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Tech Update Linux
Linux is ready for the long haul
By CNET Enterprise
August 22, 2001

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The jury is still out on how Linux will build on its initial proliferation in the enterprise. Linux vendors have consolidated in search of solid ground, but IBM's incarnation of the penguin may portend success in tomorrow's high-speed networks. We asked industry experts how they expect Linux to reach its stride.

The long view on Linux
Don't underestimate open source software, say analysts. Improved Linux products will be enticing alternatives to proprietary software, especially for servers and network services. IBM has high hopes for Linux, but expect a tough fight from Windows and Unix.
Wagner Rios
Industry Analyst
AMR Research
Gaining momentum in niche areas
Linux has demonstrated its worth at the server level and in clustering. In addition to being a robust operating system, its nonproprietary nature allows OEMs to tweak the architecture for resource-intensive applications and environments. It also allows freedom of movement away from Microsoft--something the industry has sought for quite a while. Network administrators report consistent performance advantages of Linux over Windows NT and 2000. It would be a wise move for Microsoft to make its application suites operational on Linux, as the Linux platform continues gaining market share and there remains a shortage of applications for it.

We can expect Linux to continue gaining momentum in niche areas such as finance, telecommunications, Web hosting, applications service provision, and similar environments requiring high resilience and reliability. Linux will continue to attract developers in part because of its memory management capabilities, including process swapping, file buffering, and direct memory access (DMA); virtual file system and the second extended file system; and interprocess communication (IPC).

George Weiss
Analyst
Gartner
Unix and Windows fight back
Linux will threaten but not replace Windows or Unix as the OS that corporations prefer in all server tiers through 2005. Linux will move through three phases of acceptance. In Phase 1, Linux battles for corporate credibility in network services, with early adopters enthused by Linux's robustness and low cost. In Phase 2, Linux gains durable roots--particularly in Web servers and clustered server farms--partly at the expense of Windows 2000 and costly Unix/RISC solutions. In Phase 3, ISV enthusiasm for Linux increases. But Unix's mission-critical scalability and availability, strong Windows 2000 upgrades, and potentially heavy migration costs throttle broad ISV enthusiasm. Increased complexity and insufficient skills will also retard corporate acceptance.

Success will get complicated and expensive for Linux distributors since value will come from an OS/middleware software stack and services. Most ISVs will commit resources only to the top two or three Linux distributions. Some Linux vendors will inevitably fail; others will merge or be acquired.

IBM boldly stated that in 2001 Linux will surmount the chasm separating it from the enterprise. If so, IBM is best positioned to capitalize. However, Linux faces multiple chasms (such as standards, ISV support, skills, scalability, and availability), any one of which could stop the show and leave IBM as the most exposed vendor. IBM will likely continue pushing Linux harder than corporations will accept and may have to adjust its enthusiasm to more rational levels.

The dot-bust has sobered the dot-com speculative frenzy rather than condemned any technology. Linux IPO makers did not suspect the lurking disaster. Today, Linux no longer guarantees a successful start-up and is often buried within the application context (for example, server appliances). That seems about right. Linux is valuable for what it enables you to do and is not an end in itself.

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1. Linux is ready for the long haul
2. Replacing Unix
3. Trouble for Windows





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