SCO Group has begun a direct challenge to the General Public License--the legal foundation for Linux, numerous other open-source programming projects and software that SCO still ships. Stephen ...
The SCO Group may not like the General Public License, but it sure likes the open-source software it covers. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about processors, digital ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Despite all the pounding Ive given SCO lately, Im actually ...
In an "open letter to the open-source community," McBride held open-source supporters accountable for recent denial-of-service attacks that crippled SCO's Web site. McBride said open-source advocates ...
On Dec. 4, Darl McBride, CEO of the SCO Group, unleashed the latest of his periodic broadsides attacking the world of Linux and open-source software. “There really is no middle ground,” wrote McBride.
While the embattled Unix company is set to face-off against IBM tomorrow in a Utah court on a discovery matter, its CEO broadly distributed the foundation paper on Thursday to outline SCO's right to ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. After years in the making, SCO OpenServer 6 has finally ...
While I wasn't there from the very start of Linux. I was an early adopter. Even before Linux, though, I was a Unix desktop user ranging from the early character interfaces such as the Bourne shell to ...
Making its debut in a product launch at Yankee Stadium, OpenServer 6--code-named Project Legend--integrates the System V Release 5 Unix kernel of SCO UnixWare 7.0 with the Web-based OpenServer ...
NEW YORK—The SCO Group Inc. is in the headlines more often for its legal battles than for its products these days. But last week, the software vendor wrapped up three years of development work and ...
With all of the hubbub last week surrounding SCO's pending demise and IBM's open desktop play, you may not have noticed that the heavens have shifted just a tad. No, it had nothing to do with this ...