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Technology Stocks : Novell (NOVL) dirt cheap, good buy?

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To: Scott C. Lemon who wrote (34828)11/14/2000 5:09:20 AM
From: zwolff  Read Replies (2) of 42771
 
Hi Scott:

Comments?

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Today's focus: Novell nixes personal directory
-------------------------------------------------
By Dave Kearns

I recently wrote about an interesting technology Novell was
working on - but I just found out that the technology was
killed before my column ever made it to print.

In last week's Wired Windows column in Network World, I spoke
about Novell's proposal of the .DIR global top-level domain to
the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers and how
it might be used.

In the column, I referred to personal directory services, a new
technology that I'd just read about from Novell Developer
Services, described as:

"Novell Personal Directory enables all of a user's personal
information to be stored and managed in a [Lightweight
Directory Access Protocol]-based personal directory under the
direct control of the individual. It also provides controlled
sharing of such information to external parties (individuals or
organizations). It does not depend on an external server, but
it can leverage one if it exists."

I'd also spent a few hours on the day I wrote the column
talking with Novell's Kent Prows about the .DIR proposal and
how it could leverage technologies such as personal directory.

What I didn't know, what Novell Developer Services didn't know
and what Prows didn't know, was that almost a week earlier the
personal directory technology had been killed by product
management!

Evidently, at Novell it's not considered necessary to let the
rest of the company know which products are going to go ahead
and which are to be stopped dead. Not only were the left hand
and the right hand not communicating, they were acting as if
the other didn't exist.

Granted, the death of personal directory technology doesn't
affect the .DIR proposal that much, and "federated trees" are
much more important than personal directory to that effort. But
it would have been a nice "extra."

It's been said that there's no such thing as bad publicity, but
Novell is trying very hard to test that philosophy.
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