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[News] GNU/Linux Servers Get Expanded Support, Scope

  • Subject: [News] GNU/Linux Servers Get Expanded Support, Scope
  • From: Roy Schestowitz <newsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 06 Dec 2009 23:57:48 +0000
  • Followup-to: comp.os.linux.advocacy
  • Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.advocacy
  • User-agent: KNode/4.3.1
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Intel Unveiled Single-chip Cloud Computer in a Press Event

,----[ Quote ]
| The SCC operates with a customized version of 
| Linux. As SCC has the cores it is able to run 
| an OS instance, Intel and its partners have a 
| possibility to work with various networking 
| arrangements on the software side and then 
| decide what works best.
`----

http://www.thelatestnews.in/intel-unveiled-sincle-chip-cloud-computer-in-a-press-event/23001.html

The Linux answer to Windows SBS is clear

,----[ Quote ]
| This is the problem the Clear Foundation want 
| to tackle head on with the release of the 
| ClearOS 5.1 small business server Linux 
| distribution.
`----

http://www.itwire.com/content/view/29826/1141/


Recent:

A Linux answer to Windows SBS: ClearOS

,----[ Quote ]
| Linux is used as a server all the time.
| From branch-offices using Linux and Samba
| to Google running, well everything, on
| Linux, it's the operating system for choice
| for most businesses. Except that is, for
| small offices. There, Microsoft's SBS
| (Small Business Server) is the server of
| choice. The Clear Foundation wants to
| change that with their ClearOS 5.1 small
| business server distribution.
|
| Why has Linux not done well here? It's an
| odd story. In some ways, Linux has
| historically done quite well for small
| businesses. Back in the late 1990s, the
| Cobalt appliance line did quite well in the
| market. Sun, in one of their less than
| bright moments, however, bought Cobalt for
| about $2 billion in 2000. By neglect, Sun
| had killed off Cobalt, and small business
| server Linux, by 2004.
|
| [...]
|
| Note, we didn't say 'Linux' server.
| ClearOS, formerly known as ClarkConnect,
| doesn't ask for its users to become expert
| Linux administrators. Indeed, its interface
| hides all of Linux's complexity away. While
| it's built solidly on Linux and other open-
| source programs, a non-technical user could
| use ClearOS and never know what was his
| server's hood.
`----

http://www.itworld.com/operating-systems/87803/a-linux-answer-windows-sbs-clearos


Related:

Ballmer Still Searching for an Answer to Google

,----[ Quote ]
| "Forty percent of servers run Windows, 60 percent run Linux," he said. "How
| are we doing? Forty is less than 60, so I don't like it. ... We have some
| work to do."
`----

http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/151568/ballmer_still_searching_for_an_answer_to_google.html
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