Putting Novell's SuSE Purchase In Perspective 331
An anonymous reader writes "
The editors over at NewsForge.com have combined their efforts to put today's big news about Novell's purchase of SUSE in perspective: what the news means in business terms and to the Linux community, today and in the future. A good read that includes quotes from industry insiders, IRC inhabitants, and NewsForge.com readers."
Another reader writes "This is a good analysis piece about how Linux has become Novell's lifeline, especially since NetWare's been dying...and post-Ximian."
Why would Novell ever want to buy SuSE? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why would Novell ever want to buy SuSE? (Score:3)
Where's my tinfoil hat when I need it... *looks around*
The real motivation (Score:3, Interesting)
(from article) "Yes, it was admitted there might be some marketing opportunities caused by Red Hat's recent "end of life" declaration for some of its products."
My guess is that this has more to do with the decision to buy than they are admitting to.
Re:The real motivation (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The real motivation (Score:2)
Re:The real motivation (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The real motivation (Score:5, Insightful)
The RedHat thing might've played into the timing of the announcement, but I'm sure they would've done it either way.
months ago (Score:5, Informative)
Novell could be half a year behind and still have time for "months of negotiations". And it's a big company, so it's not suprising for something like this to take that long.
Re:The real motivation (Score:5, Interesting)
While the average user may not have known about RH's dropping of mainstream Linux (the "hobbyist" version in RH Marketing slides), those closer to the major players have known for many months that this was coming.
SuSE, not being dummies, must have spotted the tremendous opportunity that this would give them in the North American Linux market.
All SuSE has to do is to keep a mainstream version alive to keep the market fed for their higher-end versions - as RH *had* been doing, and they have the ability to clean RH's clock for them.
In case you haven't guessed, I consider RH's move to drop their mainstream versions to be a crucial blunder. But, it's their company......
Re:The real motivation (Score:2)
I think RH is shooting itself in the foot by dropping the most popular Linux distro and associated brand, support and backing. Isn't this what made them popular and put them in a leadership position in the first place? They are assuming that enterprise will simply fork over more and more money but they may not enjoy the same rooted admin and developer support as they di
Is anybody else worried... (Score:5, Interesting)
If Novell's got problems keeping up in terms of IT relevence as it is with its own core product, it could be really nasty if some of that starts to rub off on Suse and Ximian.
I don't mean to troll. I just liked it better when all these things were separated. I'd rather unification through proper standards (eg: LSB compliance) than through pocketbooks.
Re:Is anybody else worried... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is anybody else worried... (Score:4, Interesting)
Corel died because Microsoft wanted them to.
Corel had a great plan but, ultimately, management was bought out [wired.com] by Billy.
People don't seem to be picking up on this. The same thing happened with Apple and OSX [indiana.edu] right after Steve Jobs dumped every last share in the company (aside from the single "symbolic" share that he did keep).
Microsoft owns each and every one of us. If they didn't, we'd have seen them split up [ft.com] a long time ago...
sigh...
Re:Is anybody else worried... (Score:2, Insightful)
Suse and Ximian have great code, experience etc, and are moving from a profitable open source company to another company that may or may not understand open source
If there is a major infestation of PHBs in Novell's future, it will not hurt the distro.
They just pack up the source code and move on, creating
Re:Is anybody else worried... (Score:4, Insightful)
LSB is very likely to continue as SuSE was one of the first adopters of it, but LSB will not bring in more sales staff or profit. I may try calling Novell or emailing them about the LSB as I am sure Novell could push this more strongly.
IBM gave $50m, to me this is just a nod of approval to the deal.
Really no comparison to this and Corel.
StarTux
It's a good move all around (Score:3, Interesting)
Novell now has some solid pieces in place:
The best decision that Novell could make (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember when people thought of networking they thought of Novell. I took a Win2k class not to long ago and the only people that knew about Netware was myself, one more person, and the instructor. Hopefully that will change with e-directory on the back end and Linux on the desktop. Although any company isn't 100% idealistic, Novell is far more open standard minded than Microsoft will ever be.
Disclaimer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Disclaimer? (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks
Thoughts (Score:5, Interesting)
- If Novell intends to still support KDE on SuSE, they should say so quickly.
