Microsoft on track to global Linux tax?
Summary: Microsoft's Linux internment and Microsoft Linux (SUSE) in the news; a little bit about GroupWise too
MICROSOFT has been creating its own internment pen for GNU/Linux users and it is looking to hire a mole to handle operations and lure some innocent sheep in.
As Microsoft boosters
put it, Microsoft has Red Hat customers in sight. Microsoft already taxes Red Hat Linux (servers) at
Amazon and now on its own turf it is trying to take this extortion further. Aiding Microsoft's efforts
we have had SUSE for a while, but fortunately Dell is
moving away from that (although not to the right system, feeding Oracle instead). From a new page:
How Dell Migrated from SUSE Linux to Oracle Linux
Switching the underlying operating system on a single server is not trivial. Neither is dealing with the related conversion and compatibility issues. Imagine what's involved in switching the operating system on thousands of servers spread globally across an enterprise, like Dell just did.
The good news here is that Dell itself won't pay Microsoft tax (for its own systems), but at the same time
Dell is actively promoting Microsoft-taxed Linux for OEMs solution, which troubles us a bit. It's a
signed deal which has the VAR Guy
arguing about SUSE Studio:
Dell Servers Embrace SUSE Linux, But SUSE Studio Is Real Story
[...]
No doubt, Dell has relationships with multiple Linux distributions — including SUSE, Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Canonical Ubuntu. But SUSE apparently is the “first Linux vendor” in the Dell OEM Technology Partner program.
Sort of makes you wonder: Is something deeper brewing between Dell and SUSE? Hmmm…
This is just another reason to actually avoid Dell, but Joe Brockmeier, the former Novell employee, is
promoting this. VAR Guy, who has also been close to Novell over the years, goes ahead and
promotes GroupWise, which sane Web sites say
nobody cares about anymore (and they are right). To quote:
No One Cares That Novell Has A New Version of GroupWise
Today Novell released its 2012 version of its email software GroupWise, and the announcement was greeted by most with a big yawn. GroupWise? Seems so last century. (Actually, the last updates to the software were for version 8 back in 2008-2010.) According to one analyst, "GroupWise has 10,000 customers and is used by 47 of the 50 US state governments." It has been a distant third to Exchange and Lotus Notes for a while, and many GroupWise customers have switched over to Google Apps in the past several years.
GroupWise is proprietary and it distracts from Free/Open Source options that work equally well or better. GroupWise -- like SUSE -- is a solution in search of a problem, much like
OpenSUSE when it looks for other people's work again (trying to ape Linux Mint in this case). SUSE over the past 5+ years has been just a product for Microsoft to tax GNU/Linux through. It lacks technical merit/advantage and
the latest release of OpenSUSE -- as put in this new review -- "was released too early. Period." Boycott Novell and boycott SUSE.
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