Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Microsoft no longer sees itself as simply a Windows company. One recent indication of this is their determination to buy the LAMP-centric (Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP) Yahoo! Instead of migrating all the tried and tested Yahoo! services over to a Windows server infrastructure, wouldn't it be simpler to establish Microsoft Linux through the acquisition of Novell? From a technology perspective Novell has two things to offer Microsoft - SUSE and Identity Management.
The U.S. Supreme Court has cleared
the way for Novell to continue their Wordperfect anti-trust suit against
Microsoft. Novell's argument is that anti-competitive operating system issues
caused their once mighty Wordperfect
suite to come tumbling down. This turn of fortune cost Novell to the tune of
$1 billion. The lawsuit Novell has filed against Microsoft is for damages
potentially in the order of $3 billion.
Whilst everyone agrees Microsoft is no saint the fact of the matter is Novell
and Wordperfect got beaten by aggressive pricing and marketing rather than
significant operating system level anti-competitive action. Microsoft gained
market share by aggressively dropping the price of Office to the point that it
was less than half that of its competitors. Rather than following suit and
matching dollar for dollar these moves Novell blindly followed their original
pricing structures inherited from when they purchased Wordperfect.
Novell's past business blunders aside, given Microsoft's recent showing in
the courts you would have to say its an even money bet that some financial
compensation arises from this case. Whether it is in the order of $3 billion is
unlikely but even a quarter of that amount is still a hefty sum. Does there come
a time when Microsoft executives look at Novell and decide it is cheaper to buy
them outright than cough up massive legal fees and reparations?
A few years ago the idea of Microsoft buying Novell would be dismissed on
anti-competitive grounds, but these days Microsoft faces stiff competition from
the likes of Red Hat, IBM, Sun, Oracle and of course Google. Even in recent
years the two companies have hardly been competing against each other. The controversial
agreement struck a few years ago between the two has seen them in
coopetition rather than competition without so much as a mumble from regulatory
bodies.
Given Novell's current financial position if a $3 billion payout were on the
cards it is not a huge leap to suggest that Microsoft simply buy them out rather
than buy their forgiveness. Whilst it would take more than $3 billion to buy the
company it would not take much more (relatively speaking) considering Novell has
a current market cap of $2.1
billion. Also from a shareholder's perspective an acquisition is much better
than a payout as their investment is preserved and built upon instead of going
to lawyers and the opposition.
From a technology perspective Novell has two things to offer Microsoft -
SUSE and Identity Management. Microsoft currently resell SUSE and have
a comparatively weak Identity Management business so both assets could be put to
good use. Netware, Novell's other technology is at end of life but this customer
base is currently having to weigh up a tricky migration to SUSE or Windows
Server. As a consequence owning both end points of this decision would not be
such a bad thing from a sales point of view.
Perhaps the biggest hurdle to get over is the general idea that Microsoft
cannot sell Linux because it invented Windows. Given the recent announcements at
Mix'08 in cloud computing and advertising it would seem that Microsoft no
longer sees itself as simply a Windows company. Arguably another indication of
this is their determination to buy the LAMP-centric (Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP)
Yahoo!. Instead of migrating all the tried and tested Yahoo services over to a
Windows server infrastructure, wouldn't it be simpler to establish Microsoft
Linux through the acquisition of Novell?
About David Harrison David Harrison is Director of StressFree Solutions Ltd, based in Auckland, New Zealand. His specialties include Java (J2EE, Hibernate, Stripes), PHP, Perl, CSS, Javascript (AJAX), XML/XSLT, usability, web services, database management (MySQL),and Linux administration (Red Hat, SUSE, Ubuntu). He blogs at http://www.stress-free.co.nz/.
Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
#6
Tim commented on 8 Apr 2008
David writes a moderately tongue in cheek blog posting and now he's 'naive, ignorant, deceptive, incompetent, a rabid pro Microsoft partisan apologist.... and a dupe'. Which is so funny to anyone who knows him - and / or has any sense of humor whatsoever.
'Some' people (cough W Anderson cough) are so in love with their own 'wisdom'. One wonders why they reserve it for the comments section - rather than enlightening us all with their own wise, enlightened, forthright, shrewd, impeccably researched, impartial and sincerely perceptive journalistic efforts..... Oh well, at least he gave me a laugh!
#5
db commented on 5 Apr 2008
Yahoo use FreeBSD and not much Linux. Plus the EU will never let this happen. This seems to be a poorly researched article.
#4
W. Anderson commented on 5 Apr 2008
It is not clear as to the understanding by David Harrison of the "real" issues regarding Novell suit against Microsoft for WordPerfect suppression, since he may be either too young to know matters at the time or is not a knowledgeable technologist.
Microsoft can indeed, and probably did restrict WordPerfect for working effectively on their Operating Systems (note: this has been proven in courts of law around the USA and internationally many time in last twenty years), so for the article author to claim there is no connection is being disingenuous at best and naive, ignorant or deceptive at worst.
Technology media must monitor their writers more closely for competence and absence of rabid partisanship, especially for all the Microsoft apologists and dupes that abound in the tech media industry.
Otherwise the overall credibility of technology reporting will (and is falling) fall to the level of the trash Inquirer magazine.
The biggest problem to that is regulatory. The author glossed over what would be the showstopper. Let's not forget that Novell has a significant customer base in Europe, and it is home to the SuSE division. I don't think the EC has a problem saying "no" to MS. That right there would probably stop the purchase worldwide. There is already a precedent for this: the attempted GE/Honeywell merger. The DOJ said yes, the EC said no, and that was enough to stop the merger based on GE's and Honeywell's assets in Europe.
Yes I forgot to consider the ZEN suite in the context of that argument which was really concentrating at the services level. That being said software management is a field in a state of flux right now with the onset of virtualisation and software as a service (SOA). Whilst the ZEN suite is arguably at the top of its class, Novell will need to ensure they maintain their competitiveness in a field that will see rapid evolution over the next few years.
#1
Alec Baldwin commented on 4 Apr 2008
I agree in part with your article, but I think Novell has a lot more to offer Microsoft than just SLES and Identity. The ZEN suite of technologies is superior to anything Microsoft can offer, and is already fully AD/Windows ready. So, three core areas of Novell's business are potentially attractive to Microsoft, add Platespin to that mix, and it gets even more interesting.
Tim wrote: David writes a moderately tongue in cheek blog posting and now he's 'naive, ignorant, deceptive, incompetent, a rabid pro Microsoft partisan apologist.... and a dupe'. Which is so funny to anyone who knows him - and / or has any sense of humor whatsoever.
'Some' people (cough W Anderson cough) are so in love with their own 'wisdom'. One wonders why they reserve it for the comments section - rather than enlightening us all with their own wise, enlightened, forthright, shrewd, impeccably researched, impartial and sincerely perceptive journalistic efforts..... Oh well, at least he gave me a laugh!
W. Anderson wrote: It is not clear as to the understanding by David Harrison of the "real" issues regarding Novell suit against Microsoft for WordPerfect suppression, since he may be either too young to know matters at the time or is not a knowledgeable technologist.
Microsoft can indeed, and probably did restrict WordPerfect for working effectively on their Operating Systems (note: this has been proven in courts of law around the USA and internationally many time in last twenty years), so for the article author to claim there is no connection is being disingenuous at best and naive, ignorant or deceptive at worst.
Technology media must monitor their writers more closely for competence and absence of rabid partisanship, especially for all the Microsoft apologists and dupes that abound in the tech media industry.
Otherwise the overall credibility of technology reporting will (and is falling) fall to the...
Joe Almeida wrote: The biggest problem to that is regulatory. The author glossed over what would be the showstopper. Let's not forget that Novell has a significant customer base in Europe, and it is home to the SuSE division. I don't think the EC has a problem saying "no" to MS. That right there would probably stop the purchase worldwide. There is already a precedent for this: the attempted GE/Honeywell merger. The DOJ said yes, the EC said no, and that was enough to stop the merger based on GE's and Honeywell's assets in Europe.
David Harrison wrote: Yes I forgot to consider the ZEN suite in the context of that argument which was really concentrating at the services level. That being said software management is a field in a state of flux right now with the onset of virtualisation and software as a service (SOA). Whilst the ZEN suite is arguably at the top of its class, Novell will need to ensure they maintain their competitiveness in a field that will see rapid evolution over the next few years.
Alec Baldwin wrote: I agree in part with your article, but I think Novell has a lot more to offer Microsoft than just SLES and Identity. The ZEN suite of technologies is superior to anything Microsoft can offer, and is already fully AD/Windows ready. So, three core areas of Novell's business are potentially attractive to Microsoft, add Platespin to that mix, and it gets even more interesting.
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