What if Red Hat bought SCO? 165
Thexder wrote to us with a curious piece on what RH should do with all it's new found wealth: buy SCO. It's a crazy idea, and gives me a headache when I try to analyze it, but the author does have some interesting points.
disclaimer:Hemos owns shares in Red Hat
Other good ideas for buying SCO (Score:2)
1. An existing customer base. Seriously, most people who have fought^Wused SCO Unix have an existing investment in Intel-based hardware. Being able to tell them that for a minimal cost they have an upgrade path to a UNIX-like OS that is cleaner than SCO & with more of a future will not only keep these customers, but will immediately increase the Linux marketshare.
BTW, I have used SCO Unix. It sucks. (You have to recompiled the kernel & reboot to change the IP address? Give me a break. Even NT has a better answer.)
2. SCO owns the copyright on UNIX, last I heard. (They bought it from Novell who bought it from AT&T.) Need I say more?
Geoff
Where should we go shopping?? (Score:4)
I really do agree with Zedlewski's point that buying out another open source outfit would not accomplish anything worthwile.
So the question becomes one of where does Linux and open source get the most bang for the buck? Does SCO own anything that is really worthwhile? Who does??
One idea that tickles my fancy is buying out Imprise/Borland. They are one of the last great independent software tool vendors out there and having delphi under gpl would be just plain cool. They also have some interesting database technology.
So what do people think? What other outfits should Red Hat look at??
SCO stock (Score:1)
Also, the owners who have more than 5% stake are:
I don't have time to read their by-laws, but if someone tenures an offer and the majority of stockholders vote to accept, it usually doesn't matter what one investor thinks or wants.
_damnit_
Re:SCO is cool! (Score:1)
No, buy 4Front (Open Sound System) instead (Score:1)
Another useful technology Red Hat could set free would be the mtv MPEG player (www.mpegtv.com). I don't know if there are intellectual property issues that would prevent that being turned into free software, but it breaks my heart to see such a good bit of software trapped in shareware limbo.
Re:Wrong! (Score:1)
Re:What good would it do? (Score:1)
Oh God, this really got me ROTFL (Score:1)
all the other merger-crazied accounting
dagger and cloaking hi-tech companies does.
Indeed, many people have come to recognize
the importance of bringing UNIX a friendly
face--this was the overwelming theme that
brings logic to the IPO of RedHat... whenever
you create software you create value--especially
OSS software. RedHat was definitely IPOed to
answer to the need of customers, employees,
and investors. However you prioritize it RedHat
is not another proprietary software company
with a closed source model. The RedHat brand
is powerful and people will continue to true
and purchase all sorts of services associated
with RedHat innovated OSS software. We won't
need to imitate proprietary companies hoarding
and killing close-source software (Think SUN's Wabi and maybe StarOffice too if Sun keeps all the source to themselves)--even if
they are a serious form of money-making method.
I realize that a lot of linux users don't buy
into the GNU and OSS philophy of software innovation. It's sorta like being an immigrant
to America. You enjoy the green card. But that's
it. But I invite you to do more than that.
What if pigs had wings? (Score:5)
Using thier money to "Aquire" more property is not the way of Red Hat. That is just plain stupid, and, only ONE of the suggestions in the article.
I call you attention to item number 5, intitled "Tools." Ahhhh... People use applications, not OS's... Hmmm...
Red Hat has money, now, if they want to keep the support of the Open Source Community they need to:
Why? (Score:1)
SCO are lusers. They were once the leading x86 *nix, and they squandered that lead. SCO's glory days are long over.
The idea that RHAT should buy APLX makes a lot more sense. Does anyone know if the official RHAT distribution includes Applixware on the applications CD? And even if it does, bundling Applixware into the mainline distribution should generate some very interesting press.
--
Re:SCO is evil! - Not completely true (Score:1)
Re:osOpinion - I agree (Score:1)
Slashdot, unfortunately isn't a whole lot better as far as submitted content goes.
Re:Questionable (Score:1)
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:1)
Examine my email address to see why i make sure to point this out.
