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Seven Reasons Microsoft Loves Open Source

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wed Apr 25, 2007 04:01 PM
from the conference-trolls dept.
tlockney writes "Next week at Microsoft's MIX, whurley will be leading a discussion on 'Open Source, the Web, Interoperability, and Microsoft'. To kick off a bit of pre-session discussion and enlist the help of others in putting Microsoft on the spot, whurley, king of all things open source at BMC has written an article entitled 'Seven Reasons Microsoft Loves Open Source'."
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  • Reason zero (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cyberianpan (975767) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:03PM (#18875979)
    They can read it & re-engineer it as paid for product !
  • I think he'd be better qualified to speak on why BMC loves MSIE.

  • by neuro.slug (628600) <neuro__@nospAM.hotmail.com> on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:15PM (#18876151)
    Microsoft : open source :: Prisonmate Bubba : his bitches

    Where I'm from, they have another word besides "love" for that.
  • It makes it easier for them to get software patents.
  • FTA: "Open source is not the threat; Linux is."
    • Re:Admitted (Score:5, Insightful)

      by parvenu74 (310712) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @05:00PM (#18876815)
      That makes no sense. Microsoft primarily makes their money from Windows and Office; with Linux making progress toward a usable desktop and OpenOffice.org already at the state where it can replace MS Office for most tasks, what can Microsoft use to lock people onto their platform? IIS? There's Apache. MSSQL? There are MySQL and PostgeSQL. .NET? There is Mono and Java. There are two reasons why MS still exists: the huge amount of legacy code and applications that cannot run on any other systems, and the lack of corporate hand-holding for customers considering the jump to Linux (though this is rapidly changing). For companies that don't rely on legacy business applications, the ability to roll out Linux desktops to the bulk of their users can be done today. As the state of Linux apps business progress, there will be ever less reason for customers to play Microsoft's game.
  • What's a whurly? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by spun (1352) <loverevolutionar ... com minus distro> on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:17PM (#18876191) Journal
    Is it like a swirly? Oh, it's William Hurley. Of course. That non-famous guy I've never heard of before.

    This synopsis annoys me because it is written as if we're all just supposed to know what the hell a whurly and a BMC are.
  • Duh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by derEikopf (624124) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:19PM (#18876215)
    Free R&D.
  • by dedazo (737510) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:20PM (#18876229) Journal
    Microsoft needs open source because established companies cannot compete with them in the "normal" market outside of the web (Google and Yahoo) where Microsoft has historically played catch-up. Open source levels the field, and so you have things like Firefox. Firefox forced Microsoft to come out of their "it's good enough and no one has a choice anyway" stagnation. The inevitable comparisons between Apache and IIS5 ended up resulting in IIS6. When Microsoft feels the pressure, they are a better company with better products.

    Arguably this is not true for all their markets, such as development tools and Office, which historically have not been too contested (not lately at least) and yet have not resulted in the same stagnation.

    Many people want open source to succeed, because one of the end results of that is a better Microsoft. I've always included myself in that group.

    As for the article, I think it's a good read for all the "LOLOL M$ is TEH AFRAID OF THE GNU/PENGUIN ETC" crowd:

    Microsoft doesn't fear open source; it fears what the competition can do with it.

    Microsoft fears IBM and Novell and CA. It doesn't "fear" Ubuntu or Gentoo or Torvalds. That's the key issue that RMS managed to miss (or probably chose to ignore for the oomph effect) in his incisive analysis of the "Halloween documents".

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Actually if there's anything to fear it's that mature product genres inevitably have lower value over time.

      That is to say that now that OS technology is mature it just doesn't increase in value as much any more. So MS has a problem shifting its new OSes because the old OSes have enough value as they are. Same with Office products. Unfortunately for MS its business model requires that the value of its products does not lower over time - hence they are inevitably required to find ways of artificially increa
    • by TubeSteak (669689) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:53PM (#18876687) Journal

      They realize open source is their future.
      Sure, Microsoft sometimes makes it easy for us to hate them, but aren't as disconnected from the pulse of the open source community as you may think. Linux is causing issues for them in the market, and they're working hard to keep up. They didn't build their empire by not planning ahead--even the most closed-minded executive in Redmond realizes open source is in their future.
      Notice how author of TFA doesn't bother to back up his assertion?

