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Sun Microsystems to Acquire innotekSun Microsystems to Acquire innotekPosted Feb 14, 2008 18:51 UTC (Thu) by timschmidt (guest, #38269)In reply to: Sun Microsystems to Acquire innotek by Quazatron Parent article: Sun Microsystems to Acquire innotek
It _could_ be good news, if they open up the closed bits. On the other hand, Sun has a history of managing FOSS projects with a grip just too tight for comfort. Years of the Java Community Process, OpenOffice.org's slow uptake of non-Sun patches (necessitating OO.o-build), OpenSolaris' Linux-incompatible license, just to name a few. Much like X development in the Xfree86 days, a poorly managed but 'good enough' project is quite capable of tripping up rapid development, and ending innovation, while successfully discouraging new competitors and forks. :( I'm not sure that no management, allowing someone from the community to step up, is always better than poor management, but that seems to have been the case with Xfree86 and possibly GCC (pre-egcs). The best thing that could happen, obviously, is that Sun could open up all the code, and pour tons of development effort into the software _and_ the community. Mostly the community. But I think second best would be for sun to open the code and walk away. Seeing the community's best desktop virtualization tool stagnate while only features Sun cares about get added would be painful to watch.
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Sun Microsystems to Acquire innotek Posted Feb 14, 2008 21:16 UTC (Thu) by cry_regarder (subscriber, #50545) [Link] In particular, the USB support should be migrated from the closed version to the free version. This is the big showstopper for using VirtualBox as a vmware killer. In any case, usbip will soon make the advantage of keeping this feature closed-source irrelevant.
Sun Microsystems to Acquire innotek Posted Feb 15, 2008 1:38 UTC (Fri) by ikm (subscriber, #493) [Link] > In any case, usbip will soon make the advantage of keeping this feature closed-source irrelevant. It seems they support linux only, at least at the moment.
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