Novell & SUSE In Link Up? 209
dmorelli writes "Since it seems to be a SuSE news day, here's something from Friday this past. Novell tried and failed to buy SuSE, according to the
Linux Business week story."
Adding features does not necessarily increase functionality -- it just makes the manuals thicker.
Novell + ximian (Score:3)
Re:Novell + ximian (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Novell + ximian + Suze (Score:2)
Re:Novell + ximian + Suze (Score:2)
How _would_ former SuSE employees take the new GNOME focus? Probably pretty well, but you never know.
-Erwos
Re:Novell + ximian + Suze (Score:2)
As any Compaq (former) employee will unhappily attest to.
Re:Novell + ximian + Suze (Score:2)
Considering that SuSE is the single largest employer of KDE developers (with Trolltech itself coming in second, IIRC), I doubt it would go over "pretty well".
Some of KDE's top developers [osnews.com] are at SuSE and consider SuSE to have a KDE friendly and oriented corporate culture.
--
Evan
Re:Novell + ximian (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Novell + ximian (Score:3, Funny)
Novell + SUSE (Score:2)
NUSE?
Nahhh...
Re:Novell + SUSE (Score:3, Funny)
NoVA.
Yoda? (Score:2, Funny)
Yoda, you speak like!
That would have been interesting. (Score:3, Interesting)
If they owned SUSE, what most likely would they do with it?
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a good question, any company owning Suse and ximian would be interesting, and not knowing the track record of the suits involved, possibly a bit scary.
It is a bit interesting that they have chosen to focus on what seems a desktop flavor, considering they went after and purchased ximian. If they wanted a vanilla server distro, I'd think they could get that for less elsewhere.
Perhaps they're not interested in the technology, but the name. Suse has a very good reputation I think in both camps (client/
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
Hmm, maybe Novell was trying to internationalize its market and approach. SuSE is far more popular in Europe than in the US. And Europe is seemingly more open to open source software. It would have been a good way to build an alternate market to MS in Europe, and use the profits to build share in the US.
I wonder if this means Novell will approach Mandrake next. Given Mandrake's financial problems, they might welcome a buyout. Plus they're popula
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:3, Insightful)
Today all their services run on Netware OS which is kind of old (but good enough for the time being) and it is the services which make any money at all. By netware 7 they plan to move to Linux entirely. To do this they have two choices, run it on a stock OS and be dependant on the distro or roll t
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
God I hope not. I know what you meant, but I'd hate to see them become that important to the Linux kernel. If they start GPLing their software fine, but until then they'll just be someone who makes technically good proprietary addons for Linux.
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
The same thing they did with everything else they ever owned. Use it to keep Microsoft from becoming an all powerful force in the software industry and continue to assert the fact that Novell is the "other OS". Oh wait, I am sorry I forgot Novell is all but irrelevant. In terms of Microsofts thoughts on Novell, an X-Men quote comes to mind:
Why don't you people ever die?
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
Novell likely wanted to position Evolution, Connector, and Openexchange Server [suse.com] as an end-to-end replacement for Microsoft Exchange.
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
Fuck it up that's what. This company used to own unix remember that? They could not see the value in owning unix so they sold it!. They are a bunch of clueless idiots.
I remember seeing a novell product roadmap that Ray Noorda put out just after buying wordperfect. It showed how they were going to turn the office product into a NLM and run it from the server. Then they were going to merge novell and unix together to get a top notch server OS.
Wha
Re:That would have been interesting. (Score:2)
Novell 7 SuSe In Link Up? (Score:4, Funny)
Novell 7 SuSe In Link Up?
Looks like they succeeded in outlawing the shift key after all.Sounds like a good band name, really (Score:1, Funny)
Their first album would be named "Novell 7 SuSe In Link Up"
Apply shift key to produce ampersand. (Score:3, Funny)
Conflict of interest? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't think it's a "conflict of interest" though.
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:2)
Yeah, I believe the buyer's name was "Fido" or "Rex" or something. Someone who woudn't object too much to selling the stock right back after the term in office.
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:3, Interesting)
Still, it would be interesting to see what Novell would do with their own Linux Distro. Novell Servers, Novell Desktops tied up with ZENWorks - it would be very interesting.
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm certainly not for State ownership, but it seems to me that in the US the companies are owning the state (and the only thing that changes when Democrats and Republicans replace each other is the dominant industry).
And That's Why There's Only One Latrine... (Score:2)
(please tell me that on /. at least one person knows what the heck I'm talking about.)
Re:And That's Why There's Only One Latrine... (Score:2)
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you feel that government should represent the interests of the people, and you feel that SuSe is a good thing for the people of Germany, then this situation makes perfect sense. It's only a conflict if the interests of SuSe don't align with the interests of German citizens (which I'm sure is a case that MS would want to make).