SCO is the COBOL of UNIXes (Score:1)
would run on PCs back in the late 80s, I
contacted SCO and asked them to send me some
literature. About a month later, some stuff
landed at my door step which had little to do
with what I wanted to know. Accompanying the
stuff was a SCO packing list which was printed
on what looked like ditto master paper (for those
of you too young to remember what ditto masters
were, think bottom most copy of your Fed Ex
label, the one where you have to press the pen
down real hard to get anything to come out).
The packing list output itself was of COBOL
vintage.
I'm a quick learner so have been ininterested
in SCO since then.
:-)
Re:SCO? (Score:1)
Re:You are VERY full of shit (Score:1)
One other thing.... (Score:1)
Yes, that will get attention. RHAT buys SCO, gets a hold of Open Group, qualifies Linux for all distros, and gets $$ off the other UNIX vendors.
What about Monterey? (Score:1)
But if Red Hat did buy SCO and acquire Monterey, they couldn't make it free, because the copyright is shared with IBM. They'd have to persuade IBM to release it as free software, or else start selling non-free stuff, or else ditch Monterey altogether.
Questionable (Score:1)
1. The endless nagging about who ate whose breakfast will stop
Minuses:
1. A linux oriented company will inherit a descendant of the only Micorosft attempt to write Unix. See SCO docs for details.
2. Unfortunately 1 is not funny. Anybody who have tried to port something to SCO (especially the older versions) will say so...
Re:disclaimer:Hemos owns shares in Red Hat (Score:1)
Then again, this site has never been a source of unbiased information.
No one forces you to read Slashdot. If you don't like their methods, leave. They are free to operate the site the way they want to. It's their site, not yours.
Re:SCI? (Score:1)
SCO is the Santa Cruz Operation, a commercial Unix vendor (who hasn't been doing real well lately).
Not SGI (Score:2)
$950 for 5 Incident Support Package through Red Hat, $35,000 for thier Silver Support Package, not exactly the greatest bargins, Red Hat needs to come up with a stream line mass market support system.
SGI is loosing ground, and support is one of thier lackings. SGI using Red Hat was thier solution, and it's not working as you can tell from the $16 to $11 drop. SGI's MIPS products are solid on the hardware side, but just troll the SGI newsgroups, and you will find users are very unhappy with IRIX. It's not that UNIX in general is giving them problems, but SGI's problems with IRIX, various bugs, chaos in patches and updates, nightmear upgrade stories, etc.
Buying SGI would only give Red Hat another Support headache, just when they really need to get thier support more streamline, and focus it on a mass market. It would be a move in the wrong direction.
Now, someone like Compaq or Dell on the other hand would be an excellent place to form a "partnership" on a long term scale. Red Hat needs to get in tight with one of the Intel based hardware vendors that can help them scale up to 2+ CPU servers with RAID on one hand, and looking down towards laptops and PDAs on the other hand. Those are some areas where the growth would be a little less painful. And a "partnership" rather than a "buyout" would allow them to gain some "help" and not "aquire the headache."
If SGI is to get back on it's feet, it needs to do it on it's own. It's not thier hardware that is lacking, it's thier management. The few good techs never seen to see the light of day, or leave for other companies. The bad techs answer the phones and go to trade shows. Bad marketing, bad service, bad customer relations, and overpriced service/support contracts for a product that ends up a major headache for many consumers is going to keep driving them even lower than $11. Keep waiting for them to "bottom out" and get bought by someone like Compaq or Dell, who have proved they CAN handle the hardware buisness in todays market.
On The Other Hand (Score:2)
Then I'd like to see VA Research IPO, be a HUGE success, then buyout SGI and Caldera. Now, that would be a Linux market. VA could bolster Caldera enough to make it more head to head with Red Hat, and SGI would fit in thier product line pretty well, giving them MIPS to add to the Intel line.
Then all the "extra" vendors out there could fill in the gaps with AMD systems. Like... Penguin Computing and Mandrake... Yea... Hey.. let's pair everyone up...
and mozilla (Score:1)
web/net and indirectly the desktop. for those
who have not been following along, netscape
proved that sight designers follow the market
more than any standards and thus netscape became
a more important standard than w3.org. it seems
like ie is currently the most popular browser
(i dont know if this is true but alot of people
seem to believe its true) so content developers
will go with that instead of standards, thus
locking out others platforms. when they have
the browser market, then they have the desktop and
may be able to take the net itself. if i seem
paranoid, im only rehashing what many of us already know. there has to be an open alternative
to ie that people will actually want to use!