      I would have though that reality backs up the opposite: MS doesn't want to open their code or specs.

      Right now, they're giving the EU a tough time over specs,
      I can't imagine how "They realize open source is their future".
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Wasn't that ESR's analysis of the Halloween documents, not RMS? Give credit where credit is due.
      http://www.catb.org/~esr/halloween/ [catb.org]
  • WHAT? (Score:5, Funny)

    by theolein (316044) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:35PM (#18876421) Journal
    That's like:
    7 reasons a mouse likes a cat
    7 reasons why oil likes water
    7 reasons why intelligent design likes pasta
    or
    7 reasons why office users like clippy
  • Hopelessly naive (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Keith Russell (4440) <keith.russell@g m a il.com> on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:38PM (#18876465) Homepage Journal

    Open source is not the threat; Linux is.

    Um, no. Both are threats to Microsoft. Linux, as a product, is obvious.

    Open source, as a larger concept, is a threat to Microsoft because it is the antithesis of their power base. Microsoft has gained and held its control over the industry by clutching tightly its file formats and protocols. The only reason we ever got Office compatibility and the SMB protocol in the Open Source realm is because of careful reverse engineering and the hope that Microsoft's patent lawyers would keep their guns holstered.

    I think Microsoft is realizing that the problem isn't the source, which is eroding as a base of power, but the software patents. On the one hand, they hold enough to crush pretty much anybody they choose. At the same time, they've already been victimized once by Eolas. The Novell deal shows how reluctant Microsoft is to really enforce their software patents. It's as much a defensive action for Microsoft as it is for Novell. Obviously, Novell can step out from under that Sword of Damocles. Microsoft, however, by not filing a straight-up patent suit, avoids throwing the first punch in a barroom full of patent trolls, all of whom are itching for a brawl.

  • I like this new form of journalism being pioneered here: "X is going to be speaking at some event and I will now hold forth on some completely random topic that might come up!" One of the more vigorous submitters then follows it up with "X spoke at some meeting and I will now hold forth on some completely random topic that didn't come up!"
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:50PM (#18876637)
    Were the kernel Linux licensed under the BSD license, MS wouldn't consider Linux a threat. It's because of the *license* that the kernel Linux has that Microsoft is scared silly of it. That goes for anything else that's released under the GPL--Samba, OpenOffice.org, Mozilla/Firefox, KDE, *anything*. Why? Because they can't just lift GPL code without providing source. That's why their Services for UNIX is based on BSD, not GNU/Linux. It's also why Apple used a lot of FreeBSD code for the core of Mac OS X (the non-GUI parts).

    Microsoft has made it clear, many times, that they consider the GPL a "cancer" and "Communist". They've also said that "we're not against 'open source'. We like BSD, that's fine. What we don't like is the GPL."

    The GPL is their enemy because the GPL proactively defends our freedom. Is the BSD license a Free Software license? You bet! But it doesn't proactively defend our freedom like the GPL does, and it is that characteristic of the GPL that frightens Microsoft to its core. That's also why they're fighting so desperately against the OpenDocument file formats; to Microsoft, actual, true Freedom for users is a very, very scary thing. [mailto]
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        The GPL is great for some things, but if you are giving your code to paying customers, let them do what they want with it.

        Hmm... do you take the same stance with the binaries?

        I don't know what magic the source code has that means that if you are selling source rather than a binary that you would have to let your customers do whatever they like with it. Would you please explain?

        This "defend our freedom" sounds like a bunch of bullshit. Viewing sourcode isn't a freedom.

        Ugh. It's not about viewing the sou

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        They certainly don't have to. But if Microsoft insists on keeping their code secret at all costs, there will come a point when there is GPL code available to compete with absolutely everything that Microsoft produces. Heck, we're almost there already: OS, Office suite, Web browser, Mail client, development environment, games (for those that don't need the latest FPS from Megacorp, anyway).

