All the latest UK technology news, reviews and analysis

Ximian to offer Linux .Net apps this year

by Ian Lynch at Brainshare Europe in Barcelona

09 Sep 2003

Be the first to comment

  • Tweet this

Novell acquisition Ximian has promised that the first commercial release of Mono, its software that aims to run Microsoft .Net-developed applications on Linux, will be delivered this year.

Ximian chief technology officer and co-founder Miguel de Icaza told delegates at Novell's Brainshare Europe event in Barcelona that Mono is now a mature technology.

The core Ximian team and 150 external developers contributed to the development of Mono.

Components include a .Net virtual machine, two types of class libraries (.Net-compatible and Unix-specific), C# and VB.Net compilers and third-party components such as existing commercial compilers and development tools.

"We are not quite ready. Version 1.0 is not quite complete but it will be soon," said de Icaza.

Despite Ximian's reluctance to launch, four commercial products based on Mono are already available: Virtuoso application server from Openlink Software, Instant Messaging Platform from Tipic, Jabber SDK from Winfessor and SourceGear Vault from SourceGear.

Nat Friedman, Ximian's vice president of research and development, had earlier demonstrated the in-development Ximian Desktop2.

He explained that the challenges preventing wider adoption of desktop Linux are application availability, interoperability with file formats and network services, usability and manageability.

Desktop2 would provide lower total cost of ownership, better usability, interoperability and "complete desktop productivity", Friedman claimed.

Jack Messman, chairman and chief executive at Novell, said yesterday that he wanted Novell and Ximian to be the "catalyst" for desktop Linux.

In an interview with vnunet.com, Messman insisted that he sees Ximian as helping to establish Novell's credentials with the open source community.

After being "marginalised" as an infrastructure player, according to Messman, Novell is looking to win friends and influence developers working in the IT departments of enterprises.

"In Nat and Miguel we have two of the superstars of the open source community," he said.

Do you agree?

 

Add your comment

We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions. Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Poll

IT priorities for 2012

What is the most important IT priority for your company this year?

99%

0%

1%

0%

0%

Connect with V3.co.uk

Sign up to our daily or weekly newsletters

Accurev

Top 5 software development challenges

This paper focuses on a series of best practices and techniques for development teams looking to improve their software development processes

Talend

Rubbish in, rubbish enterprise

Why good data management at all levels is essential in the modern business (video, 6mins)

Desktop Support Engineer/2nd line support

Overview: My client; Based in the City...

Project Manager

**New Vacancy** Based in London Up to £35,000 - £42...

Business Analyst

Junior BA The role of the junior BA is to support the...

Project Manager - Financial Services IT - up to £85'000

Project Manager - Financial Services IT - up to £85'000...

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.