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| Linux and Unix Error ! Redhat,suse,centos,mandrake,Free BSD,Sun |
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Linux and Open Source: One Step Closer to the Mainstream
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Perhaps no one event exemplified this trend more than Red Hat's (Nasdaq: RHAT) The year's successes for open source did not come without conflict, however. The roster of companies involved in open source now reads like a list of the world's largest enterprise software vendors. For once, key open source projects are backed with real dollars, but there's also an unfortunate downside. With the stakes so high for the industry at large, developers and users of open source software are often left to wonder, "Who are my real friends?" The Main Players Take Oracle, (Nasdaq: ORCL) Meanwhile, Sun Microsystems (Nasdaq: SUNW) Jaws hit the floor in November when Sun announced it would license its crown jewel, the Java language platform, under the GNU GPL Novell (Nasdaq: NOVL) As usual, the community provided alternatives. In June, Ubuntu -- a popular, recent Linux distribution with a strong free-software ethos -- announced its first-ever "enterprise ready" release, backed by up to five years' support from Ubuntu's sponsor company, Canonical. The Next Version of GPL Perhaps the most significant work in open source in 2006, however, was the process of drafting the next version of the GPL, which continued throughout the year. Though not completed yet, Version 3 of the license is expected to include strict new rules regarding software patents and DRM (digital rights management) technologies, among other tweaks. Whether existing open source projects will transition to the new license in large numbers, and what impact that might have on the commercial open source industry, remains to be seen. Transforming the Software Industry What is certain -- now more than ever -- is that community-based development and open source methodologies have transformed the software industry in a way that can never be reversed, and is still gaining momentum. In the years to come, striking a balance between the open and the proprietary, the commercial and the free, will continue to be one of the most critical challenges for enterprise IT managers. |
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