        That is the future that Microsoft wants to avoid at all costs; it will make the price of software as a commodity become
  • Reason Eight (Score:3, Insightful)

    by kinglink (195330) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @05:26PM (#18877247)
    Because people spend their time working on open source instead of the product to beat Microsoft. So Steve Jobs the second comes along today. He's going to make an OS that's going to destroy Windows. He looks for his best coder. However coders don't need a Steve Jobs to make software anymore. They can just work on Linux to get their coding fix. They don't need a guy with a vision because they have Linux Torvalds to follow and continue to lead them.

    Let's face it, Linux is not going to destroy Windows, there's too many issues with it. People have already seen Linux and made their opinions then. We can change them but it's an uphill battle. The in fighting, the "hard core linux guys" vs. the Red hats vs. the Slackware vs. everyone else has ruined what little chance Linux has. The very fact that if Linux takes over, it won't be one version but every version and it will all create work for the end user means it's going to be problematic for it to even gain market share.

    Open source diverts and directs a lot of time for the people who could take on Microsoft's products and that makes Microsoft happy. In theory it COULD make for a better product because everyone can be working towards one goal. But in reality every programmer has an opinion on how best to go about the assault on the big MS and with out true leadership (Torvalds isn't looking to lead the revolution, Stallman is but he's as polarizing as can be, hell Stallman will scare most corporations back to Microsoft's loving arms with his free software talk.) Even the term open source scares businesses and executives. It's a good thing after you understand it but there's a lot of parts of it that Microsoft can whisper in people's ears to scare them into using the Microsoft alternative.

    So Microsoft loves the fact open source is here because if anything it's destroyed more genius ideas than they could probably fight on their own in a number of ways.
  • by crhylove (205956) <rhy@leperkhanz.com> on Wednesday April 25 2007, @06:06PM (#18877897) Homepage Journal
    1. We can steal code!
    2. We can steal ideas!
    3. We can steal design!
    4. We can release a version that doesn't turn off noobies!
    5. We can make a proprietary competitor and wipe the original FOSS off the map with our hegemony!
    6. We can put out a press release about how we invented something again!
    7. We can steal code!
  • by silicon not in the v (669585) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @07:06PM (#18878661) Journal
    I posted a comment there on his page, refuting his arguments. It wasn't too hard to rationally shoot most of them down. I was able to refute 6 of 7, but one of them I just wasn't familiar enough with. Here's the comment if you're interested:
    ----------------

    I can't take you very seriously because there is a lot of misdirection and hand-waving in your article. I will give you credit that I didn't see any outright lies, which Microsoft directly uses, though. Here I'll point out some problems with your points.

    "They include open source code in their products."
    You bring up the TCP/IP implementation as an example. That's not a good idea on your part because it's exactly the example people use to point out why Microsoft likes to let other people come up with good stuff under the BSD license and then selfishly take it with no thank-yous or giving in return. When it comes to a mutual sharing license that they can't take selfish advantage of, like the GPL, they spit venom, lies, quasi-legal lobbying interference with government action, violation of their court-ordered code of conduct from their anti-trust conviction, etc., etc. So basically, your first point illustrates that they just like code that other people open without restrictions so they can just snatch it.

    "They support open source vendors."
    I won't say a lot here because I'm not familiar with these Microsoft "programs created to test and verify open source applications on Microsoft platforms". If they do that, fair enough.

    "They benefit from open source everyday."
    It's called FUD. Have you read the content of the "free press" they pay for? That's kind of a twisted way to look at things to say that your competitors benefit you by giving you the opportunity to smear them with falsehoods. You're not understanding what the alternative situation was to this "battle with open source" they've been waging in the press. Before open source was maturing, Microsoft didn't have a big war in the press and had close to 100% market share. Everyone just kept buying it because they had never heard of anything else. Now Microsoft is having to viciously attack to slow the slide of their market share. Open source isn't doing them any favors there.

    "They open source code."
    Ah, UNIX tools for Windows. This is beating the ground where the dead horse rotted away several years ago. They did a small token action on a minor product most people don't use once, and we're supposed to be reminded of that over and over? That hardly seems like strong evidence to make it one of the "Seven Reasons Microsoft Loves Open Source". That's weak, man.