- Novell should DEFINITELY keep the desktop distro free. This will be key in infiltration and getting techies involved and informed.
- Novell should rebrand everything "LinuxWare" in following their NetWare line.
- NDS on Linux should be a huge priority. A successful, non-piecemeal central authentication system for Linux would be fantastic (yes, I know about PAM + LDAP, etc)
- A Novell client for Linux (even for 5.x and 6.x) should get official support TODAY.
- They should learn from the past, and invest in the desktop. That's where they'll sell this to potential customers, as and end to end solution.
More Thoughts (Score:4, Interesting)
And not only should they keep the desktop distro free, they should create a Live Distro on CD and print up a few hundred million of them and make sure that everybody and their cat has a copy, a la AOL.
Re:More Thoughts (Score:2)
I have been using SuSE for the past couple of years but I didn't like some of the things I have read about the interface to their tools in SuSE 9. I have even started to look at Fedora, but there is the stupid Blue Curve which has influenced SuSE 9. It maybe time to go fully free and use Debian Sid on my main PC, or Gentoo.
Re:More Thoughts (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:More Thoughts (Score:2)
Re:More Thoughts (Score:2)
I'm mainly talking about people who think the word Windows equals computer. People who won't have a clue what to expect when they boot from that CD, and will go WOW! when they see what comes up on the screen.
People who, despite their very best efforts, will never be able to screw up the environment the Live CD gives them, unless of course they break the CD.
Re:More Thoughts (Score:2)
Re:More Thoughts (Score:2)
No that'll piss people off. Have a place to order them free on the bnet and stock retailers such as compusa with them.
Re:More Thoughts (Score:4, Insightful)
The reason people get pissed off by AOL is because a) AOL is crap, and b) they've already received at least a dozen AOL CD's (and they figured out AOL was crap back at CD #1.)
Most people don't even understand what Linux is. I helped one person with her computer and she kept calling the thing Windows, as in "I checked to see if the keyboard was connected to Windows and it was." The apartment where I live makes available to its tenants a computer station and the manager gets pissed off at all the work he has to do to keep the thing working... he asks me what he can do about it and I tell him to make people boot from a Live CD running Linux and he looks at me as if I were speaking Swahili.
Boot his computer from a CD -- without changing a thing on his existing installation -- and he understands immediately. Explain how a million people can use that CD and he'll never have to worry about thirteen-year-olds planting viruses or sweet-little-old-ladies who decide to save each and every single picture from Sears' website to the desktop and he gets it, immediately.
Just put the word "Games" on the CD, and you'll have half of America running Linux tomorrow.
Re:More Thoughts (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think you'll have to worry about that. Remember, IBM helped subsidize part of the SuSE/Novell deal. You can be pretty sure they didn't put up $50 million just out of the kindness of their heart. I'd expect SuSE will be available all across IBM's product line.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Thoughts (Score:3, Interesting)
On Windows perhaps, but I remember using their stuff on Mac and it was actually pretty sweet.
This is like a decade ago or so though.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Thoughts (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Thoughts (Score:5, Informative)
We will also integrate Ximian Desktop into their offering, because it is a more fine-tuned desktop than the default Gnome one, and leverages all the enterprise features we added to it.
NDS is part of the Linux Software Services stack that was announced for Linux earlier in the year. So do not worry about that.
Miguel.
Re:Thoughts (Score:4, Interesting)
Will the SuSE default desktop be changed?
Re:Thoughts (Score:5, Informative)
-- Vojtech Pavlik, SUSE Labs
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
KDE is of course, second fiddle.
Re:Thoughts (Score:4, Interesting)
With a click, 1000 computers get the patch and automatically apply it.
OT: The Marx Brothers (Score:2)
Chico, Zeppo, Harpo, Groucho and Gummo.
Gummo and Groucho performed on stage together but Gummo became the manager of the other four when their careers took them to Broadway and the movies.
http://www.marx-brothers.org/
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
But Suse was never really Free. At least Free in the sense of what got linux to where it was today. Only available by FTP and not redistributable does not count as Free in any opensource book that I've read. If Suse does start providing a truly free desktop then I will be impressed, but until then there will always be a mark against them in my book.
I also don't see Novell open
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
On the other hand, they didn't force you to use YaST so it was possible to pay SuSE for a ree distribution, thus making it not ree.
I always found SuSE intriguing - it certainly looked extremely promising for a rpm-based OS - but never had the time to wrestle with all those weird ree/ree issues. -- Of course, I gave in eventually so that my nVidia card would run properly...:-/
Re:Thoughts (Score:5, Informative)
I think you've been misreading your books. The GPL (under which most of SuSE is licensed and which is pretty hot on ensuring distribution) certainly doesn't specify what protocol stuff should be available through - ftp only is fine. They do ask you not to redistribute the CDs or ISOs, but that's okay - they're within their rights to limit redistribution of YaST, which is on the CD, and all the Free stuff is available via ftp and redistributable. There are plenty of SuSE rpms being redistributed on rpmfind, etc. and there is nothing SuSE can do to prevent you redistributing rpms of Free software even if packaged to fit a SuSE distribution.
There's nothing to prevent SuSE making money from Free software and (with the exception of YaST which you can replace with yum or apt) that's what they do.
Re:Thoughts (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's a little evidence, all postdating the acquisition by Novell:
- My notes on our new desktop development center in Bangalore [nat.org]
- An article [indiatimes.com] from the Times of India about our new developers there
- The freshly-published (today!) Mono Roadmap [go-mono.com] showing where we're going with the development platform
- The first entry in our new Evolution blog [ximian.com], describing the plans for Evolution 2.0, to be released early next year [ximian.com]
- The announcement [gnome.org] and wiki [ximian.com] for the Brooklyn GNOME developer's summit we are sponsoring this month
- The announcement [novell.com] that our Exchange connector now supports Exchange 2003
And this is really just the beginning. As you can imagine, most of the super exciting stuff we are doing is behind the scenes.
From time to time since we were acquired three months ago I've heard people say things like "Novell bought Ximian just for XYZ," where XYZ has been either: Mono, our Exchange 2000 connector, GNOME, Evolution, Red Carpet, "the name,"
I think it should be clear that this is ridiculous.
Yes, we will still support KDE on SuSE. However, we hope to use this opportunity to provide Linux developers and ISVs with a single stable platform for desktop application development.
Yes, we will keep the desktop distro free. We will even make things more free than they have been.
We're only just getting started. Stay tuned.
For the record... (Score:2)
There has been speculation all over the internet that Novell bought Ximian for "X." I was just addressing that. Ximian has a host of goods that ought not be lost.
Most of us are happy. Believe it or not, there are still plenty of us who feel that Novell ha[d|s] the best NOS out there, and enriching their arsenal with the awesome U
what Nat forgot :) (Score:5, Interesting)
- for the first time ever, we've been able to open up our Ximian Desktop development process. You can get basically every patch we write on desktop built and applied to GNOME 2.4/2.5 via the xd-unstable channel.
- if you poke through gnome CVS, we've got skeletal code for a groupwise connector there. Again, something the old novell would never have done- release not only free code, but basically defacto API docs by way of code as well.
- up until the suse purchase this morning, we actually had a link to gnome.org on the front page of novell.com. Look around for a link to gnome.org on sun's site- it's not on the front page, and it's not in the Java Desktop main page, either.
So, like I said... it's even better than Nat says it is.
Re:what Nat forgot :) (Score:2)
And where is KDE in that picture?
Re:Developers! Developers! Developers! (Score:3, Insightful)
Netware is a great & stable network operating system but difficult for developers compared to Windows. So Novell can hook into the Open Source community and get access to the largest base of developers
With Novell's global support & partners they can provide a very nice alternative.
A eDirectory enabled distributed network of Netware X servers (SUSE) with Desktop X workstations (Ximian) all kept up to date with ZenWorks X
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Translation of market-speak:
Bye, bye KDE... Ximian is going to decimate SUSE now.
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Yeah you are.. and where are you taking us Nat?
So according to your post, you are saying:
1. offshore, cheap labor is a goodthing(tm). Yeah i know helping 3rd world countries with Open Source rocks da house, I wanna do it myself. But...
