Brainshare Reports: NLD 10, Novell's Linux Switch
An anonymous reader submits "Computer World has an article about Novell Linux Desktop 10, which was just announced at Brainshare, that it plans to compete directly with Windows. One of the biggest things about NLD 10 is that it will have the desktop search engine Beagle as a feature." Also from Brainshare, Joe Barr writes on NewsForge about the significance of Novell's ongoing (multi-year) transition to Linux for all of its 6,000 desktops. Consultants and software sellers of all stripes won't soon run out of TCO arguments for the products they want to push, but Novell claims to have saved $900,000 last year in Microsoft license fees alone.
and already the site is 404
First ever second post. :)
They only took out two Microsoft licenses?
Novell Linux Desktop 10?
When did the nine previous versions come out?
Already 404? Sometimes, even though the OS is Linux, the server is still kleenex.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
Linkage to my comment in the Ubuntu news topic, which very much applies to Novell too: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=143486&cid=120 28361
The Peanut Gallery, Ubergeek, Biblically Sober
NCAAbbs.com: Thousands of fans, Hundreds of teams, Just one place
...those NAZI bastards. I would not be allowed to starve my dog to death, but a precious young woman is OK?
Now if all of you just rush to buy shares of Novell, I can finally sell mine. Thanks in advance.
This way to the egress...
Y'see, the point of "total" is that you're not looking at individual costs "alone"...
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
If I know anything about newbies to linux, practically still being one myself, people wonder where their programs are. Here's an example of what search will do: "Okay, so let's try making a document... it says to use oowriter.... Now where's that at? Bah, this file structure makes no sense! Let's use search!" *shows oowriter in /usr/bin*
"/usr/bin/? How am I supposed to remember that? I'm moving it. /programs/oowriter/oowriter!"
Why stop at 10 why not release at 100 or 1000. While your at it tack on a "turbo" or "advanced" moniker.
Can anyone explain to me this hype of meta-data searching. I for one do not understand the benefits of it one bit. When I saw the Microsoft demonstration video of WinFS it did not seem revolutionary or impressive. I don't understand why we would need beagle either. And if beagle every does take off will it run on other Linux distributions.
Personally I just store my files in My Documents folder and directory on Windows Xp and Linux respectfully; I have no need for a fancy search and when I do, find and Window's Find are adequate.
Trying to make feature out of paying less to your direct competitor last year.
Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
What truth?
There is no dupe
Is this a successor to SUSE 9.3?
that it plans to compete directly with Windows.
The funny thing about this was that in the past and at last year's Brainshare, Novell had stated that they had no intention of competing directly against Windows. They even insinuated that attempting such competition was madness.
By the way. Joe Barr reported yesterday that SuSE 9.3 Professional will also include Beagle. Not that you can't download Beagle anyway.
Any one else think naming your premium feature the same as the worst virus for Windows perhaps not a great marketing move?
One of the biggest things about NLD 10 is that it will have the desktop search engine Beagle as a feature.
Microsoft does not stand a chance!!
Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
1) Microsoft will deny it exists, because it can't possibly exist
2) Have a survey done by some 90% owned independant group that find it to be lacking in all aspects when compared to windows
3) Buy them out.
4) Use underhanded tactics to remove it.
5) All of the above (So how do 3 and 4 both happen you say?)
6) Would you prefere a In SOVIET or Does it run on.. instead.
"I may be full of crap about this game, and I may be wrong, and that's fine." -Jack Thompson
...the lists are active (and questions actually get answered authoritatively), the IRC channel is lively, and the development is in the open. They've even got the logs of the team meetings on line.
PLUG: I'm working on a Ruby wrapper for Evolution. Good times!
The Army reading list
its about time that someone made such a claim. Of course will Novell be successful? Whos to say. They may they may not.
I will say that Suse is a nice build of OS, and if they can properly provide a range of products, both server and workstation, then it might be as successful as RH.
