IBM Corp. is expanding its open-source strategy beyond Linux by targeting eight new technology areas where it will focus open-source
attention going forward.
On Tuesday at LinuxWorld in San Francisco, IBM said it would look to new open-source business opportunities for client-side
middleware, development tools, Web application servers, data servers, systems management, hardware, grid computing and IBM
Research and consulting projects.
IBM was one of the first hardware companies to support Linux as a mainstream hardware OS, and the company said it hopes to
take on similar leadership in these other areas.
IBM's development tools open-source strategy will leverage the Eclipse development platform, a project the company started
several years ago before it was spun off as an independent entity. The Apache Derby and its own free IBM DB2 Express-C databases
will be the foundation for its open-source data server work, the company said.
Other open-source projects that will be key to IBM's expanded strategy include Eclipse's Rich Client Platform for hosting
cross-platform applications; the Apache Software Foundation's Geronimo open-source Java application server project; the Aperi
open-source storage project; Power.org and Blade.org hardware projects; and the Open Grid Services Architecture and Globus
Alliance for grid computing.
In a press statement, Scott Handy, vice president of Linux and open source at IBM, characterized the company's new commitment
to supporting open-source software across these technology areas as "bold and aggressive." He said the company plans to permanently
transform its business by supporting open-source software across many areas of software and hardware development.
In addition to these eight areas of focus, IBM also on Tuesday introduced several other initiatives to advance its open-source
strategy. The company said it would integrate its Cell BE processor -- which extends IBM's 64-bit POWER chip architecture
-- into the Linux kernel.
IBM also is working with Red Hat Inc. to provide a more secure version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5. In addition, IBM engineers
are developing open-source virtualization software focusing on the areas of systems management, security and POWER architecture,
the company said.