Example of Novell's Not-So-Rising Linux Business (Sales Cannibalisation)
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-04-15 13:57:40 UTC
- Modified: 2008-04-15 13:57:40 UTC
The other day we mentioned -- however briefly -- that Novell can
inflate sales figures using all sorts of artificial means. They deceive the viewer, but the bottom line remains unchanged.
Here is yet another good example of the thing we spoke about just days ago. We used OES as an example of 'legacy revenue' suddenly counting as "Linux revenue". Have a look at
this new article.
Netware is to be shown the door for OES2
[...]
OES1 was released in 2005 and ported some technology that ran on Novell’s Netware operating system to SUSE Linux.
In this case you see revenue cannibalisation, which isn't precisely the same thing as massaging figures -- something that even
Novell has admitted doing.
Recipe for pseudo renaissance:
- Rename Y, the existing product target, X
- Claim that growth strategy is X
- Move products from Y to X, then claim great growth of new strategy
- ...
- Profit!
Now, if only that profit was real. Microsoft seems to
enjoy this newly-found cash cow the most, for it has no spendings (development and staffing are Novell's role). Microsoft has only
imaginary intellectual monopolies that require not a single line of code.
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