You could, however, say that it's anti free-market. I would reply "so what?", since I think the government needs to intervene in the market from time to time to correct problems.
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:2)
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:2)
Re:Conflict of interest? (Score:2)
Les cons qui croient qu'ils sont intelligents par-ce qu'ils saient des mots en francais ne sont que des cochons sanglantes qui mangent de la merde.
No vell, no thanks (Score:2, Troll)
Novell essentially brought us the current incarnation of SCO, haven't they done enough to "help" the Linux/OS community?
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2)
They tried to fix it, you know.
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2, Insightful)
hell, when SCO exposed themselves as shiftless vultures they and Novell didn't even seem to KNOW what sort of contracts they had signed. And we still don't know for sure who owns what. Novell also got real quiet after the 2nd or 3rd volley from SCO.
If Novell is so qualified/desirable to be a Unix vendor, how does one explain Unixware?
I love SuSE Linux, I don't want it to get *any* Novell directly on it. Note to SuSE....resist!!
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2)
Nope. Caldera is SCO. The whole fucking situation is entirely a making of Ray Noorda himself.
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:5, Informative)
They had a good idea with NDS which had no competitor in NT4. Marketing (and application support) won the market for Microsoft. With W2k microsoft came up with ADS which is as good as NDS (though it does not play well with other OSes as netware does). Novell now is trying to move from an OS company to supporting services company. NDS already runs on windows and Linux. You can download it from their website ( Note: Getting it to run on any of the newer Linuxes is a total pain).Novells plan is to move netware to a set of services that run on Linux. So they have an interest in Linux, and so are helping Linux.
Linux currently does not have anything like NDS/ADS that can support a very large and distributed network. So Novell is a good thing to happen to Linux.
Also check out their site Novell forge [slashdot.org] where they have a lot of stuff they released under GPL like their UDDI server IIRC. So they stand by GPL and put their money where their mouth is
They also tried to stop SCO by releasing what they thought were some damning counter-evidence on the day of SCOs annual investor meet day. If they had their way SCO would be buried by now.
But what you mentioned is correct, novell has a way of dropping the ball.First against NT4, then against SCO.
Anyway if you are a Linux guy, try using Novell a Netware server (free demo CDs available everywhere).They are damn stable, but their GUI sucks, reminds me of Linux of two years ago.
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2)
The earlier one became a relative link by mistake
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2)
sPh
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2, Informative)
You are clueless. Value-level (as opposed to replication of full objects only, like ADS does), transitive, event-driven (unlike ADS, which does a scan for changed objects at intervals, the default being 10 (TEN!) minutes) synchronisation; the ability to scale to hundreds of thousands of objects in a single partition; working backup/restore technology - all make NDS eDirectory far su
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2)
I could go in to a huge list of issues with NDS. We were one of the first large scale companies to go with it, and I have spent many a night with Novell on the phone, and restoring. The biggest pain I had with Novell was the fact that when you deleted a server with a read/write replica, I would need to sac
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2, Insightful)
Try deleting an Active Directory domain controller and see if that doesn't throw a wrench into your domain. Same deal...
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:No vell, no thanks (Score:2)
Novell: "what has changed?" (Score:2, Interesting)
- The Executive Commitee for Novell looks entirely different than it did when it put MS as enemy #1.
- More than half of management underneath the executive committe has changed since then.
In other words 'These people' who where 'scarily clueless' are gone. I guess these 'suits' went to SCO for employment.
Troll? FUCK YOU (Score:2)
now you are too
too bad... (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh well, they'll just release their own distro of Linux now (called Netware 7).
They're stuck in the old game. (Score:2)
Why not just put a couple developers on your payroll and have them work on stuff that's important to you and release it for all the distributions?
I think they're still stuck in the old game of trying to control (and reap profits from) the various components.
How many programmers could you hire for how long with the money you'd spend on buying a whole company? Why not do that instead?
Re:They're stuck in the old game. (Score:3, Insightful)
Novell isn't only trying to build technology, they need to re-build their brand. SuSE is a very popular distro with lots of foreign/EU supporters and users. If Novell could get these markets to take them seriously - or even better: like them - they would gain substantial market clout. Novell is also quickly falling behind in relevance to today's tech market.
That's why I think they're stuck. (Score:2)
They'd be trying to support their Novell brand by associating it with SuSe.
But that doesn't work now. A company in decline cannot turn itself around by buying a company on the rise. All it will do is waste money and bring both companies down.