"God of Rock, thank you for this chance to kick ass. "
I did not read the article,
but if Microsoft says it switch to Microsoft products and saves money, will it be news?
have a fun time in hell with him Anita
I guess no more argument as to which distro is best.
I don't care who you are, that's fucking funny.
It's true too.
Larry.
The insensitive cable guy.
They've got a bone to pick with MS. Remember how NT crushed Netware back in the mid to late 90's. Seems Novell wants another hurtin'
;)
Let's all hope they do a little better this time around... for hope is eternal
I love Novell Linux Desktop 9
osdir screenshots
Novell has the resources and expertise to make Linux a truly viable desktop OS for Joe Corporate User. That all said, I'm not sure they will be able to out-market Microsoft enough to make a dent - even with their new management that's come in over the last couple of years, Novell remains the prototypical company that would open up a sushi bar, and advertise it with a sign saying:
"Cold Raw Dead Fish for Sale!"
(and I'm a Novell Partner- i like Novell!)
I've seen their new Open Enterprise Server (the SuSE/NetWare fusion) and it's tremendously impressive - I spent time in a class on it last week. The current NLD (based on SuSE 9.0) is a good solid desktop, which I run on one of my Dell boxes. Somebody out there is going to make Linux into a truly viable desktop player, and it'll probably be Novell in spite of their poor marketing skills.
I just hope that NLD doesn't turn out to be the "only" shot at a widespread penetration of the corporate desktop for Linux in general. Linux is doing just fine on the back end, but on the desktop right now the only real "alternative" is Apple - we need a good Linux-based Third Option to really start nibbling away at Windows.
-- Josh Turiel
"2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
I'll trade you my 100 shares of SCOX.
....to cut and paste that into my newly opened window browser.
Lazy cunt!
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
It will be interesting to see what obstacles Novell encounters compared to IBM. The last thing I heard about IBM's transistion was that they are rewriting all their internal web applications to no longer require Internet Explorer.
Great, another annoying dog asking me what I want to search for.
Often, these things are still easier in the GUI. Is "oowrite" always in that /usr/bin whatever folder mentioned in the parent? Then you can go to the CLI and start it in the time it takes you to fish around and search all over the screen for menus and icons that are might not even be in the same place from bootup to bootup, and will certainly never been in the same place from different machine to different machine.
"But my point was that most of the time, I run synaptic, install a package, then hit the gnome Applications menu and find it right away."
What if you have 60 or so applications? Or synaptic is in a sub menu? You'll have a lot of squinting and hunting to do. Chances are, the CLI user will have started synaptic and will be deep into use of it while you are still hunting for the name of it in the GUI. And when you install more apps, likely synaptic will move to another place in the menu list if it is alphabetized.
There is a lot of improvement to be made to the GUI. Nothing, not even Mac OS X has approached the ease of use of an ancient DOS menu utility I last saw 12 years ago. It came on right after bootup, and you pressed an alphabetic letter to start an app. Sure, the environment left something to be desired in other ways, but the ease of use in launching was unmatched, especially compared to cluttered and wildly inconsistent GUI desktops.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
Up to date, latest and greatest ones.
I don't care if they are bnaries, the important think would be that any Linux user could get hold of one.
With Novell, RH, Sun and IBM pushing for commercial Linux desktops we may get this more often thatn we currently do now.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
This is great news for Lucene, which is what's at the core of Beagle. More specifically, it is the port of Lucene (Java) to C# and .Net, which can be found at http://www.dotlucene.net/.
Simpy
One of these times, I want to get slashdotted, then turn around and 302 redirect back to slashdot. ;)
But only for slashdot referrers.
Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).
So it's linux 10?
since I'm using Linux/BSD/Mac, is called locate.
Yes, it's not integrated into the OS as Spotlight on the Mac will be, but it does a good job.
No fancy bloated technology for me.
"it plans to compete directly with Windows."
