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March 2, 1999 -- Corel Corp. will help grow the Linux market by offering an easy-to-use version of the operating system that manufacturers could offer bundled with low-cost desktop PCs, Michael Cowpland, Corel's president and CEO, said in a keynote speech kicking off the LinuxWorld show here today. "So far, (Linux) has been mostly for enthusiasts and for servers. The desktop use hasn't happened in a big way," he said. "To become really popular, we believe Linux must have the look and feel of Windows." Corel will develop a version of the open-source operating system that is easy for users to set up, with automatic hardware detection and configuration and a feature that allows users to download the latest updates from the Internet, he said. Using the KDE desktop environment, Corel's Linux distribution will also include the WINE Windows emulation package -- free software that allows Linux to run windows applications -- Corel's Java Virtual Machine, as well as various network tools. The company demonstrated WINE here today, showing a Windows version of Corel Quattro running on a Linux computer. In an interview after his keynote, Cowpland said that the distribution, tentatively named Corel Linux, will be available by November of this year. Including the Corel WordPerfect Office 2000 suite of applications, it will be priced in the $50 range. PC Original Equipment Manufacturers purchasing the distribution will be able to offer a PC running Linux for around $500, "with all the features users are accustomed to having in an OS" - including, Cowpland hopes, Corel's complete Office Suite for Linux. WordPerfect 2000 was ported to Linux using WINE. In the future, Corel plans to tightly integrate WINE code directly into its applications in order to speed the performance of its applications on Linux.
Sweet Sixteen "This is, I think, the coming out party for Linux, the Sweet Sixteen," said Jon "Mad Dog" Hall, executive director of Linux International, in his introductory remarks. "This is the time the business community is embracing the Linux community, and the Linux community should also embrace them." Hall said Linux enthusiasts shouldn't be discouraged that the vast majority of the estimated 210 million PCs worldwide run Microsoft Windows. "For all the people who say Microsoft has won and there's no opportunity for a Linux OS, I want to point out that there are 5.6 billion users on the face of this planet, and that means 5.4 billion of them have not selected their operating system yet," he quipped, drawing laughter from the attendees here. Linux is the fastest growing operating system on the market, with an estimated 12 million users -- a number that has grown 80 percent in the last 12 months, Corel's Cowpland said. Linux is finding new users in organizations as diverse as Canada's national railways system, the U.S. Navy and the car maker Mercedes, he said. In Mexico, the school system has chosen Linux as its standard operating system for use in 140,000 schools, Cowpland said. "The school community will save thousands of dollars they don't have to spend on (Windows) NT, and have a whole lot better operating system, too," Cowpland said, in one of several digs the speakers here aimed at Microsoft.
While hardware vendors began to line up behind Linux in 1998, 1999 is
the year of Linux applications, Cowpland
said. The company already offers a commercial version of Linux
WordPerfect 7; all of its applications will be
available on Linux by the end of 1999, he said.
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