2. you also say that mimicing the MS development paradigm is the way to linux salvation. Tell me, why do i want ot hear that
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Can we assume this translates to, "KDE will be de-emphisized and eventually phased out"?
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
I live in Chennai, India (just a few hours from Bangalore). I'm finishing school [iitm.ac.in] in about 6 months, and I'd kill to get this job! I've been developing gtkboard [sourceforge.net] for a while, so I think I'm not a n00b and I can qualify. So, are you still hiring? If yes could you tell me whom I can contact to put myself through the selection process?
Thanks
Arvind
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
I was one of those who use to bug you about supporting SuSE on Ximian Desktop (you know I have forgotten the orginal name of Ximian lol, but the original desktop offering took awhile to launchon SuSE).
Funny how things turned out, from supporting RedHat primarily...:).
StarTux
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
The problem is that, although the name sounds great in German (like John Philip [dws.org]), it's pronounced very differently from place to place and person to person, sowing even greater confusion than "Linux" (let alone "GNU/Linux").
Sad as it may be, English is the default language for tech stuff, and most people around the world will figure out that LinuxWare is like SoftWare,
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Well, they haven't made any such announcements, but there is this positive note in their press release [prnewswire.com]:
"Novell is firmly committed to open standards and maintaining the existing open source kernel development efforts. From advocacy and development resources to events and support of open source efforts like kernel projects, XFree86, ReiserFS, KDE, GNOME and Mono, Novell stands side-by-side with the open source community."
They
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Re:Thoughts (Score:2)
Yeah! Anyone wants to take a bet that Novell might buy Trolltech?
Several Novell products run on Linux now (Score:3, Insightful)
Technically (well, OK, from a marketing perspective more than anything), the only platforms NDS ever ran on were NetWare, Windows, and Solaris.
eDirectory is the current directory product; Linux support was added around the release of eDirectory 8.5 if memory serves.
There's also (at least) DirXML, NetMail, and soon the NetWare Services for Linux (currently in open beta).
And then there's the whole training thing - the Certified Linux Engineer program has been in the works for some time (heck, it was ann
Re:Several Novell products run on Linux now (Score:5, Informative)
I'll preface my comments by saying that I do work for Novell as a member of the Training Services organization; specifically, I develop and present public courses on eDirectory and the underlying technology. Prior to training on the technology, I worked in the trenches with both NDS and eDirectory, starting with the initial release of the technology in 1993.
NDS was based on a database engine that was specific to NetWare (called "Record Manager", or RECMAN). The RECMAN engine had difficulty scaling to millions of objects per partition, something needed for identity management for external-facing directories. Additionally, RECMAN was tied to the Transaction Tracking System in NetWare, making it very difficult to port to other platforms.
The database engine used in eDirectory is much, much more scalable and portable; improvements were added to the replication engine as well to ensure large replica rings could converge in a reasonable time without running into communications scalability issues. Also, in the most recent releases (8.7 and 8.7.1) of eDirectory, the handling of referential integrity in the database has been modified to be more scalable, much in the same way as the replication engine was enhanced in NDS8 and eDirectory 8.5.
From an end-user perspective, there's not a lot of difference between NDS and eDirectory - they both represent X.500 directories; rights are applied almost exactly the same in the two (the "Inheritable" capabilities in eDirectory were actually introduced in NDS8, the last "true" release under the "NDS" branding, though it used the more scalable FLAIM database engine).
But from a back-end architecture, the differences between NDS and eDirectory are as dramatic as the differences between the NetWare 2.x/3.x bindery and NDS.
Confused (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Confused (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Confused (Score:2)
It's like, whenever I drive through a big city, anywhere in the world, I always see a big Novell building and think to myself "how do they manage that" when their company has been pretty much off the radar for the last few years...
Really, I'm not trolling. Maybe I'm just ignorant!
Re:Confused (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Confused (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Confused (Score:2)
Re:Confused (Score:2)
Re:Confused (Score:4, Informative)
There is still a lot of Novell out there.... (Score:5, Interesting)
There are still a lot of Novell users out there, especially among certain groups (education, government, healthcare, law offices). I recently attended a CNA class, and all of the attendees fell into one of those catagories.
