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Linux Foundation - We'd Love to Work with Microsoft

johnno writes "In an interview with the Australian site pc world Jim Zemlin, the Linux Foundation's executive director, talks about the desire to interoperate with Microsoft and discusses the desktop outlook for Linux. He answers questions on the kind of legal protection Linux requires, whether anything ever come of the Microsoft protest that there's Linux code that they have patented, as well as Linux penetration on desktops and breaking Microsoft's stranglehold on the market. He also discusses Microsoft's recent move to open up their documentation, and why they'd like to work with the Redmond giant — 'We'd like to have a place where developers can come and work on making Linux more effectively interoperate with Microsoft products. And we'd like to do that in the open-source way that's not tied to any specific marketing agreement, that's not tied to any specific contract, that is an open process that can be participated in by anyone in the community,' Zemlin says."

8 of 147 comments (clear)

  1. I'm sorry, but it just sounds like giving in. by AltGrendel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I realize that Microsoft is the 800 pound gorilla in the room, but it just sounds like giving in. Microsoft really hasn't shown any signs of innovation in a long time and my fear is that this would just turn into another chance for Microsoft to take a concept from the collaboration, implement it in their own way and claim it as their own. Remember what they did with TCP/IP early on? Made their own stack that didn't quiet work with anything else but said it wasn't their fault.

    --
    The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination

    - Douglas Adams

    1. Re:I'm sorry, but it just sounds like giving in. by c0p0n · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't see your point. I do see that perhaps some business aren't adopting Linux as a desktop system because making those interact with a pre-existing AD environment is far from flawless and straightforward. Or the other way around, when implementing new services on Linux servers that need to interact with Windows machines.

      Better interoperatibility will benefit Linux hugely. Where there used to be just one choice, Windows, there could be more.

      --

      Your head a splode
  2. The letter of the law vs the intent by dyfet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The kind of interoperability they speak of is precisely the kind that Microsoft chooses, by both word and deed, to explicitly sabotage. Whether one looks at the Novell agreements, the "licensing" of api documentation, or the OSP in the OOXML, these are not acts of encouraging such interoperability but rather of blocking it by any means possible, or of trying to meet the "appearance" of interoperability from the perspective of outside regulators when forced to, but while deliberately and explicitly destroying the spirit and any actual realization of it.

  3. Make the stand. by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I disagree. I don't think that the Linux community can count on any given company treating us as anything other than hostile.

    Let me give you an example. Warcraft II vs. Stratagus.

    There was a group of people that wanted to play Warcraft II on Linux, so they made tools to extract the data of the Warcraft II DOS CDs and use it on the hard disk to play Warcraft II. At first, this was called 'Freecraft', later called Stratagus that made significant advacements in Warcraft II including:

    Support for 16 Players rather than just 8
    Support for Human/Orc joint AI.
    Support for TCP/IP
    correcting several gameplay bugs and sound bugs
    No CD Copy protection
    Actual uses for the Runestone and the Dark Portal (Dark Portal worked like a one way Starcraft Nydus Canal
    Superior AI.

    Linux technology must be flat out BETTER than anything a Windowsd technology can produce. Compare Samba 3.0 to Windows NT 4.0

    - Support for LDAP
    No stupid limits on Trust Hirearchies
    Support for Kerberos
    Support for SMB without NMB.

    We can't team up with MS, we must Flatten it, or they will flatten us. Thats just the way it is.

    1. Re:Make the stand. by xtracto · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What you mean like

      Multiple Virtual Desktops ... All were available in Linux, Unix and even Amiga before Wind... excuse me a sec... oh shit, Windows still does not come with virtual desktops? what year is it 1984?

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
  4. Re:I'm always suspicious ... by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's only dishonest if the party making the offer is disingenuous about its terms.

    I'm sure the FSF would be delighted to work with Microsoft -- if Microsoft released all of its source under the GPL. Of course, everyone knows that its unreasonable to believe Microsoft would accept these terms in our lifetime, so it would do no good to announce this.

    This shows to have PR value, an offer has to have something that might interest MS. It must be something in which MS could recognize its own enlightened self-interest. It's possible to imagine this happening fairly soon, if there are significant developments that MS cannot profitably fight or coopt. If we imagine sub-$400 linux laptops taking off big time, it might turn defending that part of MS's monopoly from a cash cow into a cash sink. That kind of thing might signal a smart time for MS to reposition itself.

    It'd be momentous, to be sure. But not impossible to imagine.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  5. What is the market share threshold? by websitebroke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have no real idea if this has any bearing on reality, but...

    I'm wondering at what point MS will honestly start to interoperate. For Internet Explorer, they didn't start to make meaningful changes until they started losing market share to Firefox and Safari. Now, we're hearing about IE8 being honest to goodness standards compliant. (and they actually sound like they mean it - not holding my breath, but I remain hopeful)

    Is the interoperability threshold 80% market share?

    Whatever the number is, I don't expect to see any significant changes until MS starts losing customers. Given their resources, they should have been able to make a better browser in 2002, rather than now in 2008.

  6. Re:Embrace, extend, extinguish.. by Divebus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you're delusional if you think the average computer user feels locked into MS products. My experience is the average computer user believes MS products are the only ones available.
    --

    Most of the stuff on /. won't survive first contact with facts.