IBM embraces Linux on client/server hardware

By Ed Scannell and Bob Trott
InfoWorld Electric


Posted at 1:38 PM PT, Feb 17, 1999
IBM will take the next step toward making Linux an integral part of its
enterprise strategy next month when it announces it will bundle the
open-source operating system with two of its PC- and non-PC-based servers.

IBM on Thursday will announce an alliance with Red Hat Software under which
the company will ship a wide array of its products with Red Hat Linux.

Under the agreement, developers from both companies will work to maximize
performance, reliability, and security for Red Hat Linux on IBM server and
client systems, including Netfinity servers, PC 300 commercial desktops,
IntelliStations, and ThinkPads. Red Hat will also perform hardware
certification testing and provide dedicated customer training, the two
firms said.

"Our customers are asking for Linux solutions," said Bill McCracken,
marketing and strategy general manager for IBM's Personal Systems Group.
"The Red Hat alliance demonstrates IBM's commitment to the open-source
movement and to provide our customers with an unmatched range of platforms,
operating systems, solutions and services."

At the LinuxWorld show, in San Jose, Calif. in March, IBM will announce it
will bundle Linux with its lower-end RS/6000 servers and workstations as
well as with its Intel-based line of Netfinity servers, along side the
native operating systems for those platforms.

The company will also announce plans to port Linux over to the PowerPC
chip, which now powers the company's RS/6000 servers and AS/400 line of
servers.

The decision to push a strategy to sell Linux across multiple server
platforms has to do, in part, with better establishing IBM in a variety of
strategic markets in which currently it lacks a meaningful presence,
sources said.

"It is a move that can only help us sell more RS/6000s into markets where
we are not all that strong, like ISPs and universities where [Linux] grew
up," said a source close to IBM. "Plus we are seeing substantial demand
from customers and we tend to listen to them. It is a fairly easy decision
to make."

Some observers question whether bundling an open-source operating system
might threaten proprietary software businesses surrounding AIX, including
the operating system and the thousands of AIX-compatible applications. IBM
officials reportedly believe the opportunity available to them in the Linux
market can cover any losses they would suffer elsewhere.

"It isn't a dangerous decision if it creates a whole other business for
IBM. And not just for software but services and support," an IBM insider
said. "Besides most of the play for Linux will be on the Intel-based
platforms."

IBM will still back AIX as its "bulletproof enterprise operating system,"
and will continue to aggressively develop and support it, according to one
source.

In addition to IBM's work with Red Hat, the company next week will announce
support for Pacific HiTech and Caldera Systems.

"More than any other computer company, we are worldwide. We realize that
different distributors have different strengths in different parts of the
world. So to play on a world stage, it is necessary to deal with different
distributors,'' another IBM insider said.

IBM Corp., in Armonk, N.Y., can be reached at www.ibm.com. Red Hat Software
Inc., in Research Triangle Park, N.C., can be reached at www.redhat.com.

Ed Scannell is an InfoWorld editor at large based in Framingham, Mass. Bob
Trott is InfoWorld's Seattle bureau chief.


From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Fri Feb 19 21:40:07 1999