Novell Gets $348 Million From Microsoft 308
An anonymous reader writes, "Novell has published additional details about its agreements with Microsoft concerning Windows and Linux interoperability and patents. It seems the company is receiving an up-front payment of $348 million from Microsoft, for SLES subscription certificates and for patent cross-licensing. Microsoft will make an upfront payment to Novell of $240 million for SLES subscription 'certificates' that Microsoft can use, resell, or distribute over the term of the agreement. Regarding the patent cooperation agreement, Microsoft will make an up-front net payment to Novell of $108 million, and Novell will make ongoing payments totaling at least $40 million over five years to Microsoft."
OK, NOW you can use the 'itsatrap' tag (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:OK, NOW you can use the 'itsatrap' tag (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot finds humor in repetition. For example: I, for one, welcome our $SUBJECT overlords. All your base are belong to us. Imagine a beowulf cluster of $SUBJECT. In Soviet Russia, $SUBJECT $VERB you! No carrier. BSOD. Etc.
I wouldn't mind, but the same group that always shouts "Hollywood keeps rehashing crap!" just can't let these jokes die.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I really enjoy when morons talk about Slasdhot as though it were a single entity, rather than a group of distinct people, with different opinions, and different viewing habits. Some people check slashdot every hour at work, some once a week. Some people have a great sense of humour and some don't. Some are just plain annoying.
As to you final statement, every studies logic? Do you have any evidence to suggest that these are the same bunch of pe
Welcome to the collective (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, Slashdot is really just one big giant AI system. All the so-called "users", including this one, are really just dummy accounts for the AI. You're the only human here.
Sincerely,
The Slashdot Overmind
Soul for sale (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft Vader: How much is your soul?
Novell Spaceballs Skywalker: $380 million and change, and we'll throw in SuSE.
Microsoft Vader: You fool! We would have paid you 10x as much.
What about CEO rewards? (Score:2, Interesting)
exchange of money (Score:4, Insightful)
Interesting that it involves the exchange of money. This lays the ground work for MS to keep collecting after they sever the agreement with Novell. The agreement runs out in 5 years, but there is a clause in the contract which allows MS to terminate it earlier.
Either way, it tries to fool people into accepting software patents. For the short term, many projects can be moved to European servers, just like when encryption export was illegal in the US. However, in the long term, the US needs to adopt a more common sense approach to patents and revoke any involving intangibles like software, mathematical formulas, and literature. Expression of those is already protected by copyright. What we have now is a broken system which allows restricting ideas.
I'm left to wonder if (Score:2)
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My own personal conspiracy theory is that Novell found something in the MS-SCO deal that the US Attorney General, even under the Bush Administration, would not have liked at all.
Re:I'm left to wonder if (Score:5, Informative)
If you really want to understand what's going on go read groklaw. The headline here is wrong. There is no patent cross licensing, that would violate the GPL. There is a promise which is not a license not to sue. It's a weird thing. There are also some unsaid, unprinted, nobody knows about exception.
So MS promises not to sue novell customers for MS patents with some exceptions. Most likely those exceptions involve some companies (for example google) or some technologies like XML.
MS has promised to sue other companies. Ballmer said that anybody who uses linux from anybody except novell is under a threat of a patent lawsuit from MS.
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Re:I'm left to wonder if (Score:4, Insightful)
What you don't consider is that Linux adoption is incredibly low- much lower than it should be. This is largely due, directly and indirectly, to the SCO case. Directly, businesses were pushed away from Linux out of fear of a lawsuit by SCO. Indirectly, because greater adoption of Linux would have spurred greater effort on Desktop Linux, thereby increasing adoption again, and so on- the so-called "critical mass" effect.
If it hadn't been for SCO, Linux would likely rule the world already- but SCO was such a spectacular success for MS that they're doing it again, with likely the same results. Businesses are (rightfully) scared of lawsuits. They were scared of them from SCO, and they'll be terrified of lawsuits from MS.
SCO was never meant to succeed as a company- their sole purpose from 2003 on was to hold back Linux while they fell into bankruptcy kicking and screaming. They did a spectacular job. MS is ready to take Linux on head-on now, armed with a patent portfolio, increasing amounts of TPM, and the IP social conflict setting a good stage for them to take down the last Unix.
On a side note- it appears Stallman was right again. Software Idea Patents have turned out to be a huge threat to FOSS, and it's likely to only get worse now that MS is ready to join the lawsuit game.
It's called FUD for a reason. (Score:3, Interesting)
It's called FUD: Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt [wikipedia.org].
This is a pretty classic example, actually; comment's like Ballmer's (yesterday), which hinted that people who used a non-Novell Linux would be sued, are its hallmarks. They're not tangible threats, and thus they're not things that can easily be defended against or refuted. They just serve to make the people in decision-making positions uneasy, and thus lead them down the path of least resist
Good move on both sides, for now ... (Score:5, Insightful)
The only concern I have is that Microsot continues further down the path and begins to create closed source applications or kernel modules specifically to run Microsoft apps. If they can swing this, the potential for degradation of the upward Linux momentum is high. John Dvorak of PC Magazine figures that Microsoft will develop GPL work-arounds [pcmag.com], and eventually begin releasing Linux apps.
What then? Mac servers for everyone?
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Why would you be at all concerned about that? As always, you can run what you'd like. If you don't like "MS Linux", you certainly don't have to use it. Once MS puts some effort into SUSE, I'd most definitely consider switching some of my 100% MS shop to SUSE for some back end stuff. I need interoperability, and simplicity, neither
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My fear was more on the standard distros including too much MS code that may have security issues. You are right that enterprises could just pick and choose what they want
Is a Linux kernel with MS shims and apps better than MS by itself? Probably
Re: Interoperability? (Score:5, Insightful)
Every time I see a statement like this it pisses me off. Linux is very inter operable with every mainstream OS except Windows. And you know what, Windows isn't inter operable with any other OS that exists. Not only that but the Linux community goes to outrageous efforts to make it inter operable with other OS's (reverse engineering) while Microsoft goes to extreme efforts to ensure no OS can inter operate with Windows.
Also why is it I find Linux far simpler than Windows. You set it up and it works forever. On rare occasions that there are problems you can find a definitive solution unlike Windows where you just reboot and pray because no one including Microsoft knows what's happening with most problems.
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Perhaps. There are still no effort on interoperability on Windows.
I decided, after 10 years on a Microsoft operating system I would dual boot XP Pro and a generic install of Ubuntu
Why ? So you never used Linux before (at least, not in the 10 last years), point taken.
Reinstalled XP Pro in about 40 minutes, including time spent downloading and installing drivers
Must be a pretty streamlined process then, w
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Mom and pop don't install Linux. Mom and pop don't install Windows. Linux is just as ready for them as Windows is (in fact, it's arguably superior in several categories). However, it does require vendor cooperation--just like W
Opposite experience (Score:4, Interesting)
Linux has always "just installed" on it. (First install on it was SuSE 8.0, upgrade several times up to openSUSE 10.1
Windows is a another story. At the begining the machine was my brother's (still a teenager at that time). I managed to install him Windows XP, after several weeks fiddling with BIOS settings trying to find that peculiar configuration on which the installer of Windows XP SP1 won't b0rk. Got windows running for a couple of months. Then a massive Windows crash fucked up the installation beyond any hope. Tried to find again 'that magic BIOS configuration' that allows the installer to run (Was it compatibility problems with ACPI ? Something else ?). I just gave up. My brother preferred to try using Linux until he upgraded to a newer machine better supported by Windows. (As a side note, once I did the initial installation / configuration of Linux, he managed to do well. Granted a tennager may be more apt to adapt himself to a new OS than the average Aunt-Tillie...)
When this machine became mine, I never bottered to try to install Windows again, and it has swallowed without complain all the Linux upgrades.
The next machine my brother had was a Athlon 64, K8T mobo, with 1 Go DDR, Radeon 9600XT I bought and assembled for Christmas. Athlon 64 were a very recent newcomer on the swiss market back then (we even had problems of shortages).
Linux installation was almost a kind of "put the CD in the drive and click 'Ok'" simplicity, even if the AMD64 version of SuSE 8.2 that I had in my posession was supposed to be experimental. Mostly no other complaint as of today (just having some problems to get AIGLX and Beryl working nice).
On the other hand, Windows SP1 installer kept b0rking. I took several month, a few BIOS upgrades (not searching for an update. waiting for a new release from the manufacturer) and then a newer Catalyst (same stuff : had to wait for a few new releases) before we had a stable Windows installation that would accept the whole 1Go RAM and not showing massive graphical corruption. And that with a plain 32-bit version. (I gave a few tries with Windows XP 64 in the begining but that wasn't a success either).
In the meantime my brother had once again to use linux.
The same difficulty installing Windows XP on Athlon 64 was experienced by several friends who were early adopter to jump into the 64 bits wagon. Even as of today, Windows can't boot correctly with 3Go RAM, the third DIMM rests usually out of the computer unless I need to borrow the computer to do some scientific calculation under Linux.
This two detailled examples and numerous other situations are the reason I *CAN'T* honestly consider the experience of installing Windows XP 'stellar'.
And Linux installation, on the other hand, has regulary proved to be very felxible, with possibility to install over network and even over internet (no need to have original media), to install on headless servers (SSH is my friend), etc... which is either hard or impossible to replicate with Windows.
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Today, if you start with XP Pro with SP2 slipstreamed (or just an XP w/SP2 disc from MS) you will have about 30 minutes and four reboots just to download updates (at broadband speeds) to bring you up to current. How long ago did you do this install?
Starting with SP1, or with no-SP and installing SP2, you end up with about six reboots and an hour downloading/installing. Mind you, I'm talking about a fairly
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Anyways, the Parent has a point, a very good one. I don't want to reinstall wi
Re: Interoperability? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think he meant interoperability between operating systems, but rather applications and services. Active Directory integrates seamlessly with Exchange, Group Policy, DNS, all forms of ACLs, and allows easy authentication of Windows users and computers. Exchange connects and works great with Outlook and offers a feature set not yet matched by any open source solution. MS Office applications can simply and quickly communicate and transfer information back and forth. -- The significant thing is that it all just works together.
Also why is it I find Linux far simpler than Windows. You set it up and it works forever.
I know this is Slashdot, and the same discussions are re-hashed in every article about Linux, but this kind of broad sweeping statement needs to DIE.
Linux is not simpler than Windows. You don't simply push a button and suddenly everything works. I just installed Ubuntu on my laptop and had to fight a small war to get accelerated graphics working. I had to change the wireless network stuff so it used ndiswrapper instead of whatever it was the installer wanted to use to prevent it from constantly dropping connections.
I'm tired of giving examples just to have them shot down by people who think everybody is a hardware expert, has the contents of
you just reboot and pray
Funny, but I find myself doing this very thing with Linux (what's broken? Is it GDM, Gnome, Nautilus? Did one of the services break? Which one? Ah, screw it, just reboot.)
Re: Interoperability? (Score:4, Insightful)
That's because they're all owned and marketed by Microsoft. I suppose that would be more intraoperability as opposed to interoperability.
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click system
click administration
click synaptic package manager
(this is the place where everything on your computer is managed. Think of it like "Add/Remove Programs" in Windows Control Panel)
click settings
click repositories
make sure all the checkboxes are checked and click apply. This only needs to be done once.
click reload
search for nvidia-glx
click install
click apply
there you go. No terminals, no editing configuration files, all in a nice gui form, in a central management place wh
Re:Are you trying to be funny? (Score:5, Interesting)
My wife hates it when I debug her computer problems just by telling her to do X, and don't explain why. The sense of being looked down-upon is what most people hate to feel. That's why she will rarely ever come to me for computer help, until she absolutely needs it. Or worse yet, she'll just give up on it entirely. You'd be surprised how common an attitude that is with many users.
As someone who specialized in Usability for my Master's, I can honestly say that it would help tremendously if all software engineers were forced to watch usability studies involving normal computer users interacting with software. Or better yet, participating in such studies and/or tutoring such folks. You will quickly realize how attitudes like yours need to change, lest you continue to alienate people even more and send them running to easier-to-use (but less secure/powerful/etc.) alternatives.