Novell actually has some pretty cool products out there, such as iFolder (syncs data between computers and a server), NetStorage (lets you access network drives from any computer with a web browser), and iPrint (lets users install their own printers via a web browser). They might not have a lot of new users, but they have a lot of old users who have no plans on changing - and they are coming out with some products that are actually pretty good.
Plus it's nice that our GroupWise email system resists most of those fun Outlook-based viruses.
Re:There is still a lot of Novell out there.... (Score:2)
Especially education. The university I go to uses Netware for authentication on all their Windows machines, and has for years. Given that they're constantly purchasing new boxes, and this sort of thing is common for universities, that's quite a nice chunk of cash right there.
Re:Confused (Score:3, Interesting)
No sense speculating. Just do the research. From teh 2002 filing:
" We managed to maintain large network site-license revenue at $681 million, approximately flat to fiscal 2001"
"Novell's revenue, including the addition of revenue from recent acquisitions, was up eight percent to $1.13 billion, and cash flow f
Re:Confused (Score:4, Interesting)
A small medical office I did an installation for had the Netware 3.12 box stay up, for around 1260 days. (Nearly *four* years without a single reboot.) It went down the time before that, only because of a four+ hour power outage that the UPS couldn't outlive. It has been up for like 500 days prior to that. So, total unrebooted uptime, was more than five years. Not a single unplanned outage caused by software failure, and no planned outages/crashes either.
Heck, in 1992-1993 I'd have killed for a Windows box that could file serve for that long without constant prodding and TLC - along with at least weekly reboots.
Novell's eDirectory is much more mature, IMHO than AD, and their ability to produce a product that simply works well is light years ahead.
Finally, Novell, perhaps to their harm always was the kind of company that left lots of space for others to develop products along side them. They made a core product, and let others fill in and provide apps around them. This kind of community is crucial IMHO, and the Novell culture, at least in the past, was good at allowing it.
I think this may be a great match.
Cheers,
Greg
Re:Confused (Score:2)
and no planned outages/patches either
Re:Confused (Score:2)
Netware is dying? (Score:2, Funny)
What happened to BSD?
Strange Crossroads (Score:2, Informative)
Novell
The company that is responsible for much of Microsofts power. None too many can remember the early nineties when Microsoft Office was not the lock-in it is today. In those days, WordPerfect was THE wordprocessor.
Along comes Novell, replaces the marketing staff, and flushes that leadership down the toilet.
This is the same company that flushed their unquestionable dominance in the server market, too.
Too be honest, I am more concerned with Novell being an anchor to drag SuSE to the bottom with th
Re:Strange Crossroads (Score:3, Informative)
Novell needs to position SuSE Linux primarily as a server OS and continue to marke
Re:Strange Crossroads (Score:2)
Re:Strange Crossroads (Score:2, Insightful)
Novell made several mistakes with WordPrefect, but it was already almost dead before Novell bought them.
This was during the switch from MS-DOS apps to Windows apps. Wordperfect, like several other publishers, came out late with Windows apps that were bloated and wern't that good (Lotus 123 and dBase are more examples of really bad transitions to Windows).
Novell
Re:Strange Crossroads (Score:3, Insightful)
Everyone was convinced by Microsoft that OS/2 was going to be the next big thing.
Then MS stabbed IBM in the heart, dumped OS/2 development, poured it on Windows, and got Windows 3.0 out the door, just as memory and VGA based stations were getting out there in mass.
So, WordPerfect and everyone else had apps ready to go on OS/2, and Microsoft had apps ready to run on Windows. Still, Word sucked, and Excel wasn't much better.
So, next move in the monopoly game...bundle.
MS bundled Offic
Re:Strange Crossroads (Score:2)
Then MS stabbed IBM in the heart, dumped OS/2 development, poured it on Windows, and got Windows 3.0 out the door
Strange, revisionist history. The MS/IBM "divorce" happened after 3.0 had already shipped. MS didn't stab IBM; they abandoned OS/2 development, and IBM kept OS/2 for themselves.
