
None of the features that make Linux a compelling choice in emerging markets, server rooms, or netbooks are new; the last 12 months saw no fundamental breakthrough that suddenly reinvented the OS as a competitor in an area where it was formerly challenged. Stories that posit a change in Microsoft's attitude simply because the company mentioned several additional companies in an SEC filing ultimately say more about the inferiority complex of Linux users than any sort of knee-knocking over in Redmond. Linux will most likely continue to gain strength in cost-sensitive emerging markets. That growth is by no means limited to server backends, where the OS has been most successful to date, but could extend to desktops, netbooks, smartbooks, MIDs, and whatever other devices prove popular in these areas. The fact that such success has occurred and continues to occur is a perfectly good story all on its own; there's no need to dress the issue with imaginary hand-wringing from Planet Microsoft. |
Via: ComputerWorld | News Archive
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Intel,
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Microsoft,
IBM,
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HP,
Sun,
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emerging markets,
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MIDs
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By claiming that competition exists in markets where, due not least to Microsoft's monopolistic practices, there is none, the company is probably trying to shield itself from investigation of these practices, a possibility which seems to be creeping closer. Let us hope that the strategem is not allowed to work !... Henri |
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I'm hoping it's just the natural progression: "First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi |
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I very much hope you prove prescient, 3vi1 ; Microsoft - and above all we users - need some competition in the OS market. I wonder what the release of Google's Chrome for netbooks will bring in its train ? Henri |