| LINUX
has long been the darling of highly-skilled programmers. But now, the
program is going mainstream, reports technology correspondent Clark
Boyd.
Some internet cafes in Brazil rely
on Linux
|
Major global computer companies are now embracing
Linux. IBM, for one, is currently running a series of television and
online ads proclaiming that the future is open, as in open source
computing.
They have even enlisted author
Kurt
Vonnegut to help promote the open source ideal of sharing your computer
code with others.
It is a far cry from the days
when the
only people who knew about Linux were a small community of zealous
enthusiasts.
The interest from big
companies is
helping Linux programmers get the recognition they deserve.
"It's helping us get more
appreciation
from the rest of the world," said open source guru Bruce Perens.
"We are no longer isolated geeks
making
a
system only we know is good. And I think there's a lot of benefit."
Modify and share
The Linux operating system
was created
more than a decade ago by Linus Torvalds, then just a student at the
University of Helsinki in Finland.
Since then, the program has
been further
refined by programmers worldwide.
Linus Torvalds: The man who
created
Linux
|
The code of Linux is open source, meaning anyone
can look it and modify it, as long as they agree to share their changes
with everyone else.
Large companies have been
benefiting
from Linux for years now. They use it to run large servers and
networks.
The number one issue for many
of these
companies is money. Linux can be a low-cost alternative to other,
proprietary operating systems like Microsoft Windows.
Because Linux is open source,
it can be
obtained for free, although most companies pay software developers for
a
package of Linux-based applications, including e-mail and word
processing.
They also pay for customer
support. But
usually not near as much as they would pay to a proprietary vendor.
That is encouraging software
developers
around the world to make Linux-based products.
"I think the market is
looking for an
alternative to Microsoft," said Dan Wensley, from Net Integration
Technologies in Ontario, Canada.
"Just being an alternative to
Microsoft
in a lot of markets globally will give you an opportunity.
"Today, business has adopted
Linux as an
alternative, and as a viable, sometimes better, sometimes as-good-as
solution and we've seen it over last five to six years, develop into a
real market and real opportunity and real saleable item," he said.
Saving money
Linux is also proving popular
in the
public sector. Governments like the idea of not paying a proprietary
vendor huge licensing fees for years and years.
They also like the fact that open source software
allows them to modify the code themselves.
"What we see happening in
Europe is that
governments are picking it up," said Marcel Hartog of Computer
Associates.
"If you talk to governments,
they're
actually thinking - why don't we write open source software as well.
"So it's not just cost-based,
but also
the concept of open source software. They just like the idea of saving
the people money, but also giving back to the people what they
created."
The German city of Munich,
for one,
recently decided to move from Windows to Linux. Israel and Brazil have
also begun initiatives to increase their use of open-source solutions.
Microsoft rival, Sun
Microsystems, is
currently working with the Chinese Government on open-source software
development.
China wants to use Linux to
create its
own, home-grown software industry.
"If you spend a dollar with a
local
company working on Linux, that dollar stays in your economy," said
Simon
Phipps of Sun Microsystems.
"When you spend a dollar with
a
multi-national corporation as a license fee for a piece of software,
that dollar leaves your country."
"It's about keeping the money
in your
local economy, developing skills and developing the local economy to be
strong in its own right in a global context."
And that is why some think
open-source
could be the way of the future, especially for developing countries.
Dimo Calovksi, who works on
development
issues at the United Nations, believes open source could tap into the
developing world's natural strengths.
"In order to be a good
information
technology professional, to be a developer, programmer, system
administrator, one has to have a problem-solving mentality," he said.
"This is something that a lot
of people
in developing countries have. It is a natural for them to make do with
little, and to produce something of value out of nothing."
Commercial waters
The majority of the Linux
community is
excited about how their creation is being put to use, both in business
and in government.
Some worry, though, that large
corporations may be reluctant to share their Linux-based software with
others. And that, say long-time Linux programmers, would violate the
tenets of the open source philosophy.
But open source proponent
Eric Raymond
says that most Linux programmers are happy to spread the gospel.
"In the last five or six
years, we've
had a new generation of advocates come out and go public, who are
really
much more comfortable with collaborating with markets and collaborating
with corporations," he said.
"Because hackers are bright
people, and
they've figured out that if you want to change the world, one of the
things you have to do is co-opt the people who write the big cheques."
Those cheques may soon be
getting
bigger.
At this year's recent
LinuxWorld Expo
in
New York, it was clear that corporations, governments and programmers
are united by one goal - getting Linux onto as many personal computers
around the globe as possible.
Clark Boyd is technology
correspondent for The World, a BBC World Service and WGBH-Boston
co-production
An
article from BBCi. More technology stories from BBCi
|