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Terryala
Microsoft frees Linux drivers; other closed-source vendors to step up?

QUOTE
The three drivers were released under the GPL v2.0 license
July 20, 2009 04:06 PM ET

Computerworld - Microsoft Corp.'s move to release three of its drivers to Linux, however technically modest it may be, could put pressure on other closed-source vendors to follow suit.

The uneven availability of drivers for Linux has long contributed to the open-source operating system's forbidding reputation among non-techies, and -- despite its free price tag -- to its slow growth.

According to Greg Kroah-Hartman, a longtime Linux developer for Novell Inc. and the head of the Linux Driver Project, Linux today "supports hundreds of thousands of drivers."

"We support more devices than any other OS ever has," he said. Citing the announcement last month that the coming USB 3.0 technology will be supported by Linux first, Kroah-Hartman said "for huge classes of devices, we usually get drivers first."

At the same time, Kroah-Hartman conceded that Linux users still have a "harder time" getting drivers for some "brand new devices." That's because hardware vendors don't prioritize support for Linux due to its small desktop market share.

Moreover, some vendors who do release Linux drivers decline to make them open-source. Doing so would allow the drivers to be included in the Linux kernel, making the installation process much smoother for users. It would also make it possible for outside developers to tinker with and fix them.

Holdouts include virtualization vendor VMware Inc., Wi-fi chipmaker Broadcom Corp. and, most notably, graphics chipmaker Nvidia Inc.

Nvidia has said it prefers to fix driver issues internally. Others say Nvidia, and others, are more interested in protecting their code from competitors.


Continued

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/913..._?taxonomyId=89
Chachazz
Pigs Do Fly - MaryJo Foley
The driver news also comes a week after Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner told Microsoft reseller partners that Microsoft has competed really well against “the fraudulent perception of free” that is at the core of many Linux vendors’ sales pitches. Not all of Microsoft management is onboard with this newfangled licensing world….)



Double-Take: Microsoft Contributes Drivers to Linux Community [ 3 drivers]
The reasons Microsoft did this probably are varied, but chiefest of them are economics and customer demand. Businesses are working to reduce costs in every area possible so as to keep their highly-skilled personnel, and sometimes this means consolidating hardware and software. Virtualization can accomplish this sort of consolitation. According to Tom Hanrahan, director of the Open Source Technology Center at Microsoft, "customers have told us that they would like to standardize on one virtualization platform, and the Linux device drivers will help customers who are running Linux to consolidate their Linux and Windows servers on a single virtualization platform."

More - OS News
Chachazz
Losing Market - Losing Money ?

"The news reflects Microsoft's continued interest in lobotomizing its virtualization competition through low prices, but also the recognition that it must open up if it wants to fend off insurgent virtualization strategies from Red Hat, Novell, and others in the open-source camp."


The code is being released under the GNU General Public License (version 2). Microsoft's poisiton through past years was that Linux was a Cancer and GPL "anti-american"... reported by Matt Asay - The Open Road (cnet news)
Chachazz
Why did MS GPL virtualization drivers?

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