The line for products to compete with Windows forms in the back. Lotus Notes, Java, browser-based apps, and network computers are already in line. Desktop 10 will just have to wait its turn.
The list is barely active. There only a couple of posts per day with most of the questions going unanswered.
The latest version of Evolution that ships with the latest version of Novell Linux, SuSE 9.2 Professional, is Evolution 2.0.1.
Evolution 2.0.1 is a buggy version that fails to upgrade older message stores more often than not.
Has a cappy interface compared to 1.x versions.
Missing features that were available in 1.x
New features do not work or are not complete.
I wish Miguel would drop the Mono mess and come back to Evolution. It has turned to crap!
Saving a few people a few Google visits:
Beagle
Also interesting:
Beagle CVS repo.
Simpy
I am not against moving away from MS.
But how much time($$) was spent moving to Linux?
Was any training needed to move to Linux?
There is alot more than just license fees.
I wish I could legally get a job at that nursing home, I'd change her sheets every day, if you know what I mean!
and I just heard from a guy working for Blackberry that they're working on making the Blackberry Enterprise Server work on Novell Groupwise Linux boxes. Oh happy day, when I can dump Exchange :)
Thanks for talking the talk and walking the walk, Novell. IBM, when are you going to switch the corporate desktops?
This guy is way out there
So, they really think this Beagle will land?
When a dog is suffering or brain dead, we actually have humane laws that let you kill them mercifully and painlessly. I think letting Terri starve is cruel to, but the right answer no one is talking about.
How in the universe are the ancestors here on topic?
"Novell has the resources and expertise to make Linux a truly viable desktop OS for Joe Corporate User."
Uh... what desktop OS expertise does Novell bring to the table that SuSE didn't already have? The last _desktop_ OS Novell produced was Novel DOS 7. (Or was it 8?)
The main issue for corporate for Linux to "compete" with Windows is user authentication over the network, all the permissions things that Active Directory offers. LDAP stuff.
"Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
Did you really expect them to say that it was more expensive? The TCO calculations can be strongly influenced in either direction by carefully choosing what to measure, and, more importantly, what not to measure.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
Despite decades of the "desktop" and "folder" metaphor, most lusers are still too stupid (lazy, foolish, etc) to navigate their filesystems. Anything that doesn't show up in their last 4 opened documents in whatever applications they use might as well be lost.
Traditional file search isn't good enough since in addition to being too brain atrophied to navigate a file system, they also think that "Document 1" is a reasonable naming convention.
SuSe, which is aquired by Novell, is in version 9.x and this version 10 product is the continuation and merge of SuSe and Novell's Netware. As far as I know. So I would say it is justifiable marketspeak.
I applaud Novell for having the guts to try to tackle MicroSoft. But I think they have their work cut out for them.
Linux Standard Base
Last year, by not switching to another platform, Microsoft saved $13.78 Billion in Windows license fees alone.
Expand please... I'm a loyal SuSE user (I still use the lowercase 'u' dammit) so is Novell 10 derived from SuSE 9.2 or not? The article seems to imply that it is: "Several of the Linux Desktop 10 features -- including Beagle, F-Spot, Tomboy, an Evolution 2.2 plug in and the Mono developer tools -- will surface in SUSE Linux 9.3, which will be introduced in early April."
Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
Ahh, the joys of working for a moron..
after reading this to the CTO of our company..
cto:"ohh, only 6000 desktops eh??...That's not even a third of the population..."
me:"a third the population of what?..."
cto:"of Windows!"
me: *tries to hold back migraine* >_
Has Novell learned nothing from NetWare, DR DOS, UnixWare?
Always hated it, and I mean really hated it. Installed its own packages. Always seemed like a beta product. Great installation routine, but branded with all their own crap. So now you've got that monstrosity, coupled with Mono....
