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


To: akirasawa who wrote (59428)1/10/2000 5:52:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108040
 
Look for LINUX players to fly after IBM embraces system:NEW YORK (Reuters) - International Business
Machines Corp. on Monday will announce new steps
to make Linux a centerpiece of its computer
hardware strategy, in what amounts to the biggest
embrace of the alternative operating system by a
major computer maker to date.
Sam Palmisano, head of the IBM Server Group,
said in an interview on Friday that he was committed
to making all of IBM's major computer product lines
Linux-ready, combining fragmented efforts IBM (IBM)
had made in this direction last year.
To spearhead the company effort, IBM will unveil
a new unit within its enterprise hardware business
group led by Irving Wladawsky-Berger, the founder of
IBM's Internet business unit and developer of the
company's "e-business" strategy.
The new unit will have responsibility for all UNIX
and Linux software efforts, for advanced computer
designs and for bringing together IBM's
next-generation Internet strategy.
Palmisano, as the man in charge of the unit
responsible for most of computer hardware sales at
the world's largest computer maker and heir apparent
to IBM Chairman and CEO Lou Gerstner, set out the
plans in a letter to IBM senior management Friday.
"We believe we're now on the brink of another
important shift in the technology world," Palmisano
wrote. "The next generation of e-business will see
customers increasingly demand open standards for
interoperability across disparate platforms," he said.
He was referring to the wide mixture of computer
systems IBM builds to suit different customer
requirements -- from PCs to mainframe computers --
and the capacity of Linux to act as a unifying force
across these various computer systems.
"We will essentially Linux-enable all our
platforms," Palmisano said in an interview of IBM's
evolving strategy to make IBM servers -- the powerful
machines used to manage network of other
computers -- fully ready to work with Linux.
Linux is a modern version of the Unix operating
system, the software widely used to control the
powerful computers that manage central business
operations at many companies, but its suitability for
running desktop computers remains in doubt.
Still, Linux has won broader mainstream
acceptance during the past year as an alternative to
Microsoft Corp.'s dominant Windows software,
especially for running the latest Internet business
tasks.
In the coming weeks, Palmisano said he also
plans to set up a new dedicated sales force within
the Server Group to unify and push forward the
marketing of its Unix and Linux products.
IBM also is donating key programming code
developed for its mainstay computer systems to the
open-source software development community in
order to boost the reliability of Linux for running
business computers, Wladawsky-Berger said in an
interview on Friday.
Analysts believe IBM has done more than any
other major computer maker to back Linux, whose
growing popularity could undermine the proprietary
Unix strategies of rivals like Sun Microsystems Inc.
(SUNW), the biggest Unix computer maker.
Dan Kusnetzky, an analyst with market research
firm International Data Corp. of Framingham, Mass.,
said IBM is at work on projects to Linux-enable its
Netfinity PC servers and mainframe-class computers,
and to make its AIX version of Unix work more easily
with Linux, among other systems.
"Among the major hardware vendors, IBM is the
one that stands out the most in bringing Linux into its
main business operations," Kusnetzky said. "The
plan is to bring Linux and Unix under one roof now,"
he said of IBM's latest thrust.
This differs from other computer makers such as
Compaq Computer Corp. (CPQ) and
Hewlett-Packard Co. (HWP), whose support for
Linux remains fragmented in various product lines,
said Bill Claybrook, an analyst with Aberdeen
Research of Boston, Mass., who also was briefed by
IBM on its plans.
Palmisano said IBM's growing embrace of "open
systems" -- software whose features are designed by
a growing body of independent programmers is part
of a multi-year undertaking to make IBM computers
more adaptable to the changing industry.
In addition, the moves by IBM's computer
hardware unit are part of a broader effort to stoke the
lackluster growth of its vast computer hardware
businesses, which account for as much as half of
IBM's roughly $90 billion annual revenue.