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KO'd Samba in shock return bid (Daily Mirror)
Chris Samba wants to make a heroic return for Blackburn Rovers this week.   
 
The Dangers of Automatic Updates (Addict 3D)
Linux.com: "When I started using GNU/Linux eight years ago, I was dumbfounded to encounter Debian users who started their day by upgrading their entire system..."
 
Kenya: Will Kibaki's Armophous Vehicle Stay the Course? (AllAfrica.com)
IT MIGHT HAVE A STRANGE spelling, but at least there is a recognised pronunciation for gnu. Now our own GNU (the Government of National Unity, not the wildebeest), has evolved into the PNU. How that is pronounced, I have absolutely no idea.
 
EU antitrust ruling renews hope for developers (InfoWorld via Yahoo! News)
Microsoft's defeat in a European appeals court Monday has left open-source developers hopeful about the future although still dissatisfied with the company's compliance with a 3-year-old antitrust ruling.
 
The open-source Gold Rush (CNET)
There's a lot of money to be made in open source, both as a shareholder and for the company.
 
Cuba is Preparing to Quit Windows and Avoid Microsoft (Addict 3D)
Cuban Daily News: "Cuban authorities are seriously preparing to quit the Windows operating system and use the GNU/Linux free software instead, thus avoiding any sanctions for using this computer system by the Windows' owner, the giant Microsoft Corporation..."
 
Amanda McPherson: EU Ruling: Microsoft paying a steep price?

News travels fast that an EU Court has ruled in favor of the European Commission against Microsoft. While we are happy with this decision and are looking forward to a more transparent and open Microsoft, I have to chuckle at this headline:

Microsoft Suffers A Blow And Pays A Big Price

Does he mean the nearly $1 billion in fines that have levied against them in the last few years? While it sounds like a lot, Andy Updegrove breaks it down very well here:

While today’s judgment is significant, it is worth noting that the penalties that Microsoft has incurred to date ? roughly $1 billion, plus an obligation to reimburse a far smaller amount of legal fees ? are minute in comparison to the size of the profits it has garnered over the ten-year investigative period. During that period, its market share in both of the subject markets has grown dramatically. As a result, while Microsoft has nominally lost in court, it continues to win at the bottom line, given that the only impact on its products to date has been more symbolic than effectual requirement that it offer a version of Windows that does not bundle a free copy of its media player.

Stated another way, a billion dollars spread over ten years is $100 million a year. During the same period, Microsoft revenues have grown enormously, to over $50 billion a year, fueled primarily by the continuing growth of its operating system and Office products. It has been a tiny cost of business indeed, and a shrewd business decision, to incur a liability to pay one fifth of one percent of annual gross revenues to retain the freedom to exercise the dominance of so lucrative a market.

In fact, since every year their monopoly is extended means another $50 billion, it doesn’t take a business degree to figure it why Microsoft acts the way they do. Unfortunately for them, customers increasingly have a choice. They can choose freedom via open source and open standards (Linux, Open Office and ODF) or continue with Microsoft and pay, through their licensing fees, the price of these penalties.

We hope this decision forces Microsoft to meaningfully support open standards and true interoperability. Customers are not letting them get away with the same tactics they once did. (Witness the OOXML defeat.) Instead of calling something open, make it open. Instead of talking about interoperability with one company, meaningfully work with developers like the Samba team or multiple vendors in a neutral setting, so people can interoperate with your products.

It will be interesting to see just how this will ruling will play out.

 
Looks Like Novell Will Be There Tomorrow - The Fleet Has Arrived
Novell has filed five pro hac vice motions. Yes, friends, they have assigned five Morrison & Foerster attorneys to appear in the SCO bankruptcy, two partners and three associates. They appear to be bankruptcy specialists. I'll put links to their bios in the PACER notes. The fleet is in.
 
Cuba is Preparing to Quit Windows and Avoid Microsoft (Linux Today)
"Cuban authorities are seriously preparing to quit the Windows operating system and use the GNU/Linux free software instead, thus avoiding any sanctions for using this computer system by the Windows' owner, the giant Microsoft Corporation.
 
Novell Ships Teaming + Conferencing to Increase Customer Productivity and Cut Costs (The San...
Sep 17, 2007 9:00 AM (3 hrs ago) From Novell, Inc., Distributed by PR Newswire
 
SCO's Bankruptcy Hearing Tomorrow Changed to 8:30 AM - Updated
The bankruptcy hearing tomorrow has been changed to 8:30 AM, according to the latest on PACER. There is a Notice setting forth what will and what won't be heard that day. Everything will be heard *except* the motions to retain Berger Singerman and Pachulski Stang as co-counsel and Epiq Bankruptcy Solutions and the motion to pay all the lawyers and other professionals monthly. That will be heard at another hearing to be announced. I may not be the only one wondering how many lawyers one needs to file for bankruptcy. Or it could be they thought there were just too many motions for a single hearing. They will hear the motion about hiring temps to cover for the finance department employees SCO fired or who quit that I told you about earlier today.

On the list of folks who got the notice one sees the top creditors we noted on SCO's list, like Microsoft and Sun Microsystems, as well as a Joe McMann, United States Trustee. So he must be the newly assigned trustee. Nobody notified Novell or IBM or Red Hat. However, I'm guessing Novell needs no invitation to follow along.

Update: SCO has filed a Notice of Late Filing with the SEC about the 10Q they haven't filed. "The Company was unable to complete the preparation of the Form 10-Q Quarterly Report on a timely basis due to additional and unusual administrative work loads as a result of the bankruptcy filing." Not to mention the unfortunate firing/quitting of approximately half of the finance department, one assumes.

 
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