Novell expects this week to begin offering SuSE Linux customers some legal protection for using the open-source operating system, the fourth legal umbrella to emerge from a computing industry grappling with legal threats brought by SCO Group.
Linux, having just won the fight for mainstream respectability, has moved to a challenge that's less glamorous but just as important: making itself attractive to the information technology industry.
Linux already sports third-party application servers, such as IBM's WebSphere. But now Caldera and SCO are delivering the first application server bundle of Linux and the Tarantella Express application server.
Dozens of distributions are stepping into the ring. But only two heavyweights -- Red Hat and Caldera -- pack serious business punch. Which one will be the champ?
While Windows 2000 gestated for the past five years, the world of operating systems changed. The notion of one OS that can fit all devices may be as antiquated as the idea that mainframe computers can handle all computing tasks.
The software maker introduces a version of Linux aimed at enterprise customers, hoping to move the open-source software beyond servers and low-cost PCs.
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