Novell Chairman Endorses Open-Source Capitalism

Linux

Too often, open-source software is construed as free, and that's not always the case, Novell Vice Chairman Chris Stone told reporters Wednesday morning at the LinuxWorld Expo in New York.

"It's clear that you can build value-added applications atop Linux, and there's nothing in the license to prevent that. MySQL is a good example," Stone said. MySQL is a database that's available under the General Public License, which is popular in the open-source world, as well as commercially for a fee.

Earlier, Novell Chairman Jack Messman stressed the same point in his LinuxWorld keynote. "We've spent a quarter of a billion dollars on Linux companies in the last six months. Clearly, we're interested in how Linux can make money," he said.

Messman added that there's a real need for file and print services for open-source software. "We see no contradiction in offering an open-source operating system plus proprietary value-added services atop it," he said.

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Just a week after completing the SUSE deal, Novell used the show and the SUSE partner conference in New York to outline its product plans. Among the highlights were the following:

The company said it plans to support the Eclipse open-source development framework, joining IBM, Borland and other companies.

By year-end, NLS 2.0 will incorporate all the Nterprise Linux Services now available on the NetWare kernel. The current NLS 1.0 has about half of those services.

Novell GroupWise for Linux entered open beta and is expected to ship in the first half of 2004.

The company is shipping the Novell exteNd 5 rapid application development suite for Web Services.

For more LinuxWorld coverage, visit the CRN Linux News Center.