IBM's other Linux shoe could drop Monday, as Big Blue is expected to endorse the idea of Linux on desktop computers at a conference. Big Blue has heavily promoted the open-source operating system for use on servers, but Sam Docknevich of IBM's Global Services group plans to discuss how Linux's popularity now has spilled over into the desktop market, according to the agenda for the Desktop Linux Conference in Boston. Docknevich's speech is titled, "The Time is Now for Linux on the Desktop."
That's a significant change from August, when Irving Wladawsky-Berger, a senior executive who led Big Blue's Linux effort in the past, spoke on desktop Linux: "There is a strong buildup of interest, but I don't think this has quite achieved escape velocity." Until now, IBM has favored Linux for use on servers, which are networked machines for data storage and processing that typically are run by technically proficient administrators. The company has avoided pushing Linux for desktop computers, where Microsoft is overwhelmingly dominant.
However, IBM is likely to take a cautious approach to desktop Linux similar to that of Sun Microsystems and Red Hat. Those companies argue that desktop Linux is most appropriate when the computer user is performing a defined set of tasks.
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News source: CNET News.com