Do-No-Evil Saturday - Part IV: Dell, China, SCO, and Ron Hovsepian Interview
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2007-11-17 04:23:20 UTC
Modified: 2007-11-17 04:24:58 UTC
Think of this as somewhat of a spillover that contains various unrelated topics, and primarily news from the past week.
Novell in China
Articles about Dell, Microsoft and Novell continue to come. It's an interesting relationship that remains wrapped as somewhat of a mystery because of vague patent agreements. This new article is about China.
Novell and Dell announced to expand Linux offerings with the addition of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 installed on Dell OptiPlex 330 and 755 business desktop PCs in China. The systems will be available later this year.
Steve Ballmer at Microsoft can be quite eccentric at times — although in fairness he is apparently an unassuming family man who is a decent cove — and the mention of the operating system Linux makes him come over strange.
Watch the photo.
SCO
In case you wish to catch up with the latest on SCO (Novell is still very much involved), read this article.
In a similar case, Andreas Kuckartz, a German Linux advocate, had been publicly stating since 2003 that "SCO IP Licenses for Linux" amounted to little more than "protection money pricelists" and that SCO is "spreading rumors about copyright violations in Linux." Further, Kuckartz claimed that "The SCO Group Inc. is probably is involved in crimes such as stock manipulation and filing a fraudulent complaint against IBM."
Shares of Novell Inc. rose Monday after the Waltham, Mass., software maker received an upgrade to buy from neutral from UBS Investment Research.
The stock gained 3.7% to $7.06 in midday trades. Shares are now up almost 14% year-to-date. UBS also lifted the 12-month price target for the stock to $9 from $8.50.
There are a variety of new GroupWise videos. One is worth a quick mention, but there's nothing exciting to see here really.
There has not been much Novell buzz in the audio/video world recently. Bear in mind that such material often comes from fans and supporters. It's not the press.
All signs indicate that Microsoft wants to "exit" the XBox business (not brand), but it does not want to publicly admit this as it would alarm staff and shareholders
Considering the huge proportion of Web requests that come from LLM bots (more so this past year or two), statCounter may struggle to justify the operating costs
The corporate media is projecting or signalling its own dishonesty when it tells us that Microsoft is a very "valuable" company while the data shows Microsoft is also a "market leader" in layoffs
For those of us who turned down those propositions there was a struggle; we needed to justify not having skinnerboxes or "social" accounts in some site run by a private company
In a lot of ways, so-called 'Vibe Coding' is already considered vapourware or a passing fad promoted in the media by managers who try to justify mass layoffs, especially ridding companies of "very expensive" software engineers