Microsoft and Novell Work in Isolation to Weed Out Common Threat (Free Linux)
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-10-26 01:48:36 UTC
- Modified: 2007-10-26 01:48:36 UTC
Not much is new under the sun. Microsoft has a plan and Novell plays along happily, so long as it is
rewarded financially and offered
exclusive rights,
at the expense of all other Linux distributions.
Here is what Novell had to say about Microsoft's latest attempt to pretend to have
'opened up'.
"The majority of our customers have mixed-source environments, and they want their platform vendors to make things work together," said Roger Levy, senior vice president and general manager, Open Platform Solutions at Novell. "That's why we entered into a technical collaboration agreement with Microsoft. As a result, Novell is the first vendor to develop and ship technology that will allow a paravirtualized Windows Server 2008 to be hosted as a guest on the Xen hypervisor. Microsoft's decision to put the hypercall API under their Open Specifications Promise will make it even easier for Novell, our customers and partners, and the entire open source community to develop high-quality virtualization solutions that deliver true interoperability between Windows and Linux."
Did you spot that bit about "hypercall API" and "Open Specifications"? Guess what? As usual, it contains anti-GPL poison. It is the old trick that involved licensing, which is part of the plan to block those that do not comply with Microsoft's rules and assimilate.
This one particular issue was not entirely overlooked by
Joe Wilcox over at Microsoft Watch.
Microsoft's decision to license the hypercall API is the right call, although some pundits and competitors might balk at the licensing scheme.
If you think it's just this hypercall, then think again. Reuters has just published a
detailed list of Microsoft
patented protocols, which brings back to mind the terms of the agreement in Europe [
1,
2].
Microsoft will release interconnection information -- called protocols -- which rival servers need in order to work smoothly with Microsoft Windows desktops.
It is worth repeating the key argument that Microsoft wants to
charge money for standard protocols which is deliberately 'extended' with the sole intention of breaking compatibility. It wishes to be rewarded for abuse of standards and sabotage of intercommunication among servers.
Red Hat, which is watching this type of worrisome developments from afar,
responds with understandable concern.
While Red Hat welcomed Microsoft's recent decision to comply with the European Court of First Instance's antitrust ruling, Michael Cunningham, general counsel for Red Hat, stated that the company was still concerned about Microsoft's patent model.
Comments
Yuhong Bao
2007-12-16 03:44:38
Roy Schestowitz
2007-12-16 03:56:25
Yuhong Bao
2007-12-16 03:58:32
Yuhong Bao
2007-12-16 03:59:15
Yuhong Bao
2007-12-16 04:01:14
Roy Schestowitz
2007-12-16 04:48:13
"GPL poison" usually refers to a case where Microsoft deliberately makes its licence/software incompatible with the GNU GPL licence.
For hypercalls to be implemented, money needs to be paid. Again, you can probably see a separator between free and commercial. There is no good reason to do this, other than to betray Free software and ensure that only companies can deliver a particular solution.
Companies can be crushed, unlike communities. A year or two ago, Steve Ballmer made a statement that suggests he wants to 'encapsulate' GNU/Linux in a company such as Novell, which he can then crush (along with GNU/Linux).
It's severe enough to make a Free Linux secondary and incomparable with 'commercial-grade Linux' (not free). It's establishing a different situation for TCO comparisons.
That won't happen any time soon. Red Hat controls a majority of the server market. Novell got together with Microsoft only because it was desperate to get a dent in Red Hat's dominant position and dethrone it. Novell failed.
On the desktop, Ubuntu variants seem to have become very popular. Ubuntu's founder has openly described Microsoft's action as 'mafia techniques' and 'racketeering'. Needless to say, he is not willing to fall for this whole patent scam. The same goes for Mandriva.
Yuhong Bao
2007-12-16 04:51:49
Roy Schestowitz
2007-12-16 05:17:44
At a second glance, there's no cost involved, but there ought to be concerns about the pledge which is similar to OOXML's pledge that isn't sufficient to calm one's mind. Also mind an item where we explained this further. Paula's item explains why Red Hat might suffer and I haven't much hope for distributions like Debian in that regard. The notion of API licensing, patents, and promises not to sue should raise flags.