Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 22nd Jan 2007 10:26 UTC, submitted by anonymous
Linux Linux, the free operating system, has gone from an intriguing experiment to a mainstream technology in corporate data centers, helped by the backing of major technology companies like IBM, Intel, and HP, which sponsored industry consortiums to promote its adoption. Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, with the system's penguin symbol, will assist the Linux Foundation. Those same companies have decided that the time has come to consolidate their collaborative support into a new group, the Linux Foundation, which is being announced today. And the mission of the new organization is help Linux, the leading example of the open-source model of software development, to compete more effectively against Microsoft, the world's largest software company.
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bolomkxxviii
Member since:
2006-05-19

One of the ways to make linux more competetive is to come up with better standards within linux. Software developers will be more likely to write programs for linux if they don't have to write several different versions. Personally I would like to see software installation/removal modeled on OSX. As much as I would like to see this happen I just don't think it will. Imagine Gentoo, Ubuntu and RedHat representatives sitting down and discussing software installation. I am not talking about compatability, I mean ONE SYSTEM.

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