Trolltech Going Public 141
An anonymous reader writes "After 12 years in business, Trolltech, the company whose founders created KDE, has filed an application for listing on the Oslo Stock Exchange (OSE). From the article: 'The OSE reports receiving the application the following day, and says Trolltech is now subject to disclosure of information requirements. IPO rumors sprang up around Trolltech last Fall, when the company hired Juha Christensen and Tod Nielsen in September, and then added Benoit Schillings and Dr. Karsten Homann in October. The company said in January that it doubled its design wins, among other significant 2005 achievements', particularly in the arena of using Linux as OS to power mobile phones."
Mod company down (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mod company down (Score:2)
No, they're going public because they need the capital. For once it's OK to feed the troll!
Re:Mod company down (Score:1)
p.s. I just hope they don't become a huge impersonal amoral company, like Google did when it went public.
Actually, they are against trolls (Score:2)
Re:Mod company down (Score:2)
Canopy invested in Trolltech before Caldera turned into SCO.
Re:Mod company down (Score:1)
In my pocket with my +1 dagger and no tea.
Re:Mod company down (Score:1)
Trolling technology to be patented? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:If you mean.... (Score:2)
good for Trolltech (Score:5, Funny)
Probably not good for Trolltech's users (Score:3, Insightful)
Unfortunately, IPOs rarely prove to be advantageous to the customers of the company in question. If I were making decisions about a cross-platform toolkit to use for development, Qt would just have gone way down the list. It's all very well having the source, but it's still much better if the guys who really know it inside out are doing the maintenance, and some of that maintenance may not be in the future shareholders' interests.
Do you mean Linux has a GUI? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Do you mean Linux has a GUI? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Do you mean Linux has a GUI? (Score:2)
Re:Do you mean Linux has a GUI? (Score:1)
Re:Do you mean Linux has a GUI? (Score:2)
The correct reply is "Never _GNU_ that."
--RMS
Re:Do you mean Linux has a GUI? (Score:3, Funny)
-The real RMS
Sweet! (Score:2, Funny)
THATS great (Score:2)
Re:THATS great (Score:1)
Re:THATS great (Score:1)
Bunch o' Dancin' Fools (Score:1)
Re:Bunch o' Dancin' Fools (Score:1)
after that movie i've decided to only use gtk apps
Re:Sweet! (Score:2)
requirements for being public (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:requirements for being public (Score:5, Informative)
it assumes that having Qt under the GPL is a bad thing for Trolltech. i really have to wonder how well known and popular Qt would be today if it hadn't been released as permissively as it have.
there have also been a -lot- of benefits to Trolltech with having Qt GPL'd including having a full desktop platform on UNIX and Linux that "Qt-friendly", the immense amount of testing and real-world feedback they get via the usage of the GPL versions, etc.
there are a lot of companies out there, several of whom are also public, that have released their primary software assets under a Free software license such as the GPL. so there's precedence for this in any case.
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
Not to get all paranoid, but there's a few other cases where previously GPL'd software has gone closed source. Some very above water "we need to make some money to keep going", some very much like a bait and switch. In an IPO owners could come in which feel this is the time to make a switch and capitalize short-term o
Re:requirements for being public (Score:1)
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
and it's not like having a GPL version of their code has hurt them, which is the base premise of your supposition. i believe it's actually -helped- their sales.
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
But WRT to public companies in the US legally being required to act in the best interests of shareholders, there can be limitations. Otherwise, any corporation that loses money (and there are plenty) could be sued for not just investing in profitable companies instead.
Provided that the executives act in a manner consistent with the published mission statement and other published corporate goodies, their actions do not necessarily have to maximiz
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
It would be very difficult for the stockholders to make demands regarding the licensing ofthe product.
Re:requirements for being public (Score:3, Insightful)
Trolltech owns the rights to QT.
So they are VERY VERY different as far as IP goes.
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
no, Red Hat has a -policy- stating they release everything they do as free software.
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
Re:requirements for being public (Score:4, Informative)
Qt model is very good (Score:3, Interesting)
They have a dual license system which is the perfect answer for those who say no one can profit under the GPL. You can get Qt under the GPL and then, of course, what you do with it continues under GPL. But if you want to implement something using Qt and sell it without the GPL, you can buy Qt from Trolltech under a different license.
If they should stop releasing Qt under the GPL they
Re:Qt model is very good (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Qt model is very good (Score:1)
Re:Qt model is very good (Score:1)
Re:Qt model is very good (Score:2)
I'm not quite sure how the answer to "you can't make money selling GPLed software" of "when you want to make money, don't use the GPL" is "perfect"...
Re:requirements for being public (Score:2)
That's,
Yes. (Score:2)
Founders (Score:3, Informative)
That's incorrect, the founders of Trolltech are not KDE coders, although the founder of KDE was hired by Trolltech and now heads Qt development.
As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:2)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:5, Funny)
This is God,
No they don't.
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:1)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:2)
Slashdot made millions posing as a "Linux resource" during the
But you don't believe Slackdot editors actually use _use_ Linux (or know what the hell it is)...
You must be young, idealistic, or have a 6-digit Slashdot ID.
