SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Deadheads -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AugustWest who wrote (22285)8/7/2000 3:01:40 PM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49844
 
Hmm, just saw that scrowl by too.
Cool headlines, one of the many reasons to like 'track.



To: AugustWest who wrote (22285)8/7/2000 3:08:30 PM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Respond to of 49844
 
Open Source Companies Follow Grateful Dead Model

Monday August 07 12:00 PM EDT


By Stephen Shankland, CNET News.com

It's open season for open-source chief executives.

In the past week, new CEOs have arrived at no less than
three purveyors of open-source software: Linux seller
MandrakeSoft, Linux server software seller Cybernet
Systems, and Apache Web server services company Covalent
Networks.

Open-source software, most notably the Linux clone of the
Unix operating system clone, can be freely shared, modified
and redistributed, unlike proprietary packages from
companies such as Microsoft.

Open-source software is becoming more popular with established companies
and with newer arrivals such as Red Hat, which bases its products on the Linux
operating system; Tripwire, based on the file-tampering detection software of the
same name; and Active State, which bases its business on the Perl programming
language.

John Jack will take over Covalent's president and chief executive; former
Covalent CEO Randy Terbush will continue as chief technology officer.
Covalent provides software and services for the Apache Web server, the most
popular program used to send out pages to people surfing the Web.

Jack, who is 45, was most recently CEO of software company Shaman and
before that an executive with database software company Sybase.

Cybernet's line of NetMax Linux-based server appliance software now will be
under the leadership of chief executive and vice president Gena Lodolo.

Lodolo previously was senior vice president of sales and marketing for
technology consulting company Complete Business Solutions.

And up-and-coming MandrakeSoft now is under the leadership of Herni Poole,
an American whose most recent stint was founder and chief executive of Vivid
Studios. MandrakeSoft, which is based in Paris and has 90 employees, formerly
was under the leadership of co-founder Jacques Le Marois.

Linux-Mandrake originally was nearly identical with Red Hat's version of Linux.
Although the software is still 99 percent compatible with Red Hat,
MandrakeSoft is striking off on its own.

Deals signed with IBM global services and Hewlett-Packard are an indication of
MandrakeSoft's growing prominence. Poole declined to reveal specifics of the
deals.

Another sign of interest in the company has come from investment banking firm
ABN-Amro, which introduced Poole to MandrakeSoft while he was kicking
around Europe this year.

Mandrake is distributed in the United States through an exclusive partnership
with MacMillan Publishers. MandrakeSoft, which is funded by a Vivendi venture
subsidiary called Viventure, has enough funding "at the current burn rate to last
several years," Poole said, though the company is hiring and consequently will
increase expenditures.

The company eventually plans an initial public offering. "We want to do it when
the time is right," he said.

MandrakeSoft has always been interested in Linux as a desktop operating
system--an effort complicated by Microsoft's dominance and the difficulties of
making Linux user-friendly. Other companies, in particular Corel and Eazel, are
struggling with the same task. MandrakeSoft is aiming chiefly for corporate
users, Poole said.

Macs and Windows-based PCs have an edge, he acknowledged, but that will
change. "With the ease of use and all the applications, it's just generally more
simple to use these more evolved products," he said.

Like Red Hat, MandrakeSoft sells boxed software and hopes to make money
through services. It's not a problem that the software is also available for free,
Poole asserts.

"There's an opportunity to be successful on a Grateful Dead model," he said.
"The Dead made money and let people record their music." MandrakeSoft sells
training, professional services and support, Poole said.