limiting the broader potential of the Internet and charging more money for less real net access and in exchange offering lots of useless cluttery crap. It's a ridiculous premise, but they pulled it off so far. Why would they suddenly get cozy with a distro that makes their core business irrelevant?

      I'd say that it's more giving the average person what they want. Face it, having a different program for every internet function is great for techies, but it's too complicated for the average person. Besides, I'd say having an OS they can control in its entirety is a plus for AOL - they can control exactly where it's going, and how to program for it, instead of having to twostep with the other 800 pound gorilla [microsoft.com].

      Also, for the average person, the internet is moving away from being a computer thing, and more towards being part of the home entertainment system, integrated into the TV and/or cable box. AOL is no dummy, they know that Microsoft is going to go in that market with both guns blazing trying to push a Windows/MSN service on these boxes, and shove AOL right out of the market. Trust me, AOL's going to need an OS if they're going to stay alive in the changing market.

      I don't know though, like most /.ers, I never understood how in the world AOL ever became so widespread and probably never will.

      Just like Microsoft, they weren't the best solution, they just happened to be in the right place at the right time. Yeah. they're not the best, but they're good enough for most people. Remember the 85% rule here. As long as it's good enough for 85% of a market, you're pretty much set. The other 15% is marginalized enough that it would be a waste of resources to attempt to take it over. AOL's ust not concerned about the technically inclined segment of the market.