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I spent my entire yesterday-evening fixing my neighbours computer. She complained that it was "running very slowly". It's a XP-machine, an
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Yes they are. Linux does not suffer from that crap. OS X does not suffer from that crap. Every single computer I have been asked to "fix" has been a Windows-machine that has been filled with adware and other assorted crap. And I DO know people who use Linux (some of those Linux-users could be described as "joe Sixpack") and OS X. They don't seem to suffer from these issues. These problems are 100% focused on Windows.
"
Nope (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, Novell claims that the patent issue is not an important part of the deal, but I bet they use it as a selling point.
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That's just silly - you don't need to use the GPL for your applications - only for other people applications that are already licenced that way. Even Halliburton have been selling commercial software that runs on linux for several years.
I think PC Magazine have to go out and buy a better keyboard for cats to walk over and generate articles - that Dvorak one doesn't seem to be working very well.
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Actually this whole deal is a GPL workaround. Not exactly a violation (that's difficult to prove), but certainly a workaround. As Kurt Pfeifle puts it:
Novell's FAQ says, they worked out the details "with the principles and obligations of the GPL in mind". Right...., riiiiiight! Yes, with the "GPL principles in mind" -- but not in order to advance these. Rather in order to work around th
The modern value of 30 silver coins... (Score:5, Funny)
Fishy.. (Score:5, Funny)
And its not the corporate sushi bar, or koi pond.
Or that nasty intern on the fourth floor.
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I hope people at Novell understand this. Since it is evident that FUD tactics cannot be applied by MS for open source products, they have decided to give their "EEE" startegy a try.
Lets see whats there in store for Novell and for open source community.
Good or bad a chapter worth learning is pending i guess ...:)
Its' Not a Patent Deal. (Score:4, Interesting)
Read the press release, it is not a patent deal, that would put them in violation of the GPL. Instead it is a conenant not to sue.
So if I understand correctly. Microsoft is admitting that their software violates some of Novell's patents.
However, instead of protecting themselves and their customers by doing a cross licensing deal with Novell, Microsoft is keeping themselves and their customers at risk by entering into a non binding revocable 'covenant ' instead.
I wonder how well this will sit Microsoft's shareholders knowing that this risk exists and it is not being addressed permanently when such an option exists.
Re:Its' Not a Patent Deal. (Score:5, Interesting)
The companies are paying each other for covenants not to sue. It's there in black and white. I don't see that this is any different from a license, and I don't see that a judge would be swayed that a covenant in this context is any different from a license.
It still sounds like a GPL violation to me. Now, we have to watch what FSF does. They own the C library that literally every program on Novell Linux uses. They have a reasonably strong case to enjoin Novell from distributing it, which would kill SuSE entirely. They have Red Hat to pay for the lawsuit.
Bruce
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Re:Its' Not a Patent Deal. (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, but that's not the only contract in this picture. The most important one is a contract between Novell and Microsoft in which they agree to make these covenants to each other's customers. The full details of that contract are not public knowledge but are certainly discoverable.
Certainly there is clear documented intent to structure the deal as covenants rather than a license with the sole intent of circumventing the GPL. Now, you can show that to a judge and make a pretty good case that the companies are licensing each other and going through circumlocutions with covenants with the sole intent of welshing out of a license's obligations. Then, you ask the judge to consider the result for what it really is.
Bruce
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Or you will repeat this mantra just because it is only truly bad thing you can say about this deal (except of course part that you simply don't like it)?
Sorry, no offence, but it feels like wishful thinking.
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There is no such thing as a patent deal (Score:2)
This does not have to put Novell in violation of GPL, for multiple reasons:
1)Novell owns IP that has nothing to do with Linux.
2)Even if some code is in Linux, and available under GPL, if Linux are the copyright holders of the code, then they can also release it under different lisences too.
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I can't yet see why you believe this would be germane. Perhaps you could elaborate.
2)Even if some code is in Linux, and available under GPL, if Linux are the copyright holders of the code, then they can also release it under different lisences too.
