09.15.10
Novell Announces More Proprietary Software, Promises It Reduces Lock-in
Summary: Novell® Cloud Manager is just another example of Novell lock-in pretending to be the opposite of lock-in
In a new press release (see one mirror among many) Novell announces proprietary software which is intended to manage Fog Computing. CRN’s headline says that “Novell Promises No More Private Cloud Lock-In With Cloud Manager” and there is a lot more coverage such as:
- Novell Releases Cloud Manager
- Novell Aims to Manage Private Clouds
- Novell Cloud Manager Offers On-Demand Workload Provisioning
- Novell Looks to Solve Private Cloud Vendor Lock-in
- Novell Unveils Cloud Manager
- Novell Unveils Cloud Manager
- Novell Unveils Cloud Manager – Analyst Blog
- Novell joins crowded cloud platform market
- Open Clouds: Tilting at Windmills?
- Novell introduces Cloud Manager
- Novell launches cloud management for private cloud
- Novell launches cloud management for private cloud
- Novell intros cloud management platform
- Novell punts cloud control tool
Will the clouds save Novell in a way that Linux has not yet done? The company certainly hopes so. Today, the company is kicking out its Cloud Manager tool, which has been under development for more than a year.
How is reliance on proprietary software from a company which is allegedly being sold [1, 2] actually a reducer of lock-in? As we explained in the past, calling Fog Computing “private” under any situation is deceiving at best. Microsoft does that too. █