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Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 20, 2003 22:02 UTC (Thu) by havoc (guest, #2261)
In reply to: Linux veteran tries again (News.com) by rknop
Parent article: Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Maybe you don't need them, but as a small company specializing in deploying Linux solutions to small businesses who have been long time customers of Novell, Novell brings HUGE (this should not be understated) legitimacy to Linux for those people for whom technical superiority is not enough.


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Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 21, 2003 0:13 UTC (Fri) by stumbles (guest, #8796) [Link]

Hmmm I'm glad your beliefs did not apply to token ring and a few other now
obsolete (or at least niche) topologies and protocols. That cannot be understated.

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 21, 2003 0:25 UTC (Fri) by gallir (guest, #5735) [Link]

How is IBM's token ring related to the thread?

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 21, 2003 0:32 UTC (Fri) by stumbles (guest, #8796) [Link]

Well he was talking about novell technologies.

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 21, 2003 6:05 UTC (Fri) by havoc (guest, #2261) [Link]

How do you translate "legitimacy" into "technologies?"

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 21, 2003 11:35 UTC (Fri) by JohnBell (guest, #12625) [Link]

What I think you mean is "How do you translate technologies into legitimacy?".

With corporate backing and a budget ;-). That's how IBM did it anyway...

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 21, 2003 16:32 UTC (Fri) by tjc (guest, #137) [Link]

IIRC token ring started as a university research project that was later taken up by IBM.

Linux veteran tries again (News.com)

Posted Nov 23, 2003 21:38 UTC (Sun) by khim (subscriber, #9252) [Link]

This is perfect example. Just perfect. Token is ring is mostly irrelevant now. As well as some other technologies from IBM. IBM is not irrelevant. And why so? Simple: they had huge number of technologies back then. Ahd they were able to use them to pull customers. Now they switch to open technologies, old technologies are obsolete but peoples are still with IBM.

SCO tried to do this. And failed. Let's see if Novell will pull it off or fail as well.

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