It sounds almost as if you think Linux is a company that owns the copyright. The number of copyright holders is a rather large number. I think they are just barely able to make changes in the letter but not the
Novell defends it's move ... (Score:5, Informative)
"Under the patent cooperation agreement, Novell's customers receive directly from Microsoft a covenant not to sue. Novell does not receive a patent license or covenant not to sue from Microsoft, and we have not agreed with Microsoft to any condition that would contradict the conditions of the GPL. Our agreement does not affect the freedom that Novell or anyone else in the open source community, including developers, has under the GPL and does not impose any condition that would contradict the conditions of the GPL. Therefore, the agreement is fully compliant with the GPL,"
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It's clear that the two companies are paying each other for similar covenants that will extend to their customers. I guess they buy the theory that if you do something indirectly, you aren't as guilty as if you do it directly.
So, this is like a shakedown artist who does not propose to damage your business at all, and only threatens to
Bill + Steve ( extended version ) (Score:5, Funny)
Steve: "I've got an idea. Let's buy another version of Linux."
Bill: "Are you crazy? The SCO gambit didn't fool anybody."
Steve: "No, not like that. Instead of trying to fool a judge, we'll try to fool our customers."
Bill: "So? That's already company policy."
Steve: "Yes, but we'll release our own version. We tell the public that we're joining the Linux bandwagon, and with our marketing clout, it will soon become the dominant version on the market. Then when the public is convinced that MS-Linux IS Linux, we make gradual changes to turn it into an unusable bloated wreck. Linux will be finished!"
Bill: "No way! Remember, Steve, I used to write software. No self-respecting programmer would deliberately wreck an OS. Where are we going to get a bunch of programmers to do that?"
Steve: "We have all the guys who wrote Vista. I think they could do it."
( Steve exits )
( 10 minutes later, Steve returns, slamming the door quickly behind him. He looks like he has seen a ghost )
Bill: "So, how did it go?
Steve: ( shaking his head ) "Bad, bad, bad, bad, b-"
Bill: Get a grip! What happened?
Steve: "They won't do it...I mean they'll do it, but they want to do it well! They won't wreck it."
Bill: "You explained the plan to them?"
Steve: "Yes, very clearly. Twice. But they just started chanting. One word, over and over and over and over and over and ov-
( Bill picks up a chair, bashes Steve over the head with it. )
Steve: "Wh..? Uh..thanks...I needed that."
( Bill puts down the chair, walks to the door )
Steve: "Nooo! Please don't op-"
( Bill opens the door. From down the hall a chorus of voices can be heard. )
Voices: "-ux! Linux! Linux! Linux! Linux! Linux! Lin-"
( Bill slams the door )
Bill: "That's bad."
Steve: "It's worse. They now refuse to work on Vista any more!"
Bill: "That's ok. We aren't going to support it for very long anyway."
Steve: "So what are we going to do?"
Bill: "I think I can still make the plan work. Listen: we'll let them produce a good version of Linux. We'll make it very good for servers."
Steve: "Suse? You mean we'll take over Novell?"
Bill: "Yes. That gives us a big step up to dominate the Linux market like you suggested. But instead of trying to convice the world that Linux is junk, we'll tell them that Linux is only for servers."
Steve: "But it will migrate to the desktop! We have to kill it!"
Bill: "No, we'll let the guys downstairs make it the way they want it. Keep it for nerds. Each update will be more and more technical. Let them gradually turn it into something that only a Linux pro can use."
Steve: "We're gonna pay them to write Gentoo?"
Listen to me (Score:3, Funny)
Please keep this in mind, and "Welcome to the world of tomorrow".
Tough crowd tonight (Score:3, Insightful)
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My bet (Score:5, Interesting)
All software sucks. (Score:2)
I'll not get into the reasons, but just remember; "the road to hell is paved with good intentions" is apt. Operating systems are no different. They are "software" too. With all the compromises and good intentions built in.
Ok, so if you want to use Windows and Linux, in the near future, it might be best to use Suse for the "Linux" side. So What?
Sounds more like a counter to "IBM+RedHat" than anything else.
