On TV.com: SUPER BOWL'S Best Commercials
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

May 16th, 2005

Microsoft to buy Red Hat? Say it ain't so

Posted by Paul Murphy @ 3:30 am

Categories: Distributions, Enterprise Policy, General, Linux, Software Licensing, Strategy

Tags:

In Paris, Ontario, there’s a large plaza sign advertising both The Paris Sleep Laboratory and the Canadian Post Office. The synergy there, of course, should be obvious –at least from the point of view of the humorist. Recent revivals of the idea that Microsoft might want to take over Red Hat have a similar quality to them.

As David Berlind recently pointed out in his piece Is Microsoft considering acquisition of Red Hat? Microsoft could see Red Hat’s acquisition as a nice way to undermine IBM, but might not consider that a sufficient reason to do it.  That, of course, is Microsoft’s perspective, but what about Red Hat’s? This is a company, remember, that wants to be Microsoft and, like Microsoft, makes its living packaging and selling other people’s ideas.

From Red Hat’s perspective this could be a marriage made in heaven — offering both a defense against the two greatest strategic threats it faces and a graceful way for key players to fold their tents and steal away into the night.

The biggest threat Red Hat faces right now is that IBM could settle with SCO and then release its own Linux along with workstations and servers based on the Cell processor. With SuSe essentially out of the picture, Linspire in a world by itself, and Debian not getting the press it deserves, such a move by IBM would leave Red Hat with nowhere to go except a suicidal head-to-head competition with Microsoft in the x86 marketplace. Given that Cell outperforms x86 by an order of magnitude and doesn’t have the security weaknesses built into the x86, this would leave them fighting to hold an ever decreasing share of a shrinking market.

The second most important threat facing them is that an IBM Linux on Cell offering gives the Linux and general open source communities an opportunity to rebel against Red Hat’s pretense of selling support with free licenses rather than licenses with free support. Since that’s the fundamental underpinning for Red Hat’s business model, taking it away would obliterate the company.

Getting acquired therefore makes sense as Red Hat’s Plan B -but Microsoft’s Plan B has traditionally been Plan A delayed a few years and I can see no reasonable business scenario under which the acquisition makes sense for them. What would make sense for Microsoft, in contrast, would be a technology sharing arrangement with Red Hat in those areas, like identity management, where doing so would assert Microsoft’s freedom of action without actually contravening the letter of its settlement agreement with Sun. That would neatly leverage Red Hat’s traditional anti-Sun stance as a balance against its own uncomfortable relationship with the people it fears most, at the cost of giving Red Hat some positive press and incurring the risk of being named in a few more GPL lawsuits - in other words, a deal with nothing but upside for Microsoft.

Related Discussions on TechRepublic

Did you know you can take part in these discussions with your ZDNet membership?

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 26 Talkback(s)
SUSE out of picture?
Just a quick note, from a PR guy at Novell. I find it a bit worrisome that someone who's writing about open source would dismiss SUSE so readily as "out of the picture." Since Novell bought SUSE, we... (Read the rest)
Posted by: blowry@... Posted on: 05/18/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
hey, it isn't 1st of April!  MOG Fan | 05/16/05
Stupid ZDnet servers  Roger Ramjet | 05/16/05
A comment on Cell  murph_zZDNet Moderator | 05/16/05
Why would anyone want to run apple OS ?!  mad-man | 05/16/05
If MS did buy RedHat  alterego_z | 05/16/05
Not to mention  Yagotta B. Kidding | 05/16/05
Oh no! That would mean....  doctormoriarty | 05/16/05
Re: If MS did buy RedHat  DragonBRockin | 05/16/05
It would because any  Linux User 147560 | 05/16/05
What reverse engineering?  alterego_z | 05/17/05
*shrug*  Shadus | 05/16/05
where do I buy my Cell processor?  thedesh | 05/16/05
Why make an agreement?  Anton Philidor | 05/16/05
Control  Yagotta B. Kidding | 05/16/05
How much FUD can you fit.....  rock06r | 05/16/05
Omg this has got to be the biggest pile of...  icejai | 05/16/05
He has no clue what he is really talking about.  d3vi1 | 05/16/05
Pay Attention...  dingletec_z | 05/16/05
They can afford it and  michael-t | 05/16/05
Too much complication....  John Le'Brecage | 05/16/05
Linux on Cell is no threat to X86  goldsounds | 05/16/05
Out of the picture?  Tachyon | 05/16/05
Longhorn is terribly late, are Microsoft doing an Apple  uno@... | 05/17/05
hahahahaha  Reverend MacFellow | 05/17/05
The inevitable switch if it happens!!  delvalln | 05/17/05
SUSE out of picture?  blowry@... | 05/18/05

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads