IDC: Linux likely to lead OS growth through 2003

By Nancy Weil
InfoWorld Electric


Posted at 10:29 AM PT, Mar 31, 1999
Growth in commercial shipments of the Linux operating system will outpace
other client or server operating environments through 2003, according to
market researcher International Data Corp. (IDC), which for the first time
has removed the increasingly popular Linux from the "other" category in its
OS reporting.

Linux commercial shipments will grow at a compound annual rate of 25
percent from this year through 2003, compared to 10 percent for all other
client operating environments IDC tracks, and 12 percent for all other
server operating environments combined, IDC said Wednesday. The market
researcher has prepared its first-ever Linux forecast in a new bulletin,
"Linux Operating System Market Overview."

IDC, which is based in Framingham, Mass., decided to view Linux separately
because analysts there have tracked increased use of Linux and demand for
research regarding the OS, a cousin to the multi-flavored Unix platform.
Linux was developed in 1991 by Linus Torvalds and remains an open-source
OS, available free on the Internet, with vendors selling commercial
implementations.

In recent months, a flurry of top-shelf vendors have announced support for
the OS, for which more applications also are hitting the market. IDC
expects that to continue as more application vendors port their products to
Linux and hardware makers expand the number of machines that operate on
Linux for server-side use.

Linux also has the potential to hit the desktop OS market as 2003
approaches, IDC said, with an enhanced graphical user interface and more
desktop applications boosting that market.

International Data Corp., in Framingham, Mass., can be reached at www.idc.com.

Juan Carlos Perez is Latin American bureau chief for the IDG News Service,
an InfoWorld affiliate.


From unknown@hawk.depaul.edu Thu Apr 1 10:26:57 1999