SCO updates Unix product, open-source attitude

In an effort to turn around its dwindling Unix revenue, SCO introduced a new version of its OpenServer product Wednesday in the US, along with a new open-source-friendly attitude.

OpenServer 6 is based on the same software core as the company's other operating system product, UnixWare, a later arrival that the company and its predecessors have emphasised for years but that never was adopted as much as OpenServer. The new OpenServer can run software for both operating systems, improves performance by a factor of two to four, and can be used on 32-processor machines with as much as 16GB of memory, SCO said.

The company's software is most popular for use in companies with numerous business branches--a notable customer is McDonald's. However, the SCO Group and its predecessor, the Santa Cruz Operation, struggled with competition from Windows and more recently, Linux.

In SCO's most recent quarter, ended April 30, Unix revenue declined to US$7.8 million from US$8.4 million during the year-earlier quarter.

SCO has been most prominent recently for its legal attack on IBM, Novell and others regarding its allegation that proprietary Unix software has been improperly moved into open-source Linux. Indeed, one of its targets is AutoZone, a former OpenServer customer.

Part of that attack was leveled at the General Public License (GPL), which governs Linux and which SCO attorneys said violates the U.S. Constitution as well as copyright, antitrust and export control laws. But Wednesday, SCO touted the inclusion of several open-source products with OpenServer.

"In addition to supporting numerous Unix applications, as well as Java applications with the inclusion of Java 1.4.2, customers will also find thousands of additional applications available through many of the latest open-source technologies that are integrated into SCO OpenServer 6," SCO said in its announcement.

Among the included open-source packages are Samba and MySQL, which are released under the GPL, as well as Firefox, Tomcat, Apache and PostgreSQL.

SCO's position is consistent, spokesman Blake Stowell argued. "We don't necessarily have issues with open source, we just have an issue with open-source technology that includes intellectual property it shouldn't," he said. Indeed, SCO's products have included open-source components for years.

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Talkback 2 comments

    The hypocrasy of SCO has no bo ...Anonymous -- 24/06/05

    The hypocrasy of SCO has no bounds. In Darl McBride's (CEO) letter to 535 members of the U.S. House of Representatives in Jan 2004, he attacks the GPL saying that open source software threatens the U.S. IT industry, the nation's global economic competitiveness and national security.

    Yet SCO continues to include more open source software, much of which is GPL, in it commercial products.

    The sooner SCO is put out of it's misery the better. Thank goodness for visionaries like Richard Stallman, who created the GPL and through the FSF is protecting our interests from those companies who seek to destroy freedom. Long live the GPL!

    Read Darl McBride's letter: http://www.osaia.org/letters/sco_hill.pdf

    But we all know Sco Xenix is t ...Anonymous -- 24/06/05

    But we all know Sco Xenix is the one true Linux, everything else is just a clone

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