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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: puborectalis who wrote (56682)1/4/2000 9:11:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 108040
 
Accounting Applications
By Matthew W. Beale
E-Commerce Times
January 4, 2000

VA Linux Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq:
LNUX) announced today that it has
been selected by Web-based
applications provider NetLedger to
supply rackmount Linux servers and
integration management services for
the NetLedger infrastructure.

Under the terms of the agreement between the
companies, NetLedger will incorporate several hundred
VA Linux FullOn 2x2 rackmount servers into its "server
farm," enabling it to deliver small-business accounting
solutions to its Linux customer base. VA Linux will,
through its Professional Services group, provide onsite
system customization and integration management
services to assist with the server deployment.

The Menlo Park, California-based NetLedger, founded in
1998, introduced its first Web-based accounting
application, which runs on the Oracle 8i database, in
August of 1999.

The SourceForge Project

VA Linux also unveiled SourceForge today, an initiative
to provide open-source developers and projects with
no-cost hosting and communication resources. The
effort will support an Internet-based collaborative
environment model -- one that is in large measure
responsible for the existence of Linux as a full operating
system.

"SourceForge represents a dramatic departure from the
traditional practices of proprietary software vendors,
empowering software developers and users to work
together to create their own future," stated Dr. Larry
M. Augustin, president and CEO of VA Linux Systems.

According to VA Linux, over 3,000 developers from 76
countries have already registered on the SourceForge
site during an earlier testing phase. Services provided
by SourceForge include communication services, version
control tools, Web server space and other Web-based
tools designed for security and ease of use.

Open-source projects on SourceForge include the VA
Cluster Manager (VACM), Topaz and The Berlin Project,
a graphical system for Linux and UNIX.

Other News

In other Linux news, online business software solutions
provider Accrue Software, Inc. (Nasdaq: ACRU) has
expanded its data collection and analysis product line to
cover Linux. The company will first deliver its data
collection components -- which include server plug-ins
-- and then bring out its data analysis engine and data
warehouse for Linux.

"We've been seeing a growing demand among our
enterprise customers for Linux solutions," commented
Rick Kreysar, president and CEO of Accrue. "We're
committed to delivering the e-Business solutions that
will help build the e-commerce market leaders of
tomorrow."

International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates that
Linux commercial shipments will increase at a compound
annual growth rate (CAGR) of 25 percent from 1999
through 2003, according to a March 1999 report. IDC
expects more application vendors to port their offerings
to Linux and hardware vendors to continue to expand
their available product lines running Linux for server-side
endeavors.

"More and more large, complex Web sites are being
deployed on Linux, the fastest growing server OS and
most widely used OS for Web serving," stated Brian
Biles, vice president of marketing at VA Linux Systems.
"We're excited to see Accrue bring its enterprise-scale
e-Business analysis solutions to Linux."

''We've been seeing a growing demand among our enterprise customers for Linux solutions,'' said Rick Kreysar, president and
CEO of Accrue Software. ''As the leading provider of enterprise software solutions, we're committed to delivering the
e-Business solutions that will help build the e-commerce market leaders of tomorrow.''

International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates Linux commercial shipments will increase at a compound annual growth rate
(CAGR) of 25% from 1999 through 2003, according to a March 1999 report. IDC expects more application vendors to port
their offerings to Linux and hardware vendors to continue to expand their available product lines running Linux for server-side
endeavors.

''Linux matters because it is a fast-growing operating system that addresses key issues of network interoperability,'' said
Stephen Graham, vice president of IDC's Software Channel and Alliance Strategies group. ''At some point, it will probably be
relevant to the strategies of most major vendors.''

''More and more large, complex Web sites are being deployed on Linux, the fastest growing server OS and most widely used
OS for Web serving. We're excited to see Accrue bring its enterprise-scale e-Business analysis solutions to Linux,'' said Brian
Biles, vice president of marketing at VA Linux Systems.