I worked at Microsoft while this was going on. When I was hired, in 1990, Microsoft thought OS/2 was the next big thing. Windows was
Re:Strange Crossroads (Score:2)
Novell probobly has learned. Companies tend to be smart when they're at the bottom trying to move up. They only get stupid when they're successful. (yes, i'm generalizing)
drake is fine. They'd be in the black if it wasn't from some stupid deals the made in the ninties by the old CEO. Once they're free of that bull they'll be making money.
Novell not out of trouble yet (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Novell not out of trouble yet (Score:2)
Why should they? Considering Novell owns Unix, and only sold SCO the right to license it to other players, they are the only company totally immune from SCO's lawsuits.
SuSE users would breathe a huge sigh of relief. Other distro's users too, indirectly, but IANAL.
Novell - move over and let IBM drive (Score:2, Insightful)
Novell is regarded by Corporate IT as a pretty confused (although formerly mighty) company. But definitely regarded as one who let their flagship server platform kind of
Re:Novell - move over and let IBM drive (Score:5, Insightful)
Novell servers have a rep for rock solid stability. They have been bricked into walls and run for years. I can't think of any working server that compares with netware for uptime, and when it comes to security take a look at the NSA ratings where novell stands.
What Novell is known for is reliability. Their directory services work a hell of alot better than Microsofts. This counts for alot in most corporate environments.
Simply put Novell linux has alot more corporate credibility than any other name except maybe (IBM or Microsoft) linux. This is a tremendous push forward for Linux in general. Especially when you consider they want the desktop and redhat just doesn't seem to care anymore.
Re:Novell - move over and let IBM drive (Score:2)
That was my thought too. SuSE owns the zSeries s/390 space these days. I've never seen anything other than SuSE 7 or 8 installed on the dozen systems I've got to work with. Granted a small sampling, but you would figure someone Stateside would give RH a whirl on the big iron.
Anoth
Mmmmm, Novelinux flavor tastes good (Score:2, Interesting)
I wonder if this is just the beginning of corporate owned and backed linux distros. Perhaps all major companies will soon want to have their own official linux distro. Novel Gets SuSE, Microsoft Gets SCO(um), Apple has to be all Apple-ish and get a Unix distro, and to top it all off, THE linux company, Redhat, shoots self in foot, outsources healing of foot to opensource community...
Strange and interesting days for the OS
Certification == Money (Score:2, Interesting)
<p>
I know I considered getting Novell certified a few years ago, even tho I knew netware was dying, I sorta figured it was the best option available which would build on my Linux skills. Now Novell has an investmment in building Linux certification, I think this will be a major money pull for the company. It also benefit's the community as finally
My prediction for the next 5 years (Score:2)
-Now-
IBM invests $50mil in Novel.
Novel (Ximian Gnome) buys SUSE (KDE).
-2 years from now-
Novel unifies Gnome and KDE into one monster windows-eating desktop machine.
Meanwhile Redhat and Novel(SUSE) continue to make gains in the server market.
-5 years from now-
IBM buys Redhat and Novell.
Unifies them both into the ultimate Linux Distribution.
MS finally releases Longhorn but is blown out of the water by IBM's Redhat/SUSE linux distro.
IBM fin
Pass the crack, please. (Score:2)
I hate to say it, but unless Novell does amazing things quickly, Longhorn will be a big winner.
But Blackcomb [wikipedia.org] is another story.
where's my /usr/bin/SALVAGE.EXE? (Score:3, Interesting)
If you had a lot of spare disk space, you could still SALVAGE files weeks or months later.
All I want for Xmas is for the Novell filesystem guys to sit down with Linus or Reiser or somebody and shoehorn this into Linux.
The Bigger Picture (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a natural counter movement to the deeply flawed and virus-infested Microsoft monoculture. Free association, not forced assimilation, is what cooperative and self-reliant people desire. And in the en
I haven't worked with Netware for a few years... (Score:5, Insightful)
If they have preserved their technical culture through the last eight or ten years, then Novell is likely to be a very, very good fit with Linux. Netware was always clumsy and arcane to administer, at least at first; the learning curve was steep. (sound familiar?) But once you understood it, you could see WHY they had done it the way they did, and their solutions were often brilliant. In exchange for up-front learning curve, you got power under the hood. (sound familiar?)
