Linux To Ring Up $35B By 2008
al@opensourcebrowser.com pastes "For a theoretically free operating system, Linux is -- and will continue to be -- a cash cow, a research firm said Wednesday as it predicted the OS will bring in more than $35 billion in revenues by 2008. Framingham, Mass.-based IDC said that overall revenue for servers, desktops, and packaged software running on Linux will reach $35.7 billion in the next four years."
So, where's my check? :)
You are not the customer.
GET THE FACTS!
See here
I saw $358 and was not surprised.
Wow. That's a lot of SCO licenses.
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So, not only are they counting the hardware that linux is running on as being "spent on linux," they're also counting existing hardware on which linux will be installed as being "spent" on linux as well.
Linux allows companies and individuals to use their money in other areas as well. This helps the economy overall. Cell phones on Linux will be cheaper, etc.
Also, companies can use that money in other areas, which I would assume would make them more productive.
A lot of this revenue is probably for services I would assume.
Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
Microsoft will earn $38 bn in 2005.
IBM received $23.2 bn in 2004.
How will those figures look in 2008?Yet the same people completely missed portable MP3 players, VOIP, etc etc
[sarcasm]
See! Windows is a lot cheaper than Linux - I mean, look how much money you have to spend on it!
Hm? How much would it cost to do the same thing with Windows? That's not the point - look! Shiny object!
[/sarcasm]
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
Well with that much money guess they don't need us writing free code anymore. They can afford to pay and spread the wealth.
Oh, wait a sec ... I meant the other way around.
The Raven
That's a nice number, Note that in comparison, Microsoft's 2004 revenue is about $36 billion. Apple is around $10 billion.
Why is anyone taking this seriously?
Help fight continental drift.
They're counting money for hardware that would have been spent anyway, regardless of what OS is running on it. It's like a car company taking credit for $35 billion spent on gas. In the end, if I don't buy a Honda, I'll buy a Ford and spend money on the gas regardless.
The only credible argument is that less will be spent on hardware supporting Linux than would be spent supporting other operating systems. Perhaps, that's an arguable point. But even then, the cost difference would not be $35 billion.
You know, the three step program.
1) Distribute OS for free
2) ???
3) Profit!
All successful companies follow it, and so far, it hasn't failed yet.
In other news, beating dead horses has reached an all time high.
Its a cash penguin damnit!
(\_/)
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(> <) to help him achieve world domination.
IBM said it first, but it's still true today.
You don't buy computer hardware because of its architecture. You buy it for the software it will run.
Linux runs just about any sort of application you could desire, it's free (as in speech, not as in beer), but businesses have to buy hardware and hire IT people to run it.
IBM used to give the software away for free to get people to buy the iron.
The more things change...
We must be alert to the danger that public policy could become captive to a scientific-technological elite. - Eisenhower
If you look at the kernel, pretty much all the core kernels are IBM/Redhat/Suse workers. GCC (which BSD users also use) have lots of redhat people in their lists. Lots of gnome hackers are paid to (project Utopia in Novell, Sun and Redhat, etc). Openoffice is not something that a couple of geeks can do in a weekend too. X.org has keith packards who did lots of work. KDE has several Suse/Mandrake/Lindows contributions. There're Freebsd hackers too, etc, etc etc..
OSs programmers probably won't see money, but instead companies hire people to work on their projects and they give you the code (lots of times those people are guys who were one of the main developers of the project and they got hired)
Which is fair. We give them our work, they got money, and they hire people to work on our projects and release the source of the modifications. We get better software, they get money.
Well, my point is, "is not true that they give absolutely nothing back". NTPL, good SMP support, latest improvements in the incoming GCC 4.0, Gnome usability, Gnome accesibility from the Sun guys, openoffice...there're LOTS of things that wouldn't have happened without those companies.