    "They are adopting open source culture."
    You're not recognizing what this is. Culture means actually doing something, which they're not. This is co-opting the language of open source to try to pretend to be something good, while remaining the wolf in sheep's clothing. It's the same with their proprietary data-dump of their new MS Office format, which they have ironically called "Microsoft Office Open XML". They want to have that word Open associated with them, even though the format is very closed and does not contain specs enough for anyone else to use it.

    "They aren't threatened by open source."
    Well this looks like a good place to continue the talk about the office document formats. They are threatened at least as much, if not more, by other forms of openness than just by Linux. Have you kept up with Microsoft's conduct in Massachusetts over the document format decision? They have been putting out some of their most blatant lies to convince them to use the Microsoft document formats, rather than go to a neutral document format that can be used by anyone, including Microsoft if they wanted to stop their tantrums long enough to do it. Read some of Andy Updegrove's blog to find out some of the story about that, including how they fed a false character assasination story on Peter Quinn to Boston Globe reporter Steve Kurkjian. The story was published before they even
  • threats (Score:3, Interesting)

    by hachete (473378) on Thursday April 26 2007, @07:46AM (#18883133) Homepage Journal
    Microsoft see OSS as a threat: that's their problem, not ours. OSS has never been - and never should be - in the business to compete with anyone. OSS is here to produce better software. Period. If distributions like RedHat or IBM want to go toe-to-toe against MS, that's their problem.

    Really, any press release or fluff from OSS collaborators should be ignored. Any OS release should be examined for goodness - copied - then ignored. Any attempts to say that OSS is here to "wipe-out" MS should be ignored. OSS can never do that. Those people who whinge about OSS *not* competing with word, access, oh, get a life.
    • by cyborg_zx (893396) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:11PM (#18876111)
      It doesn't work like that - if MS is forced to use a UNIX based OS derivative in order to survive they may not go out of business but it is endgame as far as dominance is concerned. That is a lose situation for MS, not a win.
      • by ettlz (639203) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @04:21PM (#18876243) Homepage Journal

        if MS is forced to use a UNIX based OS derivative in order to survive they may not go out of business but it is endgame as far as dominance is concerned.

        To say nothing of the fact that UNIX and NT are architecturally very different animals.

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            Microsoft knows unix. In the 90's they partnered weith a small company called proginet based on Long Island . They partnered to help windows machines talk to mainframes. I dont know if they still ahve this partner ship or not. Trust me though Microsoft knows unix even though they dont publically state it. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3649/is_19 9507/ai_n8710090 [findarticles.com]
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              Indeed, and they work with Mainsoft for the Unix ports of some of their applications. (Not to mention Microsoft Xenix back in the day!)

          • by DECS (891519) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @05:21PM (#18877151) Homepage Journal
            You are uninformed.

            Apple not only maintained is own Unix distro of A/UX, sold AIX servers, and created its own Linux distro prior to OS/X, but also ported the Mac environment to other Unix variants, using MAE and laster MAS.

            - Steve Jobs and 20 Years of Apple Servers [roughlydrafted.com]

            And everybody knows that NT's "POSIX compliance" was a bullshit dance designed to make NT legal to sell to the government. NT never offered anything more than pretend support for POSIX, and it was of no more importance to Microsoft as a subsystem within NT than was OS/2.

            Further, since POSIX compatilbility is techniclly a paid seal of approval on a specific implementation of Unix APIs, of course Linux as general idea can't ever techically pay to attach the POSIX trademark to itself in the way Microsoft pretended to.

            The reality is that the only value of POSIX is as a general synonym for "Unix-like compatibility." In the real world, Linux currently helps define what that is; NT does not offer this at all.

            Are you really trying to argue that NT provides some useful sort of compatibility for Unix apps? Citing the Wikipedia as a source does not do much to create credibility for your conjecture.

            • NT POSIX memories. (Score:5, Informative)

              by EmbeddedJanitor (597831) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @07:27PM (#18878901)
              As the parent says the NT POSIX was severely sucky.

              In the NT3 timeframe (approx 12 years ago now), there was a big effort to sell NT to companies, such as the one I worked for then, supplying back office /server room style products. Many/most products of the time were running on Unix boxes or similar. We were using Unix x86 boxes (SCO etc) for compter tephony applications. NT had to check a few boxes to encourage people to switch: POSIX and streams driver support. This gave people a reasonable porting avenue to a cheaper OS (NT was about half or a third of SCO's cost at the time).

