A Linux company that
joined Microsoft and its FUD crusade has just acquired another. Scalix is, as far as I can recall, a proprietary solution built on top of GNU/Linux. It has had some big business contracts recently (notably Specsavers). The bad news is that it has just been
acquired by Xandros.
Xandros CEO Andy Typaldos told DesktopLinux.com that his Ottawa-based Linux desktop and server company has acquired privately owned open-source e-mail and calendaring provider Scalix under terms that were undisclosed.
Will this mean that Microsoft can collect 'tax' from even
more products that they do not own?
Update: Perhaps we posted this news earlier than we should have. Why? Because it gets worse. Xandros seems to have gotten itself
another little partnership which involves some very popular GPL-licensed software. It is software that comes 'in contact' with Windows.
Recall some old debates about
CrossOver Office,
virtualisation, and
Wine. Microsoft plays the patent game against all of these because such software is sometimes considered a "Windows killer". It obviates the need for Microsoft and gives access to some very powerful applications that otherwise require Microsoft dependencies, not just compatibility layers, APIs, or a hypervisor.
We could truly learn from UNIX here. Remember
Xenix? Microsoft tried to
ensure that each competitor which rivaled its own offering had some form of debt. This way, Microsoft extracts from anything bought, no matter who the seller is. Recall the
antitrust videos (hint: making profit from a competitor's revenue).
According to a
new article from Reuters, Microsoft will soon face the important decision in Europe. It will happen in September this year. As far as that ruling goes, Novell
did a lot of harm and did Microsoft a favour.
Comments
SubSónica
2007-07-18 09:10:14
gpl1
2007-07-18 09:49:55
But anyways, antitrust laws are supposed to take care of this sort of thing if it were Microsoft doing it...but instead it's the puppet Xandros doing it.
Also, remember that OpenXchange is excluded from the MS patent agreements with Novell (along with "Clone Products", OO.org, etc). It's under the GPL and a CC license. Something about this type of software must scare MS. The European Commission must have hit very close to home when it wanted interoperability with eg., Active Directory.
Roy Schestowitz
2007-07-18 10:00:07
Remember XenSource and Novell?
http://boycottnovell.com/2007/01/04/novell-could-buy-a-virtualisation-company/
Mind the comment from David.
> Also, remember that OpenXchange is excluded from the MS patent > agreements with Novell (along with “Clone Products”, OO.org, etc).
Just moments ago, stimulated by the breaking news from NoMachine and inspired by SubSónica, I posted an update that discusses "Clone Products". Hopefully the links will help. Your comment, which I read after I had issued the update, seems to reaffirm that very same view.
The use of proxies to make 'hostile' takeovers was discussed here several times in the past.
gpl1
2007-07-18 10:28:27
Roy Schestowitz
2007-07-18 11:00:44