At any company time is money. It's impossible to switch a corporate desktop with no cost whatsoever. Even a competent SuSE person is going to spend at least a little time installing and setting up a desktop. Time spent on that is time not spend on other corporate work. Even 5 minutes per desktop is a lot when multiplied by 6,000. Hence it costs in terms of man-hours (i.e. productivity not used towards making the company money). And it directly costs money if that person's time is billable to a customer.
Developers: We can use your help.
"Cold Raw Dead Fish for Sale!"
They were bought out by apple's marketing division?
hawk
Too little too late?
As NLD 9 was derived from SUSE 9.2, NLD 10 will be derived from SUSE 9.3 (uppercase 'u')
you mean 'As NLD 9 was derived from SUSE 9.0'
And can locate search in files? ... for a specific search term?
Can it make use of meta data?
Can it help you search through all your documents, your email, your IM logs, your browser cache,
It can't? So what is your fucking point?
To show the world that you are such a 1337 hax0r that you can type locate in a terminal? To show how 1337 you are by calling something you don't understand bloat?
Seriously, this has been discussed so many times already and given half a brain it's actually quite easy to see how this kind of technology can be useful, I'm really getting tired of all these "but I'm using locate" trolls.
uli@hobel:~$ locate brain
uli@hobel:~$
but it appears to me that 2005 -- finally -- is going to be the year of the Linux desktop's arrival in corporate America.
Weren't people just talking about how 2004 was the year of the Linux desktop? Odd how people have to be so dramatic about small steps in the right direction...
Sometimes you've gotta roll the hard six.
I use it at my laptop right now at work and its nice and easy enough for most people in my opinion. Combine Novell Linux Destop with Novell Open Enterprise and you have a managed enviroment. Heck, combine it with NX Server and you have a full fledged secure terminal server ready to put onto the net ready for outside access. Cant wait for version 10 since it probably will have most of the lessons learned from Novells migration in it.
Actually im doing just that now as a project at work.
Life is good!
HTTP/1.1 400
I know where my documents are and what they contain. Do people honestly have a problem with this? Or is this rather an attempt to integrate search portals, who sell their rankings for profit? If so, it's like hardwiring www.msn.com as the home page of Internet Explorer--good for profiteers, not good for the end user. Why are so many intelligent IT people backing these stupid bandwagons? Perhaps they really pine for a relational file system and this is a half-baked interim measure.
No, if Apple opened a sushi bar, they would advertise with:
"Look at how white and shiny our rice is!"
On Windows, Office and MS SQL licensing and support fees. Now for someone from the outside, who Novell will charge through the nose by the hour for support, I bet "savings" will be a lot less substantial.
So you know everything in your files, your mails, your IM conversations, etc.?
Wow, you don't seem to use your computer for much work besides surfing pron, do you?
Is it so hard to imagine that there are people out there with thousands of files, emails, etc, that would love to be able to search through them? Are you really unable to see that this might be useful to them?
For those who don't know what Beagle is (like me) here is a link and some demos.
MOD THE CHILD UP!
(a) How do you know he wasn't talking about a $2,000 mac? ... um... 1.42Ghz G4-based mac mini with no monitor, 256MB SDRAM, 32MB video card, 80GB HD, combo drive... aka, something equivalent to the PC I bought from parts a few years ago, for a similar price... :)
(b) For $600, you could get a
(c) For $2,000, you could get quite a bit more than a 2GHz Pentium; heck, you'd be hard-pressed to find a PC that costs that much these days. Maybe combined with a nice big monitor I guess.
(d) Have a nice day!
pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
I hope you're right. SuSE has always had one big pain in the ass, and that's SuSEConfig. If you go in and edit files manually, it screws things up. This wouldn't be a problem if YaST weren't such a pig to run and you didn't have to outwit it to get the configuration you want.
Novell needs to come up with a truly easy to use configuration interface that doesn't overwrite config files and recognizes hand editing.
Ie, it needs to interpret the config files for each managed service and support all features, and do so without being a pig and taking forever to load.
Basically, if they want people to use their GUI tools, they need to actually work, even if you hand edit the files.
If you need web hosting, you could do worse than here
Novell claims to have saved $900,000 last year in Microsoft license fees [because they installed Novell Linux Desktop]
:
Also
Microsoft claims to have saved $900,000 last year in Microsoft license fees [because they installed Microsoft Windows]
Looking at it from a business investment point of view, let's find the return on investment. Say it takes a cool $7.2 million to make this transition (6,000 employees spending 40 hours training/learning/downtime @ $30/hr = $7.2 million). Shaving $900K per year pays you back in 8 years ($900K * 8 = $7.2 mil), because those licensing costs they saved are recurring. Using the 'rule of 72' from investing, if we make our money back in 8 years, we're getting roughly 9% return on an investement. That's probably close to the ROI cut off of most businesses, and when you factor in the competitive advantages of
.... well, let's just say "You can pry my Longhorn DVDs from my cold, jobless fingers!"
1. not supporting a competitor
2. eating your own dog food and learning from it
3. being on the leading edge of change in the tech industry
sounds like Novell has made a pretty good move. Of course this business case is shot if the costs of transition go thru the roof, but if you do it intelligently (i.e. stepwise, like it sounds they are doing), its easily managed and should be a success. I wish they were hiring, though, because they seem like one of the few companies with a head on its shoulders about how to deal with opportunity and change in this brave new world of Free software. Of course, if my numbers don't convince you, just use common sense - most of the rest of the world is embracing GNU/Linux pretty strongly and if we don't
By the way. Joe Barr reported yesterday that SuSE 9.3 Professional will also include Beagle. Not that you can't download Beagle anyway.
The SUSE (remember that Novell has renamed the distro for no apparent reason) 9.3 flyers distributed at the CeBIT say so, as well. There's a list of new features, among them Linux 2.6.11, KDE 3.4, GNOME 2.10, XEN, Beagle, iPod support, "perfected" bluetooth support, PostgreSQL 8.0... and a strategy game called "Invasion". The last time I've seen a game presented as a great new feature was in that scary Windows ad with Steve Ballmer that's floating around the 'Net...
By the way, according to the dude at the Novell booth, they're going to turn SUSE into a cutting edge distro - when I asked if they wanted to compete with Fedora, he answered that Fedora should first try to catch up. Maybe SUSE will become interesting to those users who like to always have the newest stuff. OTOH Fedora feels a lot cleaner then SuSE 9.0 did - less distro-specificness.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
Now, When I hear Beagle in terms of computers, I tend to think of the Beagle virus (That the media idiotically called Bagel.... Apparently they never opened the virus with a HEX editor and found out that it created regestry entries under the name Beagle.... Hopefully the two aren't related....
Novell used to be pretty good about numbering. I think they had difficulties because of the way microsoft numbered their products and then they followed in the same pattern.
Exchange Server 4 was the first version of exchange. It replaced MSMail 3.x which was a completely different product.
Novell started kicking versions of ancillary products up their base os versions. ZEN 4 went to ZEN 6.5 and there were others that did this also.
What amazed me is that they didn't change it to match othe netware version (NLD 6.5/7.0).
eric
I wonder if this means Novell is any closer to releasing a Novell Netware Client for Linux? In our shop, lots of people use Fedora Core 1,2,3 - but everyone needs to have access to files on the Novell Netware LAN. Scripts that use NCPFS get us there, but it's kind of a hack (i.e. you need to change the script if we change the server, ...)
Releasing a full Novell Netware Client for Linux has been a planned thing for some time. Maybe NLD 10 will finally get us there?
Everytime I get a new machine at work I need to spend a little time setting it up. Doesn't matter if it is FreeBSD, Linux, or Ms Windows, I have to spend some time making it work like I like it.
Companies replace computers often. Generally every 2-3 years, though some go much longer. Companies upgrade Windows often, mixing Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000, and XP on the desktop is more pain than it is worth, so they standardize on one (or two), and every once in a while migrate everyone to the new one as the old OS looses support for new machines. Once again time is taken setting up those machines.
is not a problem if they add
Freshly Caught
1)Novell has a user base to transition to linux
2)Novell's certification program is the defacto model of IT certification programs and they still have the good reputation they built with it
3)Desktop aspect for corporate is same application over and over. Flexibility is NOT desireable. You want people doing their work. Novell has plenty of history selling into this market at the small corp level where managers want GOOD and CHEAP.
These managers know a bargain when they see it and will take the time to ask if the fish is fresh.
Or perhaps:
Eat differently
$900,000/6,000 is $150 per desktop, roughly the cost of a license to upgrade Windows for all 6,000 machines. So are they suggesting that all 6,000 desktops needed to be upgraded in a single year? Or are they including MSOffice costs? That doesn't make sense to me, as that article indicated that most of their workforce had already switched over to OOo -- so the numbers can't fairly include that.
Does it include Windows server licenses? IF so that $900,000 has little to do with the cost saving of moving desktops to Linux and more about moving the entire organization over, which makes the Newsforge and Slashdot headlines quite misleading. I have a feeling that figure meant by switching to their own software, Novell managed to save $900K from their software purchasing budget, and didn't take into account the costs that an outside organization would have to make.
But was anyone actually at the Brainshare session and would care to comment on this? I'd like to know a bit more about where these numbers came from.
501 Not Implemented
Uh... what desktop OS expertise does Novell bring to the table that SuSE didn't already have? The last _desktop_ OS Novell produced was Novel DOS 7. (Or was it 8?)
It's Enterprise experience, not desktop, that is the resource Novell is bringing to the corporate market.
GNOME vs KDE isn't the issue there, it's Enterprise directory services and the ability for Joe User's login account across 2000 computers to be removed the instant the HR department fires him.
It's Virtual Office, iPrint, iFile and the other corporate desktop user orientied services that they offer.
Buying SUSE and claiming they are saving money on software licenses!
;)
Perhaps i could save money on my Windows licenses by buying Microsoft
where you can only run the applications that come from your vendor, can't run third party programs without having to modify them to work with the distro. If you want a newer version of an app and your distro hasn't released a package of the app for their distribution, then u can either try installing from the official sources, including some extra steps that the distro would normally need to do such as adding icons to the programs menu that you now need to do yourself.
Windows has all this already. I wish linux would stop being treated like an embedded OS and instead be treated like an OS that windows is where there is one installer for all windows versions that doesn't need to be adjusted to work with them all, it just does. That's the main advantage windows has and one that I'd love it if linux had it.
I do remember when windows applications didn't have an uninstall program and you had to go in and delete all the files that were copied onto your hard drive including shortcuts. That's where linux is at. It needs to have the ability to install any program with any distro and be able to remove that program easily if necessary.
I do know that when compiling and installing from source, some programs have a removal feature as well which is great. So it's a start.
The packaging systems are just there to lock the users in, nothing more.
My Gawd WTF...
The whole post sounds like pebkac.
The point is that unlike common practice in packaging GNU/Linux programs, common practice in packaging Windows programs prevents pebkac.
What I'm assuming happened was you installed something without using a package management system.
Which package management system works on both Fedora-based distros and Debian-based distros? Or do you expect all distributors to use twice the space to ship .rpm and .deb packages?
But, as with Windows (or ANY operating system), if you don't use an installer the OS recognizes, there is a liklihood that no icons will be installed.
Here, the difference is that unlike for GNU/Linux, there is one well-known method for an installer to register itself with Windows.
The roman numeral adds greatly to the version.
Linux is doing just fine on the back end, but on the desktop right now the only real "alternative" is Apple - we need a good Linux-based Third Option to really start nibbling away at Windows.
The trouble is that few distributions have the balls to claim that that they are that good third option. "Linux" is too broad a thing, distributions need to define and differentiate themselves -- I'm glad to see Novell taking that step, and I hope more distributions will try to do the same.
Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
Will there be a free version too, or just something for 'paying customers' as is tradional for Novell.
Not slamming them, but if they also release a free version for us people at home would help in market penetration at the office...
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I'd say the total time ($$) spent and training needed was comparable to upgrading from Windows 98 to 2000, or 2000 to XP.
Some of the engineers here kept one box with Windows or dual boot. Because there's usually one or two things that Linux just hasn't got right yet. I myself am totally Microsoft Free. There was one time when I borrowed a Windows box from a colleague because I was too lazy to get my Linux box to do the job. I think it was an expense report or something.
Another thing that might muddle the training cost issue is the fact that we have tons of lab machines. Right now I have 9 boxes in my office, running SUSE Linux in various flavors. Seven of them have the Windows 98/2000 certificate stickers still on them, despite being wiped clean when I installed Linux. But that's only because I scavanged most of them from the surplus closet and the outdated testing machines rack. Due to the better performance of Linux over Windows, I can use older boxes for my developement lab machines. In past years when the manager would say, "We're making out our budget for the next year. How many Microsoft licenses are we going to need?" I would have had to count up my lab machines and give him a total. This time it was pretty easy. The total formal training needed for all those machines to switch from Windows to Linux was zero. And since the product I'm working on is Linux based, and part of the testing I do includes installation, the time spent "moving to Linux" is also zero.
I thought maybe I had more machines in my office than the average, but I went down the hall and asked some of the other engineers, and I'm barely even in the top half. Not to mention the testing rack outside my office with 32 easily identifiable boxes.
From what has been said, they both are already in the process of switching desktops..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
trying to be like these people:
Novell Public Service Announcement
Enjoy,
It's just the normal noises in here.
I guess with the inclusion of Mono with in NLD 10 we are going to see Microsoft take them to court over IP concerns. Wonder if Novell could handle a nice lawsuit from Redmond?
If they cant, Utah County is down another tech company sense SCO is all but defeated...
Shameless self plug. I've been working on a Lucene based OSS desktop search engine in pure java named Nariva http://nariva.sf.net/ that incorporates some additional Apache software projects to provide stuff like a XML-RPC interface to the engine.
One major difference here is that the various operating systems called GNU/Linux doesn't have a unified file manager. An app would have to install menu shortcuts for GNOME, KDE, XFCE, and possibly more, unlike Windows which has Explorer.exe on well over 95 percent of machines reading from the same Start Menu folder.
Oh, and on Debian, I can use alien to install RPMs. Not that it matters, since they're different operating systems. This is like complaining that Windows and Mac OS X don't use the same installer.
The difference is that Fedora on x86 and Debian on x86 have the same ABI, or nearly so. Mac OS X is less than perfectly relevant here because it's PowerPC only, and the vast majority of Fedora and Debian installations are on x86 architecture.
You are errant in treating "GNU/Linux" as a single operating system. It isn't. SuSe is a single OS, Red Hat is a single OS, Debian is a single OS, Gentoo is a single OS.
Arguably, Windows ME and Windows XP are separate operating systems even more than the different GNU/Linux systems are. Another way of looking at it: How would a company justify paying for server space to hold multiple distributions' binaries vs. server space to hold one set of binaries that works on Windows 98/ME and 2000/XP?
Just a theory...
- It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
Your grammar is too proper. It's, "Eat different".
They were bought out by apple's marketing division?
No, No, No... they were bought out by IBM's maketing division.... Get it right!!!!
Oh my gawd, they killed kenny's mod points!!!!
That is actually a complicated question. Most people assume that there are no training costs/issues with Microsoft upgrades, whether Office or the OS and that is just wrong.
At the companies I've been at, there were training issues and costs when going from Win2K/Win98 on the desktop to WinXP. There are also recurring costs with MS Office training, and major training costs associated with upgrading from Office 97 to Office 2003.