              The POSIX and streams drivers were very inefficient, and were dropped within a short while (once the bait and switch had worked).

              This ploy was very clever on MS's part. Using ourselves as a benchmark for people in this space, our customers were putting on some pressure to provide NT based products because they were eating the MS blurb and wanted to reduce costs. Our techies looked at NT and figured out what would be needed to port: POSIX-check, streams driver model - check. So we say that on paper it can be done with trivial architectural change. Marketing start hyping the NT-based offering. The business people say make it so, so we do. Unfortunately we find the POSIX and streams driver model are very slow on NT, so end up having to start doing native drivers and non-POSIX code. We start slipping, marketing starts screaming and the portability gets dumped in favour of getting shipping. The bait and switch has worked.

              We never got any benefit from NT POSIX or the MS streams driver. Our systems went from requiring low-end (16-25MHz) 386s to 100+MHz 486. Basically a very bad case of bait and switch.

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              Are you really trying to argue that NT provides some useful sort of compatibility for Unix apps? Citing the Wikipedia as a source does not do much to create credibility for your conjecture.

              And citing roughlydrafted is better? Sorry, couldn't resist.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            At least NT is already fully POSIX compliant
            Did you even read that link? NT is only POSIX compliant when using Microsoft Services for Unix, which is hardly the out of the box configuration. Anyone who has used SFU knows its limits, regular Windows apps and SFU apps don't interact very well together, if at all.
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              Not only that, at least about a year ago when I last tried SFU, it was like being blasted back in time and using ISC UNIX in 1993 (and that was a horrible experience even back then). Cygwin is just miles better - it's unfortunate that the cygwin people can't make an NT subsystem, the interface being closed and propreitary.
      • by mysticgoat (582871) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @06:16PM (#18878043) Journal

        if MS is forced to use a UNIX based OS derivative... it is endgame as far as dominance is concerned. That is a lose situation for MS, not a win.

        That is certainly a loss for Bill Gates and perhaps the rest of the original cadre of MS corporate officers. Throughout the 80s and 90s, MS was steered consistently toward a "vision" of dominance that really wasn't profit oriented. MS has consistently passed up the opportunity to make profits in its efforts to become the dominant player in different digital markets. It has thrown more money down the toilet to prevent someone else from succeeding in an area where it wasn't good enough to win on merit than many companies had earned during those 20 years.

        When MS gives up this foolishness and starts acting like a profit-oriented business, it will almost certainly lose its tarnish and become a respectable member of the business community.

        That will be a long-term winning situation for MS. The only losers will be Gates (who has already thrown in the towel), Balmer, and the rest of the original dreamers with their juvenile fantasies about attaining world dominance.

        • The only losers will be Gates (who has already thrown in the towel), Balmer (who has already thrown in the chair), and the rest of the original dreamers with their juvenile fantasies about attaining world dominance.

          Fixed(TM)
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Linux wont put Microsoft out of business. Microsoft will put themselves out of business that is if they don't learn to adjust the the market. proprietary products are painting themselves in to a corner & a niche. as OSs & software becomes more of a commodity. maybe sooner than most people think...
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      There would be absolutely no reason for Microsoft to port Win32 on top of Linux. The NT kernel is more than capable as the OS. It is a microkernel design with isolated loadable plugin subsystems. Win32 just happens to be the subsystem with which most people are familiar. Microsoft has released other subsystems, including their own limited POSIX subsystem and an OS/2 subsystem (which was the original subsystem as Windows NT was designed to be OS/3 with IBM, until Windows 3.0 took off). Later Microsoft b
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        It is a microkernel design with isolated loadable plugin subsystems.

        No, it's not. Microsoft themselves refer to it as a "hybrid kernel"; practically, it means it's a monolithic kernel that sort of looks somewhat like a microkernel if you squint and turn your head a little, but it still misses out on most of the relevant advantages of a real microkernel architecture. Most modern operating systems have kernels that support pluggable binary format and other kernel service modules, but the amount of marketin

    • by _Sprocket_ (42527) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @05:12PM (#18877031)

      Everybody keps saying that linux would put Microsoft out of business.


      I'm not sure who "everybody" is... but such claims ignore history. It ignores the very impressive turn-on-a-dime business strategy Microsoft pulled off after they initially failed to realize the importance of the Internet. And it ignores a historical precedence in the changing of IBM's desktop hardware market when it shifted from a proprietary to commodity platform.

      Micorosoft is not going to simply curl up and die. They've proven to be agile enough to react to threats / lost opportunities. And they have the momentum and resources to deal with a suddenly difficult market.

      If we're lucky, Microsoft will become the software / OS equivalent of IBM. Sure - they're still powerhouses in the Industry... but they no longer control it. They have influence but have to compete with every other market player for that influence to pay off and drive the market in their desired direction.
    • by UnknowingFool (672806) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @05:19PM (#18877125)

      Everybody keps saying that linux would put Microsoft out of business. No it won't . I honestly think microsoft would do what apple did. Linux would be the main part of windows and microsoft would make the user interface the standard windows one. Sorry I didnt describe it right. I can see microsoft doing that.

      That sounds plausible except for a few minor details. The first of which is the GPL. One of the major cornerstones of the GPL is that there are protections to prevent people from exploiting GPL code in the way MS would certainly exploit it. Microsoft has built an empire of locking every other competitor out (sometimes through illegal means). The famous extend part of the embrace, extend, extinguish ploy would not be allowed by the GPL.

      Also, Apple was able to develop OS X not using Linux. Apple acquired NeXT which had developed some advanced technologies used in OS X. Also they based their kernel on BSD which does not have the same restrictions as Linux.

        • by Grishnakh (216268) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @05:08PM (#18876941)
          I think there's a bit of a difference there. The "BSD backed" is really a custom microkernel (Darwin), with BSD userspace tools. But this really isn't important, because the thing that Apple provides that's really different and proprietary is the system libraries: Cocoa, Carbon, etc. These are the APIs that application writers code to for the Mac platform. Because of this, you can't just compile Darwin for your Intel machine and run Mac apps; the APIs are closed-source. Trying to clone that would be an effort on the order of the WINE project; as we've seen with WINE, it doesn't really matter what kernel you're using, within reason, it's the system APIs that matter for running applications.

          If Windows ever used a Linux kernel (hah!), there'd really be very little difference from the current status quo. They'd probably have to fix up the NTFS driver a lot (or use a different filesystem--most users wouldn't notice or care), they'd certainly benefit from all the built-in drivers, but the graphics subsystem would probably be a big showstopper since they'd either have to use X and change a lot of things, or make their own subsystem built into the kernel which they seem to like to do. Other than that, they'd certainly keep their whole system libraries proprietary and secret, which would make it non-trivial for people to run Windows applications on free software. Yes, they could use WINE, but that's still trying to hit a moving target and is developed slowly because of the need for reverse-engineering. Personally, I don't see why MS would ever bother using a Linux kernel; it doesn't provide them much technical benefit.
          • by Penguinisto (415985) on Wednesday April 25 2007, @06:06PM (#18877913) Journal

            Personally, I don't see why MS would ever bother using a Linux kernel; it doesn't provide them much technical benefit.

            Then again, the NT microkernel seems a bit overstressed for what it's being pushed to do in Vista, and it's starting to show... badly. Two versions from now, they're going to have to replace it with something... 'cause what they got now simply isn't going to cut the mustard (well, unless they up the minimum HW requirements to an 8-core box + 16GB of RAM + four SLI-chained vidcards...)

            That said, I do agree that it prolly won't be Linux - MSFT will most likely snag the latest *BSD kernel (one that has no GPL encumbrance) and lock it down good and hard. Then they'll build the world's ugliest set of wrappers and APIs for it, then call the results "innovation".

            /P

            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              I'm sorry, I don't see it that way. I don't think changing kernels is going to help anything. The problem is that Vista tries to do too much, namely DRM. All the DRM crap they added in is probably tied into everything, right into the kernel, and of course that's going to slow everything down. It'd be the same way if they took a clean BSD kernel and loaded it down with a lot of DRM crap.

              As for two versions from now, that's over a decade away, probably more, at the rate that MS releases major new OS versi