How Linux is keeping Microsoft honest
Imagine a world without Linux. There'd be no cute Tux penguin or any notion of software freedom day. Netbooks would not have come about. But more strikingly, there wouldn't be the modern powerful tools that Windows systems administrators have come to love. That's right; Linux is keeping Microsoft honest and I'm going to expose the new Windows Small Business Server for what it is, along with those who resell it.
Imagine there’s no Linux. No doubt you’d still be computing away, but with a less rich collection of tools. If you’re a Linux advocate, your available software repository would be greatly diminished – or, at least, not without significant expenditure or piracy. There may not be any One Laptop Per Child project. The UNIX server operating system may well have died.
For the hard core Windows power user your thoughts may be “so what?” but let me put to you that it is thanks to Linux that Windows admins have the modern developments Microsoft have offered. This has manifested itself in several ways and I will contend here that the most recent occurrence of Linux influence is with the impending release of Microsoft’s Small Business Server (SBS) product.
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