So the "free" software supports the "closed, but popular Windows" sof
Muahahahaahaha History Repeats Itself (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if there will be a SuSE version of MS-Office, like the OSX version of MS-Office created out of the Microsoft-Apple deal?
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Well... (Score:5, Funny)
does anybody know what's happening with SLED? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've been wondering if the deal is intended to basically, persuade Novell that it doesn't need to be in the desktop space and to slow down the R&D in the desktop area. Perhaps MS actually got nervous when all the articles came out calling SLED10 the "Vista-killer"?
Having reviewed two desktop distros (Lin/freespire and SLED10) for publication lately and I'm working on getting FC6 running (for review? Don't know y
RTFA - it's obvious what is happening. (Score:5, Interesting)
Embrace and Extend (Score:5, Interesting)
Microsoft knows that no one ever got fired for buying IBM of Microsoft. IBM is pushing Linux and that doesn't help Microsoft. By providing a Microsoft-approved Linux, they can get a slice of the pie and out themselves into a position to do to Linux what they have tried to do with every other standard technology - embrace and extend it.
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firing offences (Score:2)
no one ever got fired for buying ... Microsoft
If, in fact, that is still true, I make it my sworn mission to set the precedent, by firing anyone under me who tries it. I can think of few greater proofs of incompetence.
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That's the idea. Embrace and extend Linux in order to make it useful for mixed platform environments. Sounds like everybody wins, to me, except for poor ol' Red Hat. But, Red Hat has made more bad strategic moves than I can count, so I won't be shedding any tears for them.
I can see it now... COM objects for parts of Linux... complete file system interoperability... oooh... maybe even a coherent desktop platform! I know that it'll be years away, but now I'll start to more serious
I'm disabling automatic updates NOW! (Score:5, Insightful)
I will no longer be doing any updates to any of the Suse installations I support via Novell.
I'm actively seeking a replacement distro.
The poisoning of the well is under way, get out now while you still can.
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Desktop, Server, or Enterprise?
Ubuntu, BSD, or Red Hat.
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I will no longer be doing any updates to any of the Suse installations I support via Novell.
I'm actively seeking a replacement distro.
The poisoning of the well is under way, get out now while you still can.
You're a sorry picture, you know that?
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I counted the use of the word "patent" 16 times in Microsoft's press release. [microsoft.com] Draw your own conclusion.
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So is vote rigging. That does not mean that everybody has to accept abuse of either the patent system or the electoral system.
This latest attempt to extend market control using patent based innuendo to partition the Linux market is abuse by a monopolist, pure and simple. You can roll over and play dead if you wish to, but some of us have no intention of doing so.
Goodbye Novell (Score:2, Insightful)
Mod parent Troll (Score:3, Informative)
Heh. Nice troll. You really think Microsoft had to pay $380 million for Suse's source code? If that's what happened then Ron Hovsepian must be have been doubled over laughing all week.
P.S. Yes folks, both YaST and AppArmor are GPL.
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OIN? (Score:3, Interesting)
Thus if Microsoft sues someone for using one of those protected open source projects than OIN sues back.
This brings up two interesting questions. First, since Novell is a member of OIN would they be considered partial owners of these patents and thus in violation of this agreement if OIN sues MS? (I suspect not).
Second. What are the state of OIN's current patents? From the site it looks like OIN itself owns the patents (so they shouldn't lose any defensive power) but my strong suspicion is that Novell wouldn't be allowed to transfer any new patents to OIN since they could be potentially be used to sue MS (and thus in violation of this agreement).
Does anyone know more about these issues and how this agreement might affect OIN?
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Again, I don't think that Novell can withdraw those patents or that the patents would be covered by Novell's agreement with MS but it is still an interesting twist.
Fedora Will Never Compromise (Score:4, Interesting)
As long as I work on the Fedora Project, Fedora will never compromise on the essential liberties of FOSS nor will it betray the community. But the price of liberty is not free, nor is it comfortable. And unfortunately, some "leaders" of our community [lwn.net] are willing to compromise liberty for short-term convenience. I am disgusted by people like this [lwn.net], and by Novell's betrayal of the community today.
