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This is the Year of the Linux Desktop Breakout

Declaring victory for the Linux desktop at the end of the day will based upon looking at market penetration of Linux based clients vs. Windows and other operating systems. I believe this is still the best measure but we may finally be able to declare this year the breakout of the Linux desktop.

When looking at operating system software adoption it is important to look at trends and not a single break through event that will signal that “we have made it.” It is kind of like economic forecasting – you look at a lot of leading indicators to decide whether we are heading towards an expansion or a recession; inflation, interest rates, productivity, employment rates, etc. It is worth applying this logic when looking at the Linux desktop. Based on just a cursory glance of news this week it is clear that all leading indicators suggest a significant expansion on ...

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Get answers to all your Linux questions direct from the source.

Next week the leaders of the Linux industry gather in Austin Texas for a meeting of the minds. The Linux Foundation has set up an invitational event where the folks who work directly on the business and technical issues facing the platform can get together and share ideas. We’ll find out about these questions and more:

What are the technology trends and the economics driving the Linux desktop in new low cost PC’s? Find out directly from Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Shuttle, Everex, Intel, TI, AMD, and more.

What is the “M” commitment to the “L” in LAMP after the Sun acquisition of MySQL? Find out from the Marten Mikos himself.

When am I going to get my hands on a Linux phone? Find out from Google’s OHA, the LiMo Foundation, OpenMoko, and others. This is the first time Google and the LiMo foundation are sharing a ...

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Cloud Computing - Did anybody notice Microsoft’s SQL Server Data Services Announcement?

About a week ago Microsoft announced something they are calling SSDS. According to their web site “SQL Server Data Services (SSDS) are highly scalable, on-demand data storage and query processing web services. Businesses use storage resources as needed transforming large upfront capital and operations expenditures into much smaller on-demand costs.” In other words - cloud computing.

Even though they have bad marketing and an even worse name, this is something that the Linux ecosystem should pay attention to as Microsoft rolls this out into the market. Ray Ozzie stated it pretty accurately, “The greatest impact that services will have on business will come from the inevitable shift toward utility computing within the enterprise.” Linux has an early lead in this area with service offerings like Amazon’s Linux based S3 and IBM’s Blue Cloud which uses Xen and PowerVM virtualized Linux operating-system images.

Today Web 2.0 start ups are ...

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