[olug] Yahoo! News - Research Firm: Microsoft Will Use Linux by 2004

Don Kauffman dkauffman at tconl.com
Wed Dec 11 19:31:07 UTC 2002


Hey Bill,

When I said "more accurate" I was referring to CNN's take on the story. 
However, since you bring up the issue of "Accuracy" has anyone seen the 
actual Meta Group report? I went to their website to locate the actual 
report but it is apparently an industry Paysite only. I don''t qualify 
as an "industry" person at this point in time (being unemployed that 
is). :-(

Here's Rueter's/Forbes take on that report I read through it and noted 
that they don't mention .NET . They do interpret the Meta Group report 
as saying that they expect Microsoft to offer some of its server 
software on linux.

http://www.forbes.com/technology/newswire/2002/12/09/rtr818343.html

Don
William E. Kempf wrote:

>Don Kauffman said:
>  
>
>>Here’s a more accurate assessment of the prediction by the Meta Group
>>regarding M$ apps on Linux.
>>http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nf/20021210/bs_nf/20210
>><http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nf/20021210/bs_nf/20210>
>>    
>>
>
>Accurate?
>
>"As a result, the group said it believes Microsoft will respond by adding
>proprietary apps, including .NET, to a Linux environment beginning in late
>2004."
>
>..NET is not an application, nor is it proprietary (it's an ECMA standard,
>and I believe it's slated to be an ISO standard as well).  Not to mention
>..NET has already been mostly ported to Linux by the Mono project, so
>there's little reason for MS to invest any time/effort in this endeavor.
>This statement alone brings into question anything else in the article,
>and I gaurantee you it wasn't made by META.
>
>William E. Kempf
>
>
>
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>
>  
>


-- 
Don Kauffman
Email: mailto:dkauffman at tconl.com
---------------------------------
An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: it rarely happens that Saul becomes Paul. What does happen is that its opponents gradually die out and that the growing generation is familiarized with the idea from the beginning.

.... Max Planck, "The Philosophy of Physics" (1936) 





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