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DATE | 2004-04-18 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] Free Software Desktops are in the news again
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Every IT trade show needs a theme, and it's usually not the one advertised in the brochure. It's reflected either in the kinds of products in the exhibit hall or the buzz you hear in the conference tracks. Comdex Fall 1998, for example, was all about biometric security devices. By 2002, it was the year of the tablet PC. This year's Real World Linux show in Toronto confirmed open source on the desktop as the industry's latest Holy Grail, and boy, are the hopes high.
Part of the excitement can be explained by the need to chart Linux's progress. Its success in Web servers and databases has hardly plateaued, but further growth may be more incremental than what we've come to expect. Embedded Linux applications are flourishing, too, but there's a sense that something's missing. In a panel discussion yesterday, Linux International evangelist John "maddog" Hall summed up the popular sentiment: "It's really the desktop that's the last place for Linux to grow into, in part because there's already an incumbent."
This is no doubt one of the reasons Microsoft has been deploying Alex Taylor, its senior manager of platform strategy, on a North American tour to discuss "options" with key customers. Taylor has also been busy with a slew of appearances, including ITBusiness.ca and the Toronto Star, as the counterpoint to Linux enthusiasts who are also making the most of Real World Linux this week.
The battle for customer mindshare is more heated this year in part because the open source community has an established enterprise software firm, Novell, preaching the Linux desktop message. Novell, which was one of Real World Linux's marquee sponsors, was smart to import Ximian co-founder Nat Friedman as the keynote speaker. Though he performed a similar dog and pony show at Novell's recent Brainshare conference, Real World Linux put him in a more traditional open source milieu but keeps him under the Novell flag.
Friedman admitted that a Linux desktop revolution isn't likely to happen all at once, but he highlighted Novell's plans to move its 6,000 employees to Linux on the desktop internally. Its deadline is Hallowe'en, which suggests some black magic might be necessary, but this putting-your-OS-where-your-mouth-is strategy could become a useful marketing tool for years to come. Right now, according to CGI vice-president of emerging technologies Ross Buttons, most enterprises want someone else to be the guinea pig. "Replacing 5,000 desktops (with Linux) is a bit radical for them," he said at the show.
Novell has also managed to sustain, with some difficulty, support among NetWare users despite considerable competition in the marketplace. The trick will be enticing desktop application developers, and this, more than anything, will be the barrier
(suggestion: hire someone bald, stocky and hyperactive). Although Real World Linux included at least one session on an open source ERP implementation, there isn't a breadth of compelling Linux-based customer relationship management or business intelligence products. In fact, most customers would tell you the Windows-based CRM and BI tools aren't that compelling either, and the headaches they've gone through will make them loathe to switch to Linux or any other platform.
Novell's best shot may come from porting its single sign-on and eDirectory services to SUSE and convincing customers like the ones it has won in Canada to take advantage of Linux's scaleability. If it's simple, secure and affordable, platform choices become much easier. Maybe that will be the theme for Real World Linu
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