Rather than doing that, Novell needs to understand what the GPL means and start getting Novell licensed code out there. Novell should form a partnership with SuSe and Red Hat and pay for the developme
Re:They're stuck in the old game. (Score:2, Informative)
Something to think about (Score:2)
Here's my point of view as someone more interested in Free Software for everyone then just having Linux take over the enterprise. I will admit that I will always cheer when Linux gets some big Enterprise scale win since less Windows in the world mean less headaches, but commercial success isn't any utopia IMO.
So knowing that I guess you could say that in reality I don't give a fart if Novell has some
Re:too bad... (Score:5, Informative)
But Netware does not run on MS-DOS . And saying so makes you look a bit ill-informed.
sPh
Re:too bad... (Score:2)
So tell us what exactly were you meaning by DOS if not MS-DOS? My SGI server boots from DOS, my Sun server boots from DOS, my Windows workstation boots from DOS, my Linux Laptop boots from DOS, and yes NetWare boots off of DOS too. Ill-informed indeed.
Microsoft 2 (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Microsoft 2 (Score:2, Insightful)
Thing is that from IBM's point of view they're just trying to become something vaguely like IBM again.
From Red Hat's, Novell's and some other's point of view though I rather suspect they're trying to become the new Sun since Sun seems to have lost its way.
And then th
Re:Microsoft 2 (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft 2 (Score:2)
You must be in a marketing department or something. IBM produces servers PCs etc... some of their stuff ships with Red Hat. Do you honestly think that Red Hat (a software company) is outcompeting IBM (a hardware company)? If so, I'll tell you my apples are better oranges than yours.
Re:Microsoft 2 (Score:2, Informative)
Cisco has it's own dristro to. I know this for a fact because a couple of months ago I enterviewed for a job building a Dristro for Cisco under a IBM contract.
Sadly they hired some one else
Re:Microsoft 2 (Score:2)
Maybe you should have interviewed for the job instead?
Just pulling your leg, I am not to good at that spalling thing either.
German Goverment (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:German Goverment (Score:2, Informative)
Re:German Goverment (Score:2)
Deal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why didn't they accept?
Valuation isn't easy (Score:5, Informative)
Because valuing a company is as much art as it is science. Especially for companies like SuSE whose assets are largely intangible. They don't have much in the way of hard assets like manufacturing equipment or buildings. They have no proprietary code to speak of. Their only real assets are their brand name, whatever cash they have and the people they have working for them.
So how do you value that? It's tough. Companies are considered to be worth the present value of all their future cash flows. But how fast is SuSE going to grow? What sort of margins will they pull down? What does the competitive landscape look like? Will they grow steadily or will they grow fast and then slow down? I don't know about you, but my crystal ball isn't that good.
It's not a trivial problem to value a company. You can't answer it just by checking their market capitalization. That's just the market's current concensus on the value of the equity in the company. But debt holder, preferred stock holders and the government (taxes) all have claims to the cash flows of the company that come before the common stockholders. And the market doesn't even get the equity part right all the time. Witness the recent tech bubble bursting.
So in short, there probably was a difference of opinion on the valuation. If I think my business is worth $150 million and you think it's worth $100 million, who is right? Hard to say. It's also possible that they didn't sell just because the key shareholders didn't like the buyer. Happens all the time. Maybe the terms of the deal weren't good. If I'm the buyer and Novell is offering me stock, I'm going to think about it real hard. Novell's stock isn't exactly blue-chip. What happens if I sell and Novell tanks? Could be SuSE management wanted cash and Novell wasn't offering.
In short there are lot of reasons why it fell through. Some reasons are very sensible, some aren't. Why they turned them down? I have no idea, but I can think of a lot of possible reasons.
Re:Deal? (Score:2)
It's not all about money, some people do underpaid work because they enjoy it, and owning/running a business is no different...
If I had built up a company like SuSE I would be very reluctant to sell it.
Re:Deal? (Score:2)
So what if it's not in the shareholders interest to sell to the highest bidder? Shareholders often have agendas on their own.
SuSE is not floated on the stock market afaik and the investors listed on their website are mainly technology companies, who i imagine have their stakes for reasons other than merely money...
So anyway, shareholder interst is not always the same as getting the biggest valuation out of a company. Besi
Re:Deal? (Score:2)
Market price is not an absolute constant, you know.
Novell's next choice - Mandrake! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Novell's next choice - Mandrake! (Score:5, Insightful)
No kidding. MS has a half-hearted desktop and a shitty server that's nothing more than the desktop with multi-user perms - but they DO integrate better than any other desktop/server combination.
If Novell bought Mandrake, they'd have an awesome desktop to ship, and integrate, with their Netware 7 Linux product.
Re:Novell's next choice - Mandrake! (Score:2)
You know, Ximian's main product used to be a darn good GNOME desktop...
