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Technology Stocks : LINUX -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: E. Charters who wrote (2236)4/11/2000 9:40:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 2617
 
Compaq leads surging Linux server market
By Stephen Shankland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 11, 2000, 11:55 a.m. PT

Compaq is the top seller of Linux servers, beating out Linux specialty shops as well as
other established computer makers in a market that grew 166 percent in one year, a
study has found.

Compaq sold 18,000 Linux servers in the fourth quarter of 1999, according to a study released
this week by International Data Corp. (IDC). That gives Compaq 25 percent of the 72,400-unit
market.

Specialty shops such as VA Linux Systems, Penguin Computing
and Atipa didn't make the top five. IBM was second, with 7,000
servers and 10 percent of the market. Hewlett-Packard was third,
with 5,400, Dell fourth with 5,200 and Fujitsu Siemens fifth with
2,300.

The study highlights the adolescent growth spurt of the relatively
young operating system. Though Linux has been around for years,
major hardware and software companies only began announcing
support in late 1998 and early 1999. As Linux gradually matures,
though, it faces stiffer competition in the form of Microsoft Windows
2000, the successor to and improvement on Windows NT.

The Linux server market accounted for only 6 percent of the total
entry-level server market--computers costing less than $100,000.
However, the unit growth rate of 166 percent made Linux servers
the fastest-growing segment of the server market, IDC said.

The developments with Linux hardware mirror similar studies of
software. IDC in February reported that Linux license shipments
increased to second place in market share from 16 percent to 25
percent of the 5.4 million copies that were sold in all of 1999.

Microsoft Windows took first place in that study, holding a constant 38 percent market share,
but Windows generated far more revenue for Microsoft than all the Linux sales.

Compaq also led in Linux hardware sales for the fourth quarter, with $84 million in revenue. IBM
garnered $33 million, Dell $24 million and HP $23 million.

In a recent talk, IDC analyst Michelle Bailey said Linux is of particular appeal to people building
Internet services. It's good for "server appliances," computers set up to perform a specific job
such as serving Web pages or keeping track of network resources.

In a survey of 195 businesses, 71 percent said they believe their Linux
servers stay up and running 99.99 percent of the time--all but 53 minutes of
the year. "They've already accepted that Linux servers are a reliable
platform," Bailey said.

While the IDC survey found that Linux beats Windows NT for price, performance, security and
reliability, NT wins for application choice and ease of use, she said.

Unix, the operating system on which Linux is based, beat Linux on service and support in the
survey. Unix also works on much larger and more powerful servers than Linux.

A recent study by consulting firm Booz-Allen & Hamilton concluded that Linux competes more
with Unix than with Windows. "We think Linux's greatest threat is to proprietary Unix operating
systems, especially Sun Microsystems' Solaris," the report said. "Sun's recent move to make
Solaris' source code freely available is evidence of this."