20 Years of Linux down. Best to Come
Amplify’d from www.zdnet.com
im Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation, speaking from a wheelchair, opened the 2011 Linux Foundation
Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation, speaking from a wheelchair, opened the 2011 Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit. This meeting Zemlin said, was for the “leaders of Linux.”
The leaders of Linux aren’t ready to declare victory over Microsoft, Zemlin told me before the presentation, but “We’re beyond the obsession with Microsoft.”
From there, Zemlin pointed out that Linux runs everything from air traffic control systems to infotainment systems to nuclear submarines. Linux also powers the $10-billion CERN super collider, the special effects in Avatar. Zemlin also pointed out that Linux-powered stock markets now trade “72% of the world’s equity trades in 2010.” This, I might add, was before the London Stock Exchange went to Linux earlier this year. And of course, there’s been a “complete inversion” in supercomputing. In ten years, the top 500 supercomputers have switched from 96% Unix to 96% Linux.
Zemlin pointed out that “Wall St. is telling the world that Linux is the future. Over the last 10-years of comparing “Red Hat Stock price vs. Microsoft, you can see that Red Hat’s stock price has gone up 400% while MS stock price has remained stagnant. Sure Microsoft’s market cap is greater and revenue is greater, but for long term future growth, Wall St. believes in Linux and Red Hat.”
As for mobile, Zemlin thinks “The fat lady hasn’t sung in mobile yet. There are huge sea changes ahead. There will be new mobile devices and business models.” He won’t even guess what these might be because mobile is such a hot and changeable field. All he does know is that since open source enables companies to control their own destiny, Linux and open source will have major roles to play in smartphones and tablets.
As for Linux real’s future, after introducing the 1.0 release of the new Yocto Project for embedded Linux developers, Zemlin said, “The next Steve Jobs is probably using Linux. That’s a safe bet because Linux and open-source tools make it so easy to create. Linux give developers the richest colors, the best possible tools, to allow them to create that product, whatever it is. The next breakthrough device will be running Linux”
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