Linux Standard Base Is Exactly What Platform Needs
Opinion: To keep Linux on the right path to the enterpise, the new standard base is essential.
If Linux is to grow into the enterprise, its developers must cling to the Linux Standard Base like a devout Catholic to the rosary. UHC, Consensys, Interactive Unix ... remember these operating systems companies? No, with the exception of my fellow Unix fanatics, Im sure you dont. Except for SCO with OpenServer and UnixWare, and Sun with Solaris for x86, the x86 Unix companies are in historys trash heap. Theres never been any secret why people use Unix: It works well and its extremely powerful. And theres never been any secret why Unix has declined: software incompatibilities.
Click here to read more about the new standard base, which is said to have the support of almost all global Linux distribution vendors.
That said, even something as simple as setting C++ and RPM (RPM Package Manager) standards will go a long way toward making sure that well-written Linux applications that run and install on, say, Red Hat also will run on Debian, on Novell/SuSE and so on.
So far, Linux has been very lucky. It has people such as Linus Torvalds and Andrew Morton at its head.
They can lead. Their vision of Linux is strong enough that everyone from individual open-source programmers to large hardware companies such as HP and IBM will follow them.
They understand that the open-source approachcombined with open-standardsis whats needed to keep whats become a billion-dollar industry on track.
But that said, they are still just people. SomethingGod forbidmight happen to them. Or they might end up working in projects far away from Linux. Hard to believe, I know, but once-great names in the computer business, such as Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, have walked away from technology before.
Moving forward, rules of the development road, such as the LSB, will go a long way toward making sure that Linux continues its way into the enterprise. Without the LSB, Linux could end up, as so many of the Unixes have, permanently parked on the side of the operating-system road.
eWEEK.com Senior Editor Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols has been using and writing about operating systems since the late 80s and thinks he may just have learned something about them along the way.
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