Windows was all sexy and nice-looking, and it was a lot easier to administer up front, but it didn't have anywhere NEAR the depth of thought behind it. As of NT 4.0, Microsoft's first real competition to Netware, things like print services were a joke. You could share a printer, sure, but what if you wanted to share a pool of printers? What if you wanted an automatic fallback to a backup printer that wasn't ordinarily in the pool? What if you wanted to share the same printer across several print queues? Even several print POOLS? With Novell, any of these things were easily possible, though they did take some time to get set up. (arcane, remember?) Things like this were just flat not possible on NT 4. I'm not sure they're doable even NOW, to be honest. And Microsoft introduced Active Directory, to great fanfare, with Windows 2000; Novell had Novell Directory Services something like FIVE YEARS BEFORE. It seemed to me that NDS was, as usual, better thought out and more powerful, but when I was looking at AD, my NDS experience was several years out of date, so that could be mistaken. (I never got much past beginner-level with either directory service, FWIW.)
At any rate, the buzz in the NT 4.0 timeframe was all about "application services". This was shorthand for "you can write and run your own server software", which was very difficult to do on Netware. Netware was an EXTREMELY closed architecture. If they have retained that mindset, that's going to be the biggest likely sticking point. Windows was more open and cheaper, so it prospered, just as Linux is completely open and cheaper still. Novell may have a hard time with this issue.
At any rate, Netware servers were nearly uncrashable. It could happen: I had one customer who could crash his server just by running a particular application. But by and large, you could literally install Netware on a PC, put it in the closet, and forget about it for five years. Or longer. It would just run and run and run and always work and never break. I'm DEAD SERIOUS when I say "five years uptime"; Novell reliability made even Linux look kind of amateurish. You could pretty much expect that once you turned off the monitor and left the room, that the server would continue to run until the hardware broke. It was that good.
Assuming they've preserved their technical culture , Novell probably knows more about reliability than any other living x86 software company. And they had this directory services stuff figured out six or eight years ago. They've had a lot of time to think about that problem. I've also heard good things about ZenWorks, though I haven't touched it myself.
This could be very good indeed. I'm seriously thinking about downloading SuSE now; I know it's not going to change over the short term, but if the marriage comes off (and, mind you, MOST tech company takeovers fail), LinuxWorks could become the de facto standard within a few years.
Re:I haven't worked with Netware for a few years.. (Score:2, Insightful)
The thing that let Novell down was the quality of third party software running as part of Netware "NLM" Netware loadable modules.
Interbase 4.0 (or was it 3.0) could reliably ABEND (terminate with extreme prejudice for all you youngsters) just by sending "prepare" twice on the same query using Delphi 1. Took me 4 tries before I realised that was the cause... We did get
Messman calculates, he does not innovate (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The real perspective..... (Score:2)
It claims to be a "...community-supported open source project...a proving ground for new technology that may eventually make its way into Red Hat products."
Seems that the support has changed, but Red Hat was always just one support source among many, anyway.
I'm surprised they don't market Cygwin more. Granted, they want you to buy GNU Pro, but a Cygwin for Dummies style book would likely be a way to spread the word.
Re:The real perspective..... (Score:3, Interesting)
Fedora is not just a change of name, it comes with no company-backed guarantees whatsoever (just community support), it's just a showcase and a beta distribution to get the enterprise packages tested in the community. Before the free RH had a small, but sufficient guarantee of support. Fedora doesn't even have the name.
For tech-savvy individuals it does not matter too much although they might fear the constant upgrade treadmill and the potential unstability, but th
Re:The real perspective..... (Score:2)
Now that's a provacative statement, and leads to the question of whether the demise of RH will lead to a general yawning at .rpm from the community.
Back on topic, SuSE has YaST, right? No experience with that beast (for development purposes, `./configure && make && make install` seems to fit the bill, anyway... ),
but one wonders if deeper pockets like Novell might actually develo
Re:The real perspective..... (Score:2)
Why do we need more than one community project to produce a general-purpose distro? It's a waste of our limited resources at this stage of the game. As you already mentioned, Debian is a more solid distribution. It also has by far the largest and most mature community and a high degree of professionalism. If the Fedora people (and others) joined forces, we could more quickly smooth out the couple rough edges of Debian and make it THE distribution o