Leroy Tennison wrote: > If I heard/remember correctly, AT&T's UNIX was proprietary but they > released it to academic institutions under NDA and were lax in > enforcement. We all know what happened. In this case it's obviously open Well, also that AT&T was forbidden by law from competition in that market, so they really weren't sure what to *do* with UNIX. > source, we know what will happen if someone tries something. My main > concern is future development, will it remain open source. My real fear > is that a certain un-named company is going to feel pressured to buy > Canonical. Does that unnamed company already own Solaris? > > My surprise is that no one is commenting on the price IMB is offering, a > 60-70% premium, that in and of itself seems risky. I would think it highly unlikely that they would completely rewrite Linux, to be able to get around the licensing. I expect the same proprietary extensions that upstream does, but not much more. And, as I said, I can see them pushing their customers, hard, to migrate, not to another IBM o/s, but to Linux. A huge part of IBM, now, is service and support. mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos