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To: Paul Engel who wrote (74875)2/28/1999 9:06:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel stepping up investment in
rival operating system to
Microsoft's Windows

By David E. Kalish, Associated Press, 02/28/99 19:46

NEW YORK (AP) - Computer chip giant Intel Corp. is
expected to be the latest company to announce its
endorsement of Linux, a well-regarded version of the Unix
operating system used by businesses to run computer
networks and Internet sites.

In a move that could be announced as soon as today, Intel is
buying a multimillion dollar stake in VA Research, a Mountain
View, Calif.-based maker of business computers that run on
Linux, industry sources said.

Officials at both the Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel and VA
Research declined comment.

Linux was developed in the early 1990s by a Finnish student
named Linus Torvalds. The grassroots software is edging into
the mainstream as users embrace its flexibility and its
propensity to avoid crashing.

''We think Linux as the biggest thing since the Internet,'' said
Larry Augustin, chief executive of VA Research. He declined
to comment on any investments.

Last fall, Intel took a stake in Red Hat, a Durham, N.C.-based
distributor of Linux software. Several major computer makers
such as Hewlett Packard and IBM have begun selling
machines loaded with Linux.

VA's machines are expected to be adapted to work with Intel's
upcoming chip for high-end business computers, known as
Merced.

While Linux is rapidly gaining acceptance as an operating
system for business machines, it's still used in only a small
fraction of computers and hardly appears on desktops.
Microsoft officials dismiss Linux as only a minor rival.

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