Commentary
Moblin + Novell = ... Novlin?
Okay, so I'm bad at portmanteaus. But here we have a buddying-up between two corporate outfits with more than a tentative involvement in open source, even if the exact terms of the deal are still rather vague.
Okay, so I'm bad at portmanteaus. But here we have a buddying-up between two corporate outfits with more than a tentative involvement in open source, even if the exact terms of the deal are still rather vague.
More Software Insights
White Papers
- Red Alert: Why Tablet Security Matters - by BlackBerry
- New Visual and Wizard-Driven Paradigms for Exploring Data and Developing Analytic Workflows
Reports
More >>Webcasts
- Maximize ROI with Database Consolidation onto Private Clouds
- Outsourcing Security: What Every Potential Cloud Security Customer Should Know
From the press release that crossed the wire: "Novell ... announced it will create a Moblin-based product for netbooks that it will take to market to a wide range of OEMs and ODMs." At a guess: a scaled down / "Moblin-ized" version of SUSE that connects seamlessly to Windows domains and the like? I'm probably dead off the mark with this one, but that's my best guess given what Novell's been known for with its Linux work.
What's most striking about this is how it it's further evidence of open source being a way for companies to collude where before they might not have had any common ground. This isn't to say that Intel and Novell were competing in any significant way before, but that they've now found a common place in which to pool strengths and both come away as winners. That place is provided by open source.
Most people are seeing this collusion as a sign of how open source is a game-changer in the mobile market. That's obvious. I'm also seeing it as a game-changer for allowing companies that might not normally have worked together to collude, to blend strengths that each might have kept to themselves before. It's obviously not going to make rival companies any less rivals, but I'm curious to see how this'll serve to forge alliances where others might not have sprung up over closed source.
InformationWeek Analytics has published an independent analysis of the current state of open source adoption. Download the report here (registration required).
Follow me and the rest of InformationWeek on Twitter.
Related Reading
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. | |
|
|
T-Shirt Giveaway: Each week we're selecting one great comment from our readers. The author of the comment will receive an InformaitonWeek Community t-shirt. So get posting! |
Subscribe to RSSResource Links
This Week's Issue
Technology Whitepapers
- Mobile BI: Actionable Intelligence for the Agile Enterprise
- Creating the Enterprise-Class Tablet Environment - by Yankee Group
- How To Regain IT Control In An Increasingly Mobile World - by BlackBerry
- The BlackBerry PlayBook tablet's Good Bones - by BlackBerry
- Red Alert: Why Tablet Security Matters - by BlackBerry
Featured Broadcast
This white paper explains how to create a manageable, scalable environment suited to answer real-time business needs by building out a data center on a standards-based, virtualization-aware, energy-efficient and affordable platform. Plus, learn how virtualization is making the jump from the server realm into the application, mobile and database worlds in the additional resources section.
Learn More












