Two major pro-Linux organisations, the
Open
Source Development Labs and the
Free
Standards Group (FSG), today announced an agreement to merge and form The
Linux Foundation.
Founding 'platinum' members of The Linux Foundation include
Fujitsu,
Hitachi,
HP,
IBM,
Intel,
NEC,
Novell and
Oracle.
Jim Zemlin, former executive director of the FSG, will lead the new
organisation. Other members include "every major company in the Linux industry"
, as well as numerous community groups, universities and industry end users.
"Computing is entering a world dominated by two platforms: Linux and Windows.
While being managed under one roof has given Windows some consistency, Linux
offers freedom of choice, customisation and flexibility without forcing
customers into vendor lock-in," said Zemlin.
"The Linux Foundation helps in the next stage of Linux growth by organising
the diverse companies and constituencies of the Linux ecosystem to promote,
protect and standardise Linux."
The Linux Foundation, which continues to sponsor the work of Linux creator
Linus Torvalds, outlined a shared resources strategy to collaborate on platform
development while enhancing the Linux market for end users, the community,
developers and industry.
According to the organisation, for Linux to remain open and attain the
greatest ubiquity possible, important services must be provided, including legal
protection, standardisation, promotion and collaboration.
It added that the group needs to recognise that successful proprietary
software companies such as
Microsoft
do several important things well, such as backwards compatibility, promotion,
interoperability and developer support.
"In the voluntary and distributed world of Linux development, the industry
continues to successfully use the consortia model to rapidly improve these value
attributes for Linux," the organisation stated.
"The Linux Foundation has been founded to help close the gap between open
source and proprietary platforms, while sustaining the openness, freedom of
choice and technical superiority inherent in open source software."
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