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Citrix-XenSource deal raises open source questions

Citrix-XenSource deal raises open source questions

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 16 Aug 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The virtualization market may get some stronger competition, but developers may resent the technology being co-opted by a larger conglomerate of proprietary company. Gartner, Novell and others react

As for KVM, Chevalier said that Novell will continue to explore KVM as an option for its community release of open Suse.

“Because really that’s what contributing to the open source community provides,” Chevalier said. “If at some point KVM provides the right level of solution and we’re comfortable with that being a part of the commercial release, then we’re going to support that too. Our whole goal is to we don’t want to force customers into a box and limit freedom of choice.”

But Weiss pointed to last November’s Novell-Microsoft deal, in which the two agreed to collaborate on the development of some technologies – for example, trying to help Microsoft's Windows, a proprietary operating system, work with Novell's open source Suse.

“When this happened, there was a lot of disillusionment in the market and a lot of Suse developers left on principle that they wouldn’t work for a company that has these agreements with propriety vendors,” Weiss said.

Andi Mann, research director at Enterprise Management Associates, said he asked both XenSource and Citrix about the future of the open source project.

“They both stated to me that they are fully committed to maintain Xen as an open source project,” Mann said. “And I actually believe that this gives them a lot more resources to do this.”

Mann said that the Xen project’s biggest contributors were companies like Intel, AMD and Novell, and that the continued contribution from these enterprises will keep the Xen project strong.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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Suddenly, Citrix isn't so boring anymore
they've made a few acquisitions, but i wouldn't have pegged citrix as the likely contender to buy xensource,
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