Comment by jmclnx

3 days ago

And IIRC, he had IBM invest in Linux around 1999. That paved the way for eventual acquisition of Red Hat (for good or bad) :)

It paved the way for a lot more than that. At a time open source in general, and Linux in particular, did not have much corporate buy-in, IBM signaled "we back this" and "we're investing in this" in substantial ways that corporate IT executives could hear and act upon. That was a pre-cloud, pre-hyperscaler era when "enterprise IT" was the generally understood "high end" of the market, and IBM ruled that arena. IBM backing Linux and open source paved the way for a large swath of the industry—customers, software vendors, channel/distribution partners, yadda yadda—to do likewise.

I got complicated feelings about that. He did help pave the way for Linux, but he also killed OS/2.

  • OS/2 never had a chance. I was working at Radio Shack at the time that IBM was trying to sell Aptivas with OS/2. No one wanted it.

    It was just weird to people. Microsoft did a big consumer push for Windows 95 and there were lines to buy it and Bill Gates promoted it on the Jay Leno show.

    Windows 95 almost killed Apple.

    • There were plenty of people who wanted OS/2. They simply weren't the type of people who would go to Radio Shack.

      By plenty, I should be clear: it probably wasn't enough for OS/2 survive. IBM made some bad decisions early on. Microsoft was also a thorn in everyone's side and it looked like. While their product was good enough, their business practices were savage. Possibly something they learned from IBM's legacy.

      I was in my late teens/early twenties at the time. What I learned about how major corporations at the time is likely what led to my llife long interest in open source.

      2 replies →

    • It was never really suited to retail sales channels like Radio Shack. It was more of a corporate thing although it obviously failed there as well.

      I only came across it at one site, a big UK bank (Midland Bank). They were using a heavily modified version, it didn’t look anything like the original product.

    • OS/2 had some of the ugliest icons I've ever seen (and that elephant!) - looking cute always wins.

  • Yeah, I remember switching from OS/2 to Linux when OS/2 was more or less abandoned.