Novell has effectively traded Long-Term Liberty for Short-Term Safety.
Red Hat supports causes that matter like providing the original seed money for Creative Commons [redhat.com]. Or being a key partner in the anti-software patent movement [lwn.net] during the miraculous last-minute turnaround at the European Parliament last year. I am proud to be part of an organization that demonstrates such moral and ethical commitment.
But ultimately, Red Hat cannot change the world alone. That is why the Fedora Project exists. We want to enable the community to work together to improve FOSS at a rapid pace, in partnership with the large and consistent contributions from our engineers. We strongly believe that this is the most effective way for the entire FOSS movement to advance. Yes, we made some big mistakes in our community relationship earlier, but we are learning, and continue to improve at an ever accelerating pace.
For these reasons that I urge the FOSS community to support the Fedora Project through volunteer contributions of time and effort. Or if you lack time to contribute, please consider monetary donations toward any of the shared causes that we are fighting for.
http://wtogami.livejournal.com/11305.html [livejournal.com]
Please read more in the original version in this blog entry.
Warren Togami
Founder, Fedora Project
Software Engineer, Red Hat, Inc.
Novell was the alternative.. (Score:2)
I'm rolling out servers all over the globe, and they were going to be running SLES. This is because it was a solidly supported platform, partnered and certified with Dell, and clearly exhibited potential as a stable, longterm Linux solution.
Novell could have done without Microsoft indefinately.. Tell them to get their own Linux.
Many of the people who were in SUSE for Novell will be parting ways.
Three cheers for Debian and it's offspring!!
Huzzah! Updates
Foolish Novell... (Score:2)
ttyl
Farrell
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
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"...If any of our code is found to infringe someone else's patents, we will try to find prior technology to invalidate the patents, rework the code to design around the infringement, or as a last resort remove the functionality..."
This is a nice admission of Novell to the fact that they will never pay anyone licensing fees for a patent. This is of course true for most large corporations, but they hardly ever go on record stating it this clearly.
Let's do the math... only $308 million (Score:3, Interesting)
My conspriracy theory.... (Score:3, Interesting)
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'Cause if it's a protest to bring attention to the total failure of tags to accomplish anything useful -- I'm all for it. The only tags anyone puts on a story anymore are
-obvious indicators of the topic ("microsoft", "australia")
-contradictions ("fud" tag AND "notfud" tag, or "yes" AND "no" tag)
-buzzwords related to the subject ("bigbrother")
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if you still don't get it, you need to just turn around, head right back out the way you came in and leave your geek membership card with the doorman on your way out.
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Evil Dead, Army of Darkness, the main character, Ash, who had been battling the dead for two previous movies, encounters another 'deadite' (as it is called in this sequel) which screemns and such and then falls down apparently dead after ash shoots her/it. Next as some of the noobs to the dead's tactics start to approach the body, Ash warns, "It's a trap. Get an axe."
Of course it is a trap, as 'it' gets back up and is finally put more out of its misery.
So 'it's a trap' is a warining that a perceived vic
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If I put on my worst case hat, MS extends SUSE by using it's lisence for things such as MP3 encoders and patents such as it's WMA and WMV formats and include them in SUSE along with IE and Outlook Express. These additions will not be open source. For those with trouble installing things such as the Lame encoder or other codecs to view online content, this could be a no-brainer install. Expect it to only install alongside Windows. (not
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Wake up and smell !$#$%#$% reality. Deal is just about not sue each other, and Microsoft PAYS Novell about patents - yeah, that's right, Microsoft licenses them. And also deal is about OpenXML, SAMBA and other technologies which is for a sake of interoperability with Windows. Microsoft will help develop code for that, of course, most of it is GPL licensed.
It just feels like - "get away from
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Bruce
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Bruce
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or visa versa (Score:2)
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Re:NTFS support (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:ibm and redhat (Score:4, Insightful)
This is about patents; IBM LOVES patents, much more than they like Linux.
Anyone who counts on IBM is a fool, and has forgotten that before microsoft was "M$", IBM was the big evil. It's much, much more likely that IBM will return to their old ways than it is that they'll fight a patent war against MS.