Microsoft has popped up at a Linux conference in London to fight its corner and encourage Linux developers and vendors to battle for the desktop market
The increasing take-up of open source on the desktop will drive Microsoft to create better products in response, the software giant said on Wednesday. Bradley Tipp, Microsoft"s national system engineer, told the Linux User and Developer conference in London that competition was good for the whole software industry and would lead to better products emerging from Redmond.
"The thing I like is that Microsoft does its best work and is most innovative when it has competition, so bring it on," said Tipp. Tipp"s comments echoed the view expressed on Tuesday by Matt Asay, director of Linux business office at Novell, when he claimed that the lack of alternative desktop operating systems had given Microsoft little incentive to improve its software range. Tipp appeared as part of a debate at the conference, where a number of players in the open-source scene, including Asay, gave their view on the future of Linux on the desktop.