An open business plan... (Score:1)
In fact, I could use a business plan myself
---
Re:Questionable (Score:4)
Common stock owned:
Novell, Inc.
Corporate Headquarters
122 East 1700 South
Provo, Utah 84606
Microsoft Corporation................................. 4,217,606 12.3%
One Microsoft Way
Redmond, Washington 98052-6399
Douglas L. Michels(2)................................. 4,028,400 11.7%
c/o The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
400 Encinal Street Santa Cruz,
California 95061-1900
Lawrence Michels(3)................................... 3,149,992 9.2%
30376 Snowbird Lane
Evergreen, Colorado 80439
From www.edgar-online.com, proxy statement for SCOC, Jan 21 1999.
culture clash (Score:2)
It would end up being a management and communication nightmare. You can read this for more information about this problem:
http://www.hewitt.com/news/pressrel/1998/08-03-
Re:Absolutely! (Score:1)
Maybe it would be better if Mandrake bought them out. They now have money and will go public "as soon as possible". This might also set the stage for more support to help KDE and Gnome interoperate better.
Better they buy Mandrake (Score:1)
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:1)
---
Red Hat should buy everything (Score:2)
In today's free market, a corporation needs synergy. Red Hat needs a way to vertically integrate with retail outlets, benchmarking companies, fast food chains, movie theaters, theme parks, pharmecuticals, TV broadcast companies, chemical weapons manufacturers. That is the only way a company can give its customers true choice.
This way, RH LINUX can be inserted into a vertical market and come out as practically any sort of product! We can have "Heroes of Open Source" action figures, a hit thriller movie, happy meals, anything you can think of!!!! Plus, if you've secured heavy investments in media content companies, you'll always have rave reviews of your various products but a phone call away!
Some pretty interesting ideas (Score:1)
Actually, I think you've got some good points there. I don't know about buying SCO (depends on the price), but grabbing a significant stake might be a good idea. And I love the part about helping out Borland and other tool providers.
However, my personal interest is that Red Hat stock prices drop. So I can buy some more. Stop going up! Please
Wrong Question (Score:1)
You pose the question "where does Linux and open source get the most bang for the buck?"
This is the wrong question. It should read: "Where does RedHat get the most bang for the buck?"
Let's face it, the value of the free publicity RedHat receives is greater than their $10M in gross sales. The last thing they need to do is buy software companies or vendors and *give* their goods away. They need a solid foothold in something more than an emerging market. What is best for linux, and best for open source, is not always what is best for RedHat.
Purchasing SCO seems like a sound business decision... and very cool. It would benifit Linux, RedHat, and Un*x administrators and developers as a whole. Exciting!
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:1)
When CAD came along, did the architects get paid less? Nope. They just do more with better technology...
The point isn't at all to get paid less. It's to get paid roughly the same rate and be more productive. There is plenty of work to be done programming computers, and I'd like to get to some of it instead of wasting my time with licensing issues and who owns what.
Doing an Office2000 install... MS now uses a 25 character license key. Good god folks, what next, 50 chars? 100? Will we soon hafta punch our entire genetic code into the damn license key box?? If only outfits like MS would spend a little more time working on their OS'es and apps, maybe they wouldn't hafta worry so much about protecting their revenues. (grumble grumble...)
Re:SCO is cool! (Score:1)
Thanks, but I'll stick with Linux.
Tom
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tom McKearney
Re:Red Hat should buy everything (Score:1)
Does we really want Open Source happy meal?
Some thing's might be better left alone...
Re:No, buy 4Front (Open Sound System) instead (Score:1)
Re:"You can't buy anything with market cap." (Score:1)
Re:No, buy 4Front (Open Sound System) instead (Score:1)
Face it, efforts are already split. There's OSS/Linux, 4Front's proprietary product, OSS/Free, the out-dated and crippled version 4Front puts out every so often which is just "good enough" to stop significant development effort going into an alternative, there's the sound code in the Linux kernel tree which is derived from OSS/Free but has been modularised and improved by kernel hackers, and then there's ALSA, which can never get enough developers because they're all too busy working around the lossage created by 4Front.
