12 Results for Linux. Microsoft

Novell's Earnings Down--Linux Business Disappoints

Novell has reported its financial performance for the November-to-January quarter, and the results aren't pretty. Earnings dropped 36 percent to $11 million, compared to $17 million in the year-earlier quarter. Sales fell short of analysts' expectations, although the earnings were very slightly above expectations. Novell's CEO Ron Hovsepian didn't just pin the results on the economy. He said invoicing was below our expectations in this weak economy,? and he noted that our Linux performance did not meet our expectations. What lies ahead for Novell's Linux business?


Linux Foundation's Voice of Reason On the Microsoft/TomTom Patent Dispute

This afternoon, Linux Foundation Executive Director Jim Zemlin weighed in with the Foundation's view on the recent patent infringement claims Microsoft has filed against TomTom.

Zemlin says at this point, there's no reason to doubt Microsoft's assurances that this is a dispute solely between TomTom and itself, or that the claims against TomTom are in any manner a direct (or indirect) move against the wider Linux ecosystem.

The Linux Foundation is hopeful, Zemlin says, that the dispute will be resolved as quickly and as peaceably as possible. However, he indicates that if the litigation turns towards the Linux environment in a general sense, the Foundation is prepared to defend the platform.



Microsoft Asks TomTom for Directions to Court: Lawsuit Claims Involve Linux Implementation

As some OStatic readers have likely already heard, Microsoft is taking TomTom, a manufacturer of in-car navigation devices, to court for patent infringement. This is especially disturbing to those in the open source world for at least two reasons -- Microsoft's previous claims that Linux violates over two hundred patents it currently holds, and three of the claims against TomTom deal with TomTom's implementation of the Linux kernel in its products.

Techdirt's Mike Masnick presents some good analysis of the story, including links to the patents in question and those with particularly tenuous claims (in terms of infringement and patentability, in a few instances). While this is worrisome to those who use Linux, and certainly causing TomTom executives to lose sleep, I can't help but wonder, really, what this positioning actually means. Why is this coming up now? If hundreds of Microsoft patents are being violated, why go after a company infringing on eight (with three relating directly to Linux)? And why TomTom?



Nokia Gets a Cool $630 Million from Europe to Spend on Symbian

Nokia has just reported that it has received a $630 million loan from the European Investment Bank to help it develop the Symbian operating system and stay relevant in the increasingly competitive mobile operating system war. Looks like Nokia's move last summer to buy out the remaining shares of Symbian for $410 million was more prescient than many people realized. Along with that move, Nokia also put the Symbian operating system on an open source course. Just this week, at the Mobile World Congress in Spain, vendors lined up behind Symbian, LiMo's Linux-based operating system, and Android. $630 million is a lot of money. Will it change Symbian's fate, and how does it affect LiMo and Android?


OStatic Buffer Overflow

Microsoft and Red Hat to interoperate patent-free. The two companies have an interoperability alliance focused on virtualization.

Zmanda?s 3.0 backup supports cloud, Sharepoint, PostgreSQL, EnterpriseDB. A major upgrade of the open source backup solution is just weeks away.

Bruce Perens: How many open source licenses do you need? The Open Source initiative has approved 73 licenses. Is it overkill?

Maximize your screen with Littlefox. It's a Firefox extension that sizes Firefox to fit on a small netbook screen. Check out the video.

Another desktop test for Linux. What should we make of Dell's hybrid Windows/Linux computer?



The Open Source Movement, and Microsoft's Unlucky Breaks

Microsoft Watch's Joe Wilcox, in solemn observance of Friday the 13th, compiled a list of Microsoft's ten most unlucky breaks. The strokes of misfortune chosen were weighted according to heinousness (with #10 being least signficant, and #1 the most).

Checking in at #7 is the development of the Linux kernel. Putting aside Microsoft's whole Schrodinger's cat sort of approach to Linux over the years (Linux is not a threat. Linux is a threat), it is interesting Wilcox (and the analysts who helped him narrow down the list) focused on the kernel as the bad break.



Novell Delivers Moonlight 1.0 for Rich Media on Linux

During both the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics and President Obama's inauguration, many Linux users were seriously miffed that Microsoft's Silverlight rich application plug-in was required for viewing. Today, the Mono Project, one of Novell's open source initiatives, has announced the availability of the Moonlight 1.0 Firefox extension, which is an open source implementation of Microsoft Silverlight for Linux and Unix platforms. According to Novell: Moonlight provides the platform Linux users need to use Silverlight and Windows Media content. In combination with Banshee, a Novell-sponsored project to produce an open source media player, Moonlight is part of a complete multimedia solution on Linux. Some questions are being raised about Moonlight's license, though.


Microsoft Looks for Open Source Desktop Strategy Czar

Are you interested in taking the job of Director of Open Source Desktop Strategy at Microsoft? If so, here's the LinkedIn job description. Matt Aslett at The 451 Group notes that Microsoft is looking for a strong team member to lead Microsoft?s global desktop competitive strategy as it relates to open source competitors.? The language used in the job description stays vague about whether the successful candidate's job will be to stave off open source competitors or grow an open source strategy internally, but this is yet another sign that Microsoft has open source directly on its radar.


Does Microsoft Have a Mobile Open Source Strategy Up its Sleeve?

There are rumors cropping up that Microsoft may unleash an open source strategy surrounding Danger, the mobile software/services player that it acquired last year. Danger got a lot of kudos in its early days for its innovative Danger Sidekick mobile phone featuring pull-out and flip-up components, but it mostly floundered after that. Part of the cause for the Danger-goes-open-source rumors is this post, which shows a recruiter looking for a talented NetBSD developer interested in working on the next generation of Danger Sidekick. With Windows Mobile facing wolves at the door in the form of the iPhone, Android phones, and the Blackberry Storm, would an open source Danger strategy make sense for Microsoft?


Why Would Windows 7's Success Necessarily Doom Linux?

Perhaps it's inevitable -- people react strongly to hyperbole, it gets them talking, it makes them curious, it's a quick way of making a subject hot. For years, every new MP3 player was met with speculation -- would it be an iPod Killer? Perhaps ASUS didn't release new hardware quickly enough before solid competition entered the market, but for a few months last year the term Eee Killer was thrown about. Yet, despite the bounty on their heads, iPods and Eees still exist, as do alternative devices.

As Microsoft allowed people to take an early version of Windows 7 out for a test ride, the -Killer suffix re-emerged. It's not an OS X-Killer. It's a Linux-Killer. I'm sure this is due in large part to the robust netbook market and Apple's absence there. It's interesting that suddenly Linux is seen as competition. It's also intriguing that this is portrayed as the nail in the coffin, and not an opportunity.



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