Posted on 02/14/2005 4:53:05 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
IBM plans to launch on Tuesday a program to make Linux applications available across its entire hardware line.
Called the IBM eServer Application Server Advantage for Linux and code-named Chiphopper, the package includes tools aimed at programmers as well as support and marketing resources from IBM. Linux distributors and IBM partners Red Hat and Novell were involved in the development of the tools and endorsed the project.
By participating in the program, independent software vendors will have an easier time moving, or "porting," applications from x86 processor-based servers to servers that run on IBM's Power chips and to IBM mainframes.
To complement the technical offerings, Big Blue is extending its partner program to independent software vendors, or ISVs, that sell Linux applications.
IBM will give application providers access to its testing centers and has created a structure so that ISVs can collaborate on specific customer segments, including those considering a move from Windows NT to Linux or from Solaris to Linux. IBM will also support applications that have been ported from the x86 chip to IBM's chips and provide a program certification logo.
Much of the initial interest in Linux as a server operating system was fueled by the availability of relatively cheap hardware based on x86 processors from Intel or Advanced Micro Devices.
IBM, however, has invested in making Linux run on all the hardware systems it sells, including those based on Intel chips, Unix servers, mainframes and its iSeries hardware. Better tools for creating Linux applications on multiple processors will help spur sales of IBM hardware, 40 percent of which is non-Intel servers, according to IBM.
"It's generally part of an effort to fight the perception, held in many quarters, that Linux is nothing more than an x86 phenomenon," said Stephen O'Grady, an analyst at RedMonk. "IBM wants to expand (application) vendors' horizons to non-x86 platforms."
Chiphopper includes porting and testing software that helps programmers identify potential incompatibilities. IBM said it is using Linux Standard Base as the standardized version of the Linux operating system.
Red Hat and Novell backed the program because it could grow the number of applications that run on Linux, an important factor for many corporate and consumer customers.
"Making sure that key enterprise applications work seamlessly on leading hardware platforms is a critical component" to adoption of Linux, said Hal Bennett, vice president of Novell Business Development.
IBM signed on 11 ISVs that intend to use the Chiphopper software and program.
The program is one of many efforts IBM has to encourage software providers to build applications that are optimized to run on its Linux servers or its middleware infrastructure software.
Sun Microsystems has created an open-source version of its Solaris operating system in large part to entice programmers to get a better look at its inner workings and create applications for Solaris.
IBM's vice president of Linux, Scott Handy, said the Chiphopper program will greatly increase the number of applications in the Linux industry, or "ecosystem." The company intends to grow its catalog of approved applications from 6,000 today to 12,000 by the end of 2007.
"Sun is promoting an ecosystem that is one 20th the size of the Linux ecosystem," Handy said. "With this announcement, the business decision of which ecosystem is the better business opportunity just got easier, and it heavily favors Linux."
Hmmm...ok.
I saw this:
"It's generally part of an effort to fight the perception, held in many quarters, that Linux is nothing more than an x86 phenomenon," said Stephen O'Grady, an analyst at RedMonk. "IBM wants to expand (application) vendors' horizons to non-x86 platforms."
And immediately thought about the new CELL chip IBM is building for SONY and Toshiba which is an incredible performer but for PC applications will need Software.
Details on the CELL are here:
Linux is all right, for what it is, but I just don't get why someone like IBM wants to be so pushy with it, especially on the server side. We use their AIX product extensively, and we just can't get the same level of stability or mature tools on Linux, as a server solution, as we can on AIX.
Well, IBM actually has to pay people to write AIX.
We pay IBM a lot for their trouble.
Sure. But fundamentally IBM sells hardware and services, so they want software to be as cheap as possible. It's all about commoditizing your complements.
AIX requires hardware AND support with high margins on both. Linux can be run on a plain jane Intel box. I don't know, maybe you're barking up the right tree, I'm often confused at IBM's decision-making, and also confused about the marketplace pushing Linux so hard, but I still highly value IBM's products.
As a shareholder I am glad to hear that.
I've slowly purged my company of Unisys, NCR, and SCO. I'd never consider anything other than AIX on risc for what we do.
IBM Ping
Too bad for you, that plans like this are perfect proof IBM plans to shelve AIX in favor of the foreign fake Linux. Disappointing to me, too.
It's really no mystery. It's about moving application software, which is where the biggest margins are. Intel hardware has been effectively commoditized, now IBM is now trying to commoditize OS as well as high-end hardware.
You and me both!
Linux may be (partially) foreign, but it's real. Show me evidence that China is using Linux to gain competative advantage and subvert US markets, and you'll have an ally in me.
I'm not touching that through the corporate firewall, so I'll have a look at that when I get home this evening.
That processor with 8 little vector units just looks an incredible performer for the right applications.
It might blow away some of the early Cray's.
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