Linux bandwagon grows

By David Pendery, Dan Briody, and Ed Scannell
InfoWorld Electric


Posted at 7:15 AM PT, Jan 23, 1999
Momentum behind the Linux platform will soon surge again with both
Hewlett-Packard and Tivoli Systems planning to extend their management
platforms to the open-source Linux platform, according to high-ranking
officials at the two companies.

In addition, Compaq is expected to Linux-enable its Alpha systems soon,
according to a source familiar with Compaq's plans. Also, Lotus officials
this week confirmed that the company plans to release Notes on Linux before
the end of the year in response to market demand.

In the midst of growing Linux activity, Linux inventor Linus Torvalds next
week plans to announce Version 2.2.0 of the Linux kernel, which will
feature improvements in file systems, multiprocessing, and security, as
well as platform support for Sparc64, Alpha, and PowerPC.

Detecting an opportunity to move to the forefront of the Linux arena, HP
likely will be porting its OpenView network management system to Linux in
the near future, a move characterized as a "no-brainer" by HP's Nigel Ball,
general manager of Internet and Applications Systems, in Cupertino, Calif.
HP, which is a major Microsoft partner for NT in the enterprise, is also
considering making available support services for Linux, according to HP
sources.

IBM, meanwhile, has slowly been expanding is Linux commitment, first with
beta releases of its DB2 database and Transarc network file system, and now
with pending support from Lotus and Tivoli.

"We have done a fair amount of engineering, and have a version of Tivoli
running Linux in our labs," said Tom Bishop, chief technology officer at
Tivoli Systems, in Austin, Texas. "We see no technical or engineering
hurdles that would prevent us from delivering a Linux product. Our view is
that it's a good platform, a high-quality Unix implementation."

Bishop added that Tivoli Enterprise for Linux would be generally released
when demand is high enough, perhaps in late 1999.

Support for Linux has been growing throughout IBM.

"I have to admit that I was skeptical about why the world needed another
Unix, but the advantages are now clear to me," said Lotus CEO Jeff Papows
this week during the Lotusphere conference in Orlando, Fla. As part of its
effort, IBM is also pondering a Linux support service offering.

On the hardware front, a source familiar with Compaq's plans said the
company will announce support for Linux on its Alpha systems later this
month, and that various support and development programs are planned.

HP, for its part, believes the OS has promise, particularly in the emerging
"thin-server" market, for dedicated, single-function servers with minimal
hardware and software. These devices could be deployed for applications
such as e-mail, virtual private networks, directory services, and caching,
according to the company.

"We would strip off the bits of software and hardware you don't need," Ball
said. "At some point, the operating system becomes irrelevant. It's the
application that you care about."

The growing interest in Linux comes as a breath of fresh air to one Linux
customer.

"I'm starting to see more [support] come out; vendors are not quite as
skittish when you mention Linux any more," said Jeff Noxon, programmer and
consultant at Data Processing Resources, in Dallas.

"It's a best-of-breed Unix," Noxon added.

David Pendery is an InfoWorld reporter. Dan Briody is the Client/Server
section editor at InfoWorld. Ed Scannell is an InfoWorld editor at large.


From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Mon Jan 25 10:23:38 1999