If Red Hat bought 4Front, then instead of 4 sound systems on Linux we could have 2 and a bit. There might even be a chance for an eventual merge of the two free systems. That's an improvement by my reckoning.
Re:SCO? (Score:1)
YESSSSSS!!!! (Score:1)
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:2)
--Shoeboy
Many slashdots own shares in Red Hat (Score:1)
So, let's moderate your post down, ok?
;-)
Disclaimer: I wish I owned more shares of Red Hat, so sell yours after the 30 day mark so I can buy it cheap.
Re:One other thing.... (Score:1)
Re:Three words. (Score:2)
Funny story about BillG and SCO (Score:4)
A long time ago, Microsoft decided to try to make an x86 UNIX. They called it Xenix, and lo, it sucked.
A couple of enterprising characters from Santa Cruz approached Bill and offered to buy an exclusive license for the code, plus rights to port MS applications to the new OS. Bill thought, "Hell, who wants a x86 UNIX anyway? It's a piece of junk- SURE!"
These Santa Cruz characters turned Xenix around in unbelievable time. Soon, it rocked. It was fast and stable. Moreover, it had one of the first and best POSIX and C2 implementations on commodity hardware. (something MS still can't manage over a decade later) Thus SCO totally conquered the BIG $$ government market that MS had been aiming at. This made Bill extremely mad.
One day, the licensing checks from SCO to MS were a day late. Bill grabbed his lawyer, hopped a plane from Redmond to Santa Cruz. Bill and showed up at the door of a little yellow house in Santa Cruz that was SCO. Bill banged on the door and threw a HUGE tantrum, screaming "I KNOW YOU'RE IN THERE!!" and claming he was there to reposess the Xenix source code. Meanwhile, somebody slipped out the back door to the bank and got Bill his check. SCO was saved, but bill was still mad.
Next time the contract to port MS apps to UNIX/Xenix came up, Bill had a demand. "Write us a POSIX layer for our new OS!" SCO: "Screw you!" Bill: "Fine, no apps for you!"
They're still feuding. Of course, Bill has gone on to fame and fortune on the back of applications like Word and Excel as much as Windows, but he still hates SCO. They will always be a thorn in his side until, with his billions of dollars and hundreds of programmers he can finally produce a POSIX and networked C2 certifiable system like those few hackers did in a couple of months. He'd love to get his greedy paws into the gov't market, still SCO's bread&butter.
If anything, Red Hat buying SCO would be a great way to inject Open Source code into the US Gov't, and we all know this would be a great thing.
Re:disclaimer:Hemos owns shares in Red Hat (Score:1)
Also, the SEC would put anyone who did that in jail/big fines.
Re:osOpinion - I agree (Score:1)
A juvenille post about juvenille postings.
Noone's forcing you to read anything.
Crawl back into your hole.
SGI!! (Score:1)
Seriously, SGI stock is really a bargain now, as investors stupidly took the Linux announcement and the Belluzo announcement as BAD news, the fools.
It dropped from $16 to $11, and should have gone the other way. Doesn't that mean it will eventually climb to $21 or more?!
If RHAT doesn't buy SGI, then at least those who flipped their RHAT should...
Re:"You can't buy anything with market cap." (Score:1)
Not GPL, use LGPL (Score:2)
GPL would not be good for Qt. It would put it at a disadvantage compared to GTK+ where propietary software is concerned. Placing Qt under the LGPL would completely, once and for all, level the playing field between Gnome and KDE.
With all of that said I think that if Red Hat bought Troll Tech Qt would automatically and irrevocably be placed under a BSD/MIT style OSS license. Someone else may be able to verify this. The Trolls have made their company rather unatractive to purchasers by making their main asset unsaleable.
Re:SCO? what about Qt/Troll Tech? (Score:1)
RedHat should stick with GNOME and of course ensure compability with KDE. I think that is a recipe to beat Microsoft on the desktop.
Otherwise, buying Cygnus would be a great idea since Cygnus is much more important for Linux than RedHat is.