Re:Novell's next choice - Mandrake! (Score:2)
I've never really understood the desktop thing. It's a place to put icons for programs ;)
IMHO, the Novell/Ximian deal brings a Linux version of Zenworks into the fold - and a good desktop team (whether or not they work on the Gnome desktop is not a big deal to me).
Re:Novell's next choice - Mandrake! (Score:2)
Better choice: Hire Klaus Knopper. (Score:2)
Give him 1 million $/year. It'd be a bargain compared to $120M. Hire a few more Linux gurus with proven track records in networking. Might be interesting.
That would be cheap... (Score:5, Informative)
Also, $120M sounds a very cheap for a company of this size. Red Hat, not quite twice the size by employees, is valued at over 2$ billion.
Re:That would be cheap... (Score:2)
You'd _think_ they weren't losing money hand over foot what with the German government ordering from them now. But then again, for all the awesome publicity and service contracts RedHat has, they've been losing goodly amounts of money up until very recently.
In other words, trying to predict whether SuSE is worth some amount is a tricky bus
Re:That would be cheap... (Score:2)
Would it be in any of their interests to have SuSE as a subsiduary of an American company, and in many areas a competitor. I would say not, Novell have no track record in delivering on companies they take over and are a US company. Rightly or wrongly, SuSE are wi
Re:That would be cheap... (Score:2)
I for one, do NOT want any U.S. Company taking over SuSE (or any non-U.S. controlled distro).
Why?
Because *that* company (Novell for example), could easily be taken over by Microsoft.
Microsoft would love to buy out and crush the Linux distros.
Re:That would be cheap... (Score:2)
I think they could easily do that anyway. RH, Suse, Mandrake and a few smaller ones together are probably cheaper than one of Microsoft's infamous advertizing blitzes.
IMO, they know they could kill al Linux vendors, but they can't kill Linux. Linux companies are ultimately a function of market demand - if you destroy all of them, new ones will crop up and repla
Re:That would be cheap... (Score:2)
what is starting to make me nervous is SuSe tries to be Europe's linux. Linux is suppose to bring us together not divide us. What happens when flamewars stop being, "SuSe sucks" and starts to become "germany sucks" or a political problem instead of a technical one. If we can't trust an Open source company (RH) just because they're the leader, will we _EVER_ win anything? we'l
long term? (Score:2)
Change is bad... (Score:2, Interesting)
Pronounciation? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Pronounciation? (Score:2)
I wonder where they got the name anyway. Does it stand for something? (other than a kickass linux distro of course)
Re:Pronounciation? (Score:2)
Are you happy now ? [acronymfinder.com]
Re:SOO zuh (Score:2)
Close, more like "Zoo Ze", with "Ze" as in "Zen". Of course, various regional accents in Germany might sounds more like "Zuh", but not in Hochdeutsch or standard German.
Re:Pronounciation? (Score:2)
It was very nearly "No-vell".
I always call it "soos" though.
Re:Pronounciation? (Score:2)
Re:Pronounciation? (Score:2)
--
Evan
Netware & GNU/Linux: yes, please (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, we have a rolling hardware upgrade program here and too many viable PCs just end up in the skip. The 300MHz PIIs w/64Mb RAM are next for the chop, but they'd be totally acceptable general office-use machines if they ran GNU/Linux. Tending to the luxurious, in fact. My home PC, for example, is a 133MHz Cyrix w/64Mb and I can't be arsed to upgrade, the point being that the economy of Slackware 9 (or whatever the distro of the minute) let's me get away with not being arsed.
You can see the appeal of it, really. Free at last etc.
Re:Netware & GNU/Linux: yes, please (Score:2)
Re:Welcome! (Score:1)
Re:Wow, I didn't know ... (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe the author of the original article was thinking about the eMillennium fund - partly owned by Deutsche Bank, which is not by any means a government entity. It only sounds so (the government bank is called the Deutsche Bundesbank, and it does not do investments).
Re:Wow, I didn't know ... (Score:2)
Maybe this is an erroneous reference to SuSE's corporate governance, which probably follows German laws. If so, then 50% - 1 of their board (Aufsichtsrat) members are elected by employees, and this structure might be seen as unusual by a company like Novell, which never (AFAIK) owned publicly listed companies here.
Another explanation would be that some German authority owns a part of the "old" company and not the holding (the web sit
Re:It could be worse. (Score:2)
Not at all what you think. First, MS would scream in triumph "We own Linux we bought it."
Then Sco would come back with "Oh no you didn't. We own, we have this old program we bought a long time ago from Novell. We own Linux."
Linus would say "It's a community thing, bugger off or I'll sick Big Blue on you."
Finally, IBM would have it's feelings hurt when Billie G tells them "None of this would have happened if you would have b