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:2)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:2)
Matthias Ettrich created KDE. He did not found TrollTech. The summary is incorrect. That is all.
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:2)
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:1)
I wouldn't be surprised if the submissions
Re:As usual, the summary is incorrect. (Score:1)
These
Should I be scared? (Score:1)
NYSE? (Score:2, Informative)
Schwab in particular
Re:NYSE? (Score:2)
Re:NYSE? (Score:5, Informative)
For example, if you want to own 0992.hk (Lenovo), you can not easily do so directly in a US brokerage account. However, you can own the American Depository shares which represent 20 underlying shares on the Hong Kong market. These depository shares trade on the Over the Counter market (quoted on the pink sheets) as LNVGY (.pk for pinksheets).
Some sponsored ADRs actually trade on established exchanges like the NYSE. For example, Sony has American Depository shares which represent their common stock trading on the NYSE as SNE. Hitachi does the same thing as HIT.
Whether you can buy a foreign issue (or an ADR representing the foreign issue) in a local brokerage account depends mostly on whether the company has taken steps to create an ADR or whether there is enough interest to create an underwriting profit for a bank to create an ADR.
There is no indication that an ADR (trading either on the OTC market or on the NYSE or other established exchange) will be created for the Trolltech common stock. If it is not, your only option is to use a brokerage which lets you directly buy and hold foreign stocks on foreign exchanges. Such an account is usually considerably more expensive than your typical discount brokerage account.
Re:NYSE? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:NYSE? (Score:2, Informative)
For the record:
End of Transmission
Re:NYSE? (Score:2)
Most European firms with US listings want to cancel them them because the cost of a US listing is high - complying with US regulatory requirements were always costly and Sarbanes-Oxley has made it a lot worse.
Cable and Wireless is forcing Americans with small shareholdings to sell [investegate.co.uk] so it can end its SEC registration.
Re:NYSE? (Score:2)
Re:NYSE? (Score:2)
So.... (Score:2)
The official OSE notification (Score:2, Informative)
Nice ticker symbol if anything
Re:The official OSE notification (Score:1)
Re:The official OSE notification (Score:2)
Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:2, Informative)
You can't even make a prototype of a program with out paying TT - they require you to destroy all code and start from scratch. No code developed using the free version may be used in a for profit project.
" * Build commercial software and software whose source code you wish to keep private.
* Freely choose licensing for the software you are writing (Proprietary, Open Source or both).
* Get commercial supp
Re:Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:1)
Re:Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:1)
Re:Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:1)
Re:Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:1)
Re:Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:2)
Re:Will the be as honest as they currently are? (Score:2)
Re:Will they be as honest as they currently are? (Score:2)
OSS true motivations (Score:2)
It has become quite apparent that software developers working in Open Source definitely want to get paid, they'd just rather do it via IPO and devil take the hindmost.
No-cost 3D software using Qt (Score:2)
Re:No-cost 3D software using Qt (Score:1)
Special deal with TrollTech (Score:3, Informative)
"Thankfully, we were able to get Trolltech to discount their SDK fee considerably since the package that we're offering is limited for use specifically with DAZ|Studio. We do not offer the complete QT package, if you're interested in that so that you can use it to develop items for other apps, then you'll need to contact Trolltech directly. It's been a very useful tool for our development team and we wouldn't have this cool cross-platform ap
Now that they're going to IPO (Score:5, Insightful)
The pricing for proprietary use of Qt is unreasonable (compare to other class libraries, especially in the Windows world. Even Stingray with its slew of libraries is MUCH cheaper) and until Trolltech brings their licensing costs down to more reasonable levels, you're going to see proprietary developers continue to use harder-to-code-for-but-up-front-startup-cost friendlier Gtk for proprietary applications, despite STUPID dumbed-down user-unfriendly dialogs like the GtK file dialog that nearly everybody hates.
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:1)
You get what you pay for. Go ahead and waste your time with mind-numbing API's such as MFC...
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:1)
I have personally never coded with Qt, but I've heard that the ease of developing with it justifies the cost.
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:2)
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:1)
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:2)
How's Wine doing on OS X PPC, AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, Solaris, or non-Intel Linux [trolltech.com] these days? QT is directly supported on all those latforms, but I doubt any other cross-platform toolkit handles all (if any) of them.
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:2)
Re:Now that they're going to IPO (Score:1)
IPO=new interests (Score:1)
[To keep the software free,] get ready to dole out all your personal information in the [difficult] registeration process--compared to today.
Re:IPO=new interests (Score:1)
Re:IPO=new interests (Score:1)
Not 'Public' (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Not 'Public' (Score:2)
Trolltechs source code is public... (Score:1)
Buying shares ? (Score:1)
Participate in IPO? (Score:1)
exclusionary (Score:1)
This would be excusable if at least their claims were true that their embedded toolkits are faster than running an X11 server with an X11 toolkit, but, sadly, the reverse is true: not only are you locked into their software, Qt/Embedded is also slow and resource intensive compared to a good X11-based implementation.
Re:exclusionary (Score:1)
http://blogs.qtdeveloper.net/archives/2006/04/10/