Re:Microsoft owns part of SCO (Score:1)
Microsoft had to pay a fairly stiff royalty to AT&T on each copy of Xenix they sold. Microsoft doesn't like this sort of arrangment, and decided to divest their "Santa Cruiz Operation." And so SCO was formed as a free-standing entity.
As a condition of the divestment of Xenix, Microsoft agreed to never enter the Unix market with a competeing product. Therefore they are barred from producing their own Unix (Microsoft Linux is a legal impossiblity because of this.)
Re:disclaimer:Hemos owns shares in Red Hat (Score:1)
Re:Absolutely! (Score:1)
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:1)
But I have a real question. In your letter, you mention in passing that Linux is destined to lower software sales revenue, and I guess you're commenting that someday programmers will get paid less. Do you see that as a Bad Thing, and if so, how can you come to terms with being such a greedy bastard, and if not, how are you going to buy vodka and salad dressing when the revolution comes?
Re:Really? (Score:1)
That's NOT a Media Subscription.. (Score:3)
A huge number of peopl would not want their "Silver Support" subscription with a $35,000 price tag!!
I am talking about CDROM.COM style subscriptions, to the MEDIA, not the support. Red Hat could easily use it's financial resources to put out a quarterly distribution that included all the latest and greatest applications and information on a CD for under $100 a year (which would still be outrageously high priced for a total of maybe 8 CD's a year, which would probably cost them $1-2 per CD to produce).
They should be maintaining a solid base of applications anyhow for thier product, and batch runs on a CD burner that would crank out some disks to drop in the mail with a little "product brocher" or something would make good marketing sense for them (because it would provide them with the information they need to know about who might be willing to pay for at least the media, Plus, give them a direct way to let thier users know what new products and services like support contracts were avaliable).
If AOL and Microsoft can send out Free CD's to people a few times a year without cost to get people to just consider using thier browser or internet service, I would sure think Red Hat could use a mechinism like this to keep in contact with thier "bulk" customers, and provide a valuable service at a reasonable price.
Just Some Thoughts (Score:1)
Really? (Score:1)
Explain. I thought it was interesting read at the very least and most of it sound marketing strategy. Should redhat follow these instructions I see it's profits increasing at the cost of potentially alienating free software developers not paid by redhat.
Re:disclaimer:Hemos owns shares in Red Hat (Score:1)
Imagine Open Sourced VISIBROKER?? (Score:1)
It appears SCO no longer has XENIX License (Score:1)
SCO has several license agreements with Microsoft pursuant to which Microsoft has provided software technology to SCO, including XENIX. Microsoft has rights to terminate its licenses with SCO in the event of the acquisition of SCO by a competitor of Microsoft, which may affect any such acquisition. SCO believes that, if such an acquisition occurred and Microsoft canceled these licenses, SCO could obtain alternative technology from other sources and could incorporate such technology into SCO's products, or alternatively, SCO could continue operations without such technology with no material impact to its business. However, the loss of any significant third-party license, or the inability to license additional technology as required, could have a materially adverse effect on the Company's results of operations until such time as the Company could replace such technology.
This text (and all other references to XENIX being a current product of SCO) has been removed from the 12/98 10-K.
Not sure that it wouldn't be a terrible idea (Score:1)
1.) Buying SCO, if the analysts like it, may give an uptick.
2.) The enevitable layoffs that would hit accounting/administration/marketing provide an uptick (From the "Stock in the dulldrums? Announce a layoff!" school of increasing stock price)
3.) Maybe the chance to be profitable without increasing the price of the distribution another $30 provides another uptick.
4.) A west coast presence (SCO has a pretty nice campus).
Re:Imagine Open Sourced VISIBROKER?? (Score:1)
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:2)
--Shoeboy
Re:SCO? what about Qt/Troll Tech? (Score:1)
However, no matter how good Troll developers are ( and they are really good !) Qt is not a recipe to beat MS on the dekstop. Qt can be only as fast as underlying graphics architecture allows it to be and right now XFree still can't come even close to performance offered by profesionally written graphic card drivers on Win platform.
Wrong! (Score:3)
To receive the legal right to call Linux "Unix," all that would need to be done is pay some company to certify that it meets the latest Unix standard as published by The Open Group. This simply requires money to pay for the proceedure, and developers to fix any problems encountered in the certification process. (Unfortunately, the Unix branding would probably only apply to a particular release of a particular distribution.)
I haven't looked at the standard myself, but I doubt there's much there that Linux doesn't have. Oh, and I wouldn't be surprised if some of the commercial Unixes haven't bothered with actual Unix branding. Perhaps we should check to see if Solaris and HP-UX are really "Unix-like operating systems."
SGI (Score:1)
And they can do it:
SGI
Red Hat [thestreet.com]
SCO [thestreet.com]
Red hat is values at some 5 billion (most likely a large chunk of which is 'liquid') while SGI is around 2 billion. Imagine if all of SGIs technologies and manufacturing and research and
Screw SCO (although for the price it may not be a bad idea), but SGI would rock. Oh yeah, and I do agree that QT, APLIX and otehrs would be a good buy, too. Maybe better than SGI considering what is really wrong with linux is not the OS (it is great) but the fact that there isn't a "Killer App" for people to choose OVER microsoft. Until Linux gets an app that MS can't do, no one "will be fired for buying MS."
Re:SGI AND BROKEN LINK! (Score:1)
http://quote.thestreet.com/cgi-bin/texis/StockQ
or:
SGI [thestreet.com]
Re:Can I get a "Hell No?" (Score:1)
Re:Bad Idea (Score:1)
by SCO ofcourse
A lot of good ideas (Score:3)
One thing, I believe Microsoft still owns about a 10% position in SCO (as do a couple of other companies - AT&T?). Wonder if they'd be willing to sell it, and with what attached strings?
What good would it do? (Score:1)
(VARBusiness did a poll back 5 years ago about SCO. 80% of the people who answered said they would not get 'in bed' with SCO again, if they had to do it all over again.)
And really, the vendors doing the ports of code to 'linux' are not the ones to blame for the 'we only support redhat linux' problem. It is **YOU** the consumer of shrink-wrapped binaries. Are **YOU*** asking for binaries that will run on *ANY* Linux-compatible system, be it redhat, suse, debian, SCO, Solaris, BSD etc or are you just saying 'port to linux', and then throw in that you are running redhat? (Hint: today you do have a LSB - its called the compatibility modes of SCO/Solaris/BSD. If it runs there, it will run anywhere.)
If **YOU** the consumer of shrink-wrapped linux binaries don't get your act together...then the 'linux' who has the most ports done to it will be the official 'linux', in the eyes of the economic world.
disclaimer:Hemos owns shares in Red Hat (Score:1)
Then again, this site has never been a source of unbiased information.
My open letter to red hat (Score:5)
Your recent, wildly successful, IPO has shown, to the joy of Linux fans everywhere, that Wall Street investors are smoking crack. Linux is destined to lower profit margins on software sales for everyone, but investors still see you as a potential gold mine. Now is the time to leverage your core buisness asset of crack smoking investors. As crack and glass pipe supplies have been drastically lowered during your IPO you need to invest in entities that will ensure an adequate supply of crack cocaine for future stock growth. Allow me to suggest the nation of Columbia.
Acquisitions: There are occasional rumors that Red Hat would consider buying a small european nation such as Luxembourg with its newfound wealth. Bad idea. Who owns Luxembourg? Who do you write the check to.
Instead, and this is key: buy Columbia from the Medelin cartel. This will provide a sufficient amount of coca plants to fuel irrational investor exuberance into the next millenium. What does this bring you?
Equatorial climates and loads of coke. What better way to enjoy your wealth?
Columbia will also give you easy access to Peru's shining path guerillas. These rebels are brutal fanatics, just like linux users. Imagine unleashing a horde trained jungle warriors in the midst of Redmond. Instant coup de etat and you're the CEO of Microsoft! Then you can let your investors snort cocaine off the top of Steve Ballmers glistening scalp. What a way to build market enthusiasm.
Revenue. IPO money is great, but the real money is in narcotics smuggling. You currently only have 10 million in revenue. That's paltry compared to the amount you could make by cornering the market on coke.
CIA contacts. That's right, once you're a major player in the drug arena, the government will bend over backwards for you. They need the drugs for controling inner city unrest and will gladly charge mandrake and debian with antitrust suits just to keep the supply going.
