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Developers of Linux Software Planning Assault on Microsoft

Hoping an Alternative Suite of Applications Will Be More Widely Used

AN FRANCISCO, Aug. 13 -- A group of key Linux software developers and major
computer manufacturers are planning to announce on Tuesday at a Silicon
Valley computer conference the first effort to compete directly with
Microsoft's Office suite of applications for the personal computer.

Until now, the free Linux operating system has had its greatest impact in
the computer server market, where many Internet service providers and World
Wide Web applications and service companies routinely use the program.

While Linux has gained ground on the PC desktop as an alternative to
Microsoft's Windows operating system, which holds a large share of the
market, it has not yet been used more widely by businesses and consumers
because it has not developed the wide application support enjoyed by both
Windows and Apple Computer's Macintosh operating system.

That may soon change. On Tuesday, a group of Linux organizations will
announce the creation of the Gnome Foundation, which will have the support
of I.B.M., Compaq, Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems and several other
major computer vendors.

The foundation plans to announce a set of initiatives, including a unified
desktop user interface and a set of productivity programs intended to
compete as a free alternative to Microsoft Office.

Gnome is a set of software standards developed by an international group of
programmers led by Miguel de Icaza. The Gnome software has been gaining
momentum in both the Linux and Unix communities as a way to offer a common
software development environment for programmers.

Sun Microsystems also plans to announce that it will adopt the Gnome
desktop user interface for its Solaris operating system. The move is part
of the Linux effort to create a larger market for application developers.

Last month, the company announced that it was releasing the source code for
its StarOffice software, allowing programmers around the world to alter the
software and share their work.

The announcements to be made on Tuesday underscore both the progress that
Linux has made toward becoming a viable alternative to Windows and the
challenges that remain in persuading business and consumer computer users
to adopt the free operating system.

"What they're doing is extremely valuable," said Dan Dusnetzky, a computer
industry analyst at the International Data Corporation, a market research
firm. "However, there's a bigger issue that has not been addressed yet and
that is the availability of the most popular desktop applications on Linux."

While Linux currently has about a 24 percent share of the server market,
Microsoft's Windows has an 88 percent share of the desktop PC marketplace,
while Apple's Macintosh has a 5 percent share.

Linux developers say that while progress until now has been limited, they
are confident they can now rapidly close the gap on Microsoft.

"By the end of the year, we will have a desktop software operating system
that compares favorably with Windows," said Mike Boiche, chairman of the
Eazel Corporation. The company, founded by former Macintosh programmers,
has been developing software called Nautilus, which is being integrated
into the Gnome user interface for Linux. It is intended to make Linux as
simple to use as Windows or Macintosh.

A variety of announcements intended to consolidate the momentum for the
Linux operating system are planned for LinuxWorld, the conference scheduled
to begin on Tuesday in San Jose, Calif.

On Friday, Hewlett-Packard said that it planned to make Linux its third
"strategic" operating system in addition to Windows and HP-UX, its own
version of the Unix operating system.

The Tuesday meeting itself will feature a keynote address by Michael S.
Dell, chairman of Dell Computer, and will include an announcement from
I.B.M. that it will make a Gnome version of Linux available on its Thinkpad
portable computers as a user option.

Compaq is also planning to announce that it will make a version of its
hand-held iPaq computer available with the Gnome Linux operating system on
Tuesday.

Henzai, a start-up manufacturer of hand-held and Internet computing
devices, also plans to announce its support for the Gnome desktop software.

Several executives who support Linux said they now felt confident that the
free software world will soon have a direct competitor to Windows on the PC
desktop.

"A year ago, we were missing the last mile," said Nat Friedman, president
of Helixcode, the Cambridge, Mass., developer of Gnome and a set of PC
applications. "But at the end of this year my mom could install Helix Gnome
and Sun's StarOffice and have a total office environment."


By JOHN MARKOFF
Copyright 2000 The New York Times Company
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/08/biztech/articles/14linux.html

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