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Novell cuts SUSE developers

Novell cuts SUSE developers

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 11 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Novell’s future growth is largely dependent on its success and commitment in the open source community, but sources close to the company say a quarter of the planned 100 layoffs there will be from the SUSE development team

“I could speculate that a new acquisition would be useful if they were looking to get access to new user communities as an attempt to increase the pool of potential clients or move into related sectors of open source software,” Jeffrey S. Hammond, a principal analyst with Forrester Research Inc., said. “In this sense, the costs really come out of two different buckets.”

Lyman agreed, saying that the company’s “ongoing extension of SUSE Linux makes a couple of categories of vendors more likely – identity management and systems management, in particular.”

According to Mark Driver, research vice-president of application development tools and methods at Gartner Inc., Novell will be looking for a deal that helps them expand beyond the core operating system. He compared it to Sun Microsystems Inc.'s acquisition of MySQL and Red Hat Inc.’s purchase of JBoss.

“The more products you have, the more you can cross-pollinate and create a synergy across the software stack,” he said. “This will bring in more revenue, but also give people a reason to upgrade. If you can go to Novell for the OS and the other stuff that goes on top of it, than you’d be more likely to deal with that way, rather than just a one off thing”

“A lot of vendors are going to be looking for opportunities to catch some of these smaller open source startups in this economy,” he added.

Driver said that the current economic conditions will play a key role in both increasing consolidation among open source software companies and boosting enterprise interest in open platforms. Recent research has shown that more businesses are considering open source out of desperation for cost savings, he said.

“What I’m finding is that many companies are struggling with open source because they are dealing with the integration of a whole lot of different pieces,” Driver said. “It’s a typical systems integration problem.”

This is a problem that companies like Novell and other industry giants will have to try and tackle by going after the smaller and extremely innovative open source startups on the market, especially those that are experiencing their own troubles in this economic recession.

“Anybody with some extra money can pick these guys up for fire-sale prices over the next 24 months,” Driver added.










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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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