Human capital. Linux programmers are cool to have around, but what company can afford to be without mules? You can use the cartel's drug runners to swallow encryption algorithms and smuggle them out of the country. This will allow you to be the only US software company with real encryption.
Buy Columbia from the drug lords, it just makes sense.
--Shoeboy
Re:My open letter to red hat (Score:1)
Colombia is the country's name... Columbia is a city in SC
This is a solid idea. (Score:1)
Why not destroy SCO in the marketplace? (Score:1)
Re:A lot of good ideas (Score:1)
Well, except that they both involve "education," I have no idea.
Nobody forces you to work for any particular company. If you don't like the company's basic goals and philosophy, find another job. Or convince the company that you're right and they're wrong.
--
Re:Linux Is Not UniX (Score:2)
Why not? (Score:1)
Re:SCO? what about Qt/Troll Tech? (Score:1)
It seemed, however, that one of the other Linux distributors would probably be better suited to make this move. It would be pretty awkward for RedHat to abruptly drop GNOME/GTK right now, but if they didn't move to Qt as their primary platform, it wouldn't be a very good investment.
Still, something has to give with the current Qt licensing system. It's ridiculous to charge $1500 per developer for a widget set, even if it is fantastic. How much is MS Visual Studio Pro now? $750? And companies with an absolute focus on cross platform capability can always settle for Java for free, despite its faults. There you get a large, skilled developer base and your choice of many IDEs. If Troll-Tech (or their future owner) doesn't wise up in the next year, they'll rapidly be made irrelevant in the commercial markets when Swing and fast JVM's really become common.
--JRZ
Re:SCO is evil! - Not completely true (Score:1)
What you are doing on SCO is re-linking the kernel, NOT recompiling it - the drivers and the kernel core are shipped as binary modules. I am not completely familiar with what all happens when you relink on SCO, but I believe there are some modules that are re-compiled. All these hold are the configuration information you can edit - basically a bunch of constants and data areas, no code to speak of. Its considerably less work than compiling the source for the entire kernel and all the drivers.
I think it might be handy to have a similar mechanism for tweaking settings on an already compiled set of Linux kernel object modules, but it would involve a considerable reorganization of the code and kernel build process, for a limited benefit.
Cheers
Eric
Re:Red Hat should buy Applix (Score:1)
Re:A lot of good ideas (Score:1)
Re:Questionable (Score:1)
Microsoft owns 30%+ of SCO. It is questionable whether RH wants to buy something in which M$ has some level of control.
And if the buy is done by stock swap M$ will hold a sizeable chunk of RH. Now this might make the job of the Justice department much easier, but is not something Bob Young would enjoy.
mfg lutz
Re:SCI? (Score:1)
SCO owns Unix (Score:1)
So SCO owns the Unix trademark and System V source code (or have they done something with it since then?).
Buy SCO, release System V under GPL, and brand Linux the only official Unix!
Re:Questionable (Score:2)
Re:A lot of good ideas (Score:1)
>out couple of years ago.
This is not correct. SCO is still publicly traded
(SCOC on the NASDAQ) and as recently as March
Novell was still selling the chunks of SCOC
they'd picked up in exchange for something they'd
sold SCO. Besides, even if M$FT owns 10%, if RHAT
owns a controlling share in the company (hell, if
they offered me $10/share I'd sell my trivial
stake) there wouldn't be squat that the Evil
Empire could say.
Re:SCO? (Score:2)
Hope this satisfies your "first post" question.
Re:Funny story about BillG and SCO (Score:1)
Re:SCO is evil! - Not completely true (Score:1)
Tom.
The point: (Score:1)
there is still a lot of old SCO out there (Score:2)
SCO? what about Qt/Troll Tech? (Score:3)
SCO does not own Unix (Score:3)
Disclaimer: I am a former employee of The Open Group, back when it actually did things more interesting than branding and standards.
Three words. (Score:3)
Buying SCO you'd have to deal with all the bagage of supporting UNIXWARE and their existing customers. One of the great things about RedHat right now is that it doesn't have this huge load of bagage it has to deal with. They can stay focused on Linux.
Besides, who'd wanna buy a UNIX that sells the TCP/IP stack as a seperate product?? blah.