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| UPDATE 1-SCO posts loss vs profit; revenue down 52 pct Thu Jun 10, 2004 03:38 PM ET (Adds details on legal case, share activity) SEATTLE, June 10 (Reuters) - SCO Group Inc. (SCOX.O: Quote, Profile, Research) , the software developer suing to collect money from users of the Linux operating system, on Thursday reported a quarterly loss versus a profit as revenue fell 52 percent, sparking a 10 percent sell-off in the company's shares. Lindon, Utah-based SCO, which claims that parts of the Unix software code it owns are used in the free Linux operating system, posted a net loss of $15 million, or $1.06 per share, in its fiscal second quarter versus net income of $4,5 million, or 33 cents per share, a year earlier. Revenue fell to $10.1 million in the three months ended April 30 from $21.4 million a year earlier. Shares in SCO fell 57 cents, or 10.5 percent, to $4.87 on Thursday on the Nasdaq after the results were announced. SCO sued International Business Machine Corp. (IBM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) last year, accusing the world's largest computer company of violating its rights by putting parts of Unix into Linux, which can be copied and modified free of charge. SCO is also arguing that corporate users who have adopted Linux to cut information technology costs should now pay to use the system. So far, SCO has not been able to collect from its legal adversaries and said that it had earned $11,000 from its licensing efforts. SCO's main costs are associated with its legal bills, as well as charges it incurred to buy out one of its main investors, BayStar Capital. BayStar Capital, which led an investment group that paid $50 million for convertible stock in SCO, sold its its holding for about $23 million, well below the $40 million face value of its original investment. Few private analysts had provided forecasts for SCO's latest quarterly earnings, but the company said that results were in line with expectations. "Our revenue for the second quarter was consistent with our expectation.... we are committed to increasing shareholder value through profitable operations and increasing cash flow from our UNIX division as well as remaining focused on our intellectual property lawsuits and licensing strategies," Darl McBride, chief executive, said in a statement. |
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News.
The SCO Group, Inc., formerly known as Caldera International, Inc., owns the UNIX operating system and is a provider of UNIX-based products and services. It generates revenue from two sources: sales of UNIX-based products and services, and licenses of the UNIX technology through SCOsource initiatives.
The Company's core business is to sell and service its UNIX operating system and related software products to small- to medium-sized businesses, and branch offices and franchisees of Fortune 1000 businesses. Its main products that drive the majority of its UNIX revenue are OpenServer and UnixWare.
In January 2003, The SCO Group established its SCOsource division to review and enforce its intellectual property surrounding the UNIX operating system. In July 2003, it acquired the assets, engineering personnel and technology of Vultus Inc.
At first I thought this was a typo, so I checked it out. It is correct.
That means that SCO sold exactly SIXTEEN Linux "licences" in three months.
Sweeeeeeeeet!!!