Microsoft wants to disconnect Novell
Microsoft and Novell share a similar dilemma and Novell is the weaker party in this relationship. Microsoft keeps 'stealing' some of the latter's legacy business and therefore it has control over Novell's destiny. There are some more reasons for Novell to be skeptical about Microsoft's intent, based on this analysis from IDG. James Gaskin opines:
Win2k came out a year and a half before Windows XP and bridged the gap between 9x and XP, reworking the kernel and linking tightly to Active Directory, enabling Microsoft to kick the last chance of a Novell NetWare revival out the door.
The numbers are staggering, considering the youth of the LAN industry. There are about 220,000 NetWare-based file servers connected to more than 2 million IBM-compatible PCs. By my calculations, that's one-fifteenth of the world's PC population.
The Lotus Development Corporation, which is known for its popular 1-2-3 spreadsheet, and Novell Inc. announced yesterday that they had tentatively agreed to a $1.5 billion merger in an effort to deliver a competitive blow to the Microsoft Corporation, the leader in personal computer software.
Reading-up time
--Ray Noorda, Novell
Comments
bobo
2008-11-09 18:33:15
It is easier to write FUD than careful and balanced analysis.
Roy Schestowitz
2008-11-09 19:32:16
Novell's Linux business only accounts for about 10% of the company's livelihood. It's still a small fraction. I recommend that you read this post.