Saying that there are training costs when tranistioning from MS Office to OOo or from Windows to Linux usually doesn't take all that into account. There are training costs from MS to MS as well, and they aren't necessarily cheaper.
-Charles
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
That's a really funny skit. It kinda reminds me of the early days of the mac when we all hung on the every word of Steve Jobs ...
...
errr, but wait
-- "It's not stalking if you're married!" My Wife.
The gp makes a comment that is clearly intended to be funny. The gag, oft repeated, is that the server is slashdotted. That's all it says, if you actually fucking read it. I saw it modded flamebait, and queried. Then THAT got modded flamebait, the innocent query. Why didn't the mod just fucking post why he thought it was flamebait in response to my valid question? You know, given that it isn't, and you might only think that if the reference to Linux is taken as a flame. Which, uh, it isn't.
Here's praying the metamods tear these flamebait mods up.
I don't understand why any Novell owned PC would ever have had MS Office products on it. Surely WordPerfect and QuattroPro have been functional products all of these years. Since Novell had been for quite a while an opponent of MS desktop products, any employee who even submitted a purchase order with a MS Office product on it should have been fired on the spot.
If they had forgotten about WP and QP, they could have bought Lotus SmartSuites....
"Lack of technical competence coupled with the arrogance of power, as usual, leads to no good end."
Many Novell employees objected strongly when Novell moved from WordPerfect to MS Word. The reason it had to be done was that Novell's customers were pretty much all running Word and so Novell was not able to exchange documents with them. The automatic document conversion between the two just wasn't good enough.
You can do all that in Linux. That's the whole point of Novell's ZENWorks product.
should have been this.
"Now, Novell is in a unique situation. Since they own SuSE they don't have to pay SuSE license fees, so i'm sure that saves them a chunk of change, and they don't have to purchase service contracts because they're their own service facility."
I would not bet on that. Very often (don't know specifics about novell) Internal support vs external support to paying customers are not the same. Look at Cisco for example, they were broken in to and some of their source code stolen, what the point? They sell security solutions but outsource security.
Man, I so totally agree with you on that one. I've not used SuSE since 7.2, so I've no idea if its improved, but SuSEConfig was something I learned to hate. And why did Yast always insist on reconfiguring every dam component when all I did was update one tiny part of it.
In contrast, I really like Redhat's organisation of rc files. Everything under
I hope they won't base their marketing on that Beagle thing, as your average IT executive might be tempted to think that a software at version 0.0.7 is probably crap (no matter how polished it might be in reality, I don't use Beagle, so I wouldn't know).
Firefox 0.9 had a hard time getting into enterprises because, among other reasons, of its sub-1.x version level, I can't imagine how a 0.0.7 version number can provide the sensation of security/safety needed to be a good pro-NLD10 argument.
Ps: sorry about my bad english, hope this makes sense.
There's no place like 127.0.0.1
MyBlog
Up until very recently we have been using Redhat Enterprise linux across the board and having to use a shitty NIS+ setup for authentication. Now we are using Novel Open Enterprise Server with the directory services across the board. Thanks to novel we can finally have a TRUE enterprise solution, one that has directory services, one that has a good QA model and so far we have not had any issues even though the prodocut is still in a "beta" state. Go novel.
Got a question about UNIX ask it here : Unix/xBSD Forum
Odd how people have to be so dramatic about small steps in the right direction...
So true, and not just about software. I think Chuck D said it best:
"Don't believe the hype".
"If it's real, then it gets more interesting the closer you examine it. If it's not real, just the opposite is true." -
Actually, what Novell would prefer is that you use their linux desktop management interface in Zenworks to remotely configure the entire OS.
This is "Corporate" Linux Desktop we're talking about. Don't assume it's aimed at the home, or the enthusiast market.
In a corporate environment, having to visit each machine is a waste of time... doing it all remotely, by assigning a policy to a workstation object, is far preferable.