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IBM, Linux Dealers Seize Chance to Market 'Microsoft-Free' Desktop
By: Chris Preimesberger
2008-08-05
Article Rating:    / 51
There are 46 user comments on this Linux & Open Source story.
The slow adoption of Vista is giving IBM and Linux distributors an opportunity to convince enterprises that there are good desktop software alternatives to Windows. IBM, Canonical, Novell and Red Hat will work with hardware makers to market custom-designed PCs preloaded with Linux and Lotus word processing and collaboration software.SAN FRANCISCOIBM's front-line Linux and open-source troops were out in
full force at Linux World Conference & Expo Aug. 5 in their continuing
effort to remind the community at large that the company is serious about
becoming more open-source-minded in enterprise product development.
IBM revealed a couple of news items at the Moscone Center
conference, the attendance of which appears to be dramatically down from past
yearsmost likely due to the slumping economy and general
difficulty of travel. Some 7,500 developers, vendors and assorted others are
registered to attend. But my early takehaving
been to eight consecutive LWCE eventsis
that there are not nearly that many people actually on-site.
News item No. 1: IBM, Canonical (Ubuntu), Novell (SUSE Linux), and Red Hat
(RH Enterprise Linux) are joining forces with their corresponding hardware
partners to deliver so-called "Microsoft-free desktops" worldwide.
News item No. 2: IBM introduced do-it-yourself-type software appliancesin the forms of physical boxes and softwareaimed at speeding up the adoption of Linux in the
small and midsize business data center market.
Take that, Windows makers.
The three Linux companies in item No. 1 have tuned their respective operating
systems for use on IBM's Lotus Notes and Lotus Symphony in an effort to cut
into the Microsoft Windows- and Office-dominated desktop market worldwide by a
year from now. Analysts have determined that the enterprise market consists of
more than 1 billion desktops worldwide, and that number continues to go up each
day.
If desktop Linux is going to have a fighting chance in the open market against
the standard Windows deployment, then coalitions like this need to happen.
"The thing that's always been missing in the Linux desktop world is the
business model," Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation,
told me. "If we can make it as simple as possible for people to use it as
an alternative, whether on PCs or on mobile devices, that is the way to go.
"Look at what the Kindle
[Amazon.com's always-connected electronic book reader] has donethat should serve as an inspiration to Linux
developers."
The Kindle, which costs around $350, runs embedded Linux in a small, dedicated
form factor, and has turned out to be a useful, popular item. "They've
been sold out for a while," Zemlin said.
"The slow adoption of Vista among businesses and budget-conscious CIOs, coupled
with the proven success of a new type of Microsoft-free PC in every region,
provides an extraordinary window of opportunity for Linux," said Kevin
Cavanaugh, vice president for IBM Lotus Software. "We'll work to unlock the
desktop to save our customers money and give freedom of choice."
The four companies will distribute preloaded PCs that feature IBM's
Open Collaboration Client Solution and will include Lotus Notes, Lotus
Symphony and Lotus Sametime; the Linux operating system of each distributor;
and software applications and installation services from the local partners in
each market.
Local Firms Will Bring New PCs to Market
The final product will be branded by local IT firms that bring it to market. In
addition, customers, ISVs and systems integrators have the option to develop
applications using Lotus Expeditor based on the open-source Eclipse programming
model, IBM said.
These custom PCs will be tailored to the needs of customers in specific
sectors, such as government, banking, health care and education.
For example, one custom-designed PC for government buyers may support key ISV
applications for document and case management, crisis management, and citizen
services. Custom PCs for schools would offer a low-cost open platform that
could use Lotus collaboration and social-networking software.
Novell already has launched a software bundle that consists of IBM
collaboration software and SUSE Linux Enterprise with the help of Avnet UK, the largest IT distributor in that country.
Canonical will redistribute Lotus Symphony via its Ubuntu repositories.
Symphony 1.1 will be available through the Ubuntu repositories by the end of
August. General availability will coincide with the Lotus Symphony 1.2 release
expected to be available by the end of October, said Canonical Vice President Malcolm
Yates.
Canonical founder and president Mark Shuttleworth was not in attendance at LWCE
Aug. 5 after being highly visible at the recent OSCON event in Portland,
Ore. Red Hat also skipped the conference, as it has for the last several years.
New Alternatives for SMBs
The IBM software appliance initiatives are aimed at familiarizing smaller
enterprises with Linux and helping to deploy Domino applications on Lotus
Foundations.
A new, preconfigured version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 from Novell in
Lotus Foundations and a new tool
kit for Domino software vendors are now available. IBM also announced a new
strategy, the ISV Software Appliance Initiative, designed to help a wide
range of ISVs deliver Linux software appliances to midmarket customers.
This is all designed "to liberate small businesses from Microsoft's
proprietary Small Business Server," IBM open-source chief Bob Sutor told a
press conference.
Lotus Foundations features an integrated software package for collaboration,
file management, networking, office productivity, security, backup and disaster
recovery. Foundations' backup feature enables businesses to recover system
settings and business files in a matter of minutes.
| | Reader Comments: Selling the 'Microsoft-Free' Desktop | | >>> Post your comment now!
| | A user comment on this articleI have been using Vista home premium for almost a year and cannot believe you are calling it the most user friendly os!. have you even tried any of... Posted At: 09-09-08 By: Anonymous | | | | | | smoking crack?Free development tools? like perl, python,java? or are you talking about those hard apps like Visual basic? heh.. yes man pages are still... Posted At: 09-02-08 By: Anonymous | | | | | | replacing MSumm, I have 12000 openSuSE machines in a largely MS environment.. Funny, but it works pretty well in the new cloud computing realm. If you stay... Posted At: 09-02-08 By: Linux-omous | | | | | | A user comment on this articleClarification to last post: Linux doesn't need much to run. But when most of the "real" hardware has been replaced with drivers (i.e. software) that... Posted At: 08-28-08 By: Anonymous | | | | | | A user comment on this articleI'll second that notion. Linux runs great on "real" hardware - not the cheap stuff that you buy at Walmart for $499. Posted At: 08-28-08 By: Anonymous | | | | | | | | | | | | Certifications???"Dude" if you have certifications, you would know in a heartbeat how to install Linux in a network environment. It seems your message contradicts... Posted At: 08-12-08 By: Anonymous | | | | | | >>> Post your comment now! | | | | | |
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