![]() ![]() A decade of open systems Unix platforms on dozens of chip architectures really just helped create the conditions that allowed Linux on X86 to become the dominate platform in the datacenter. ![]() Initial attempts at creating portable and compatible operating systems for switching and routing had their issues, but a second wave network operating systems are emerging and, we think, will eventually become the way that networking is done in the datacenter, breaking the hegemony of proprietary operating systems as happened in compute in the past. We have been watching with great interest since around 2008 or so as merchant silicon came to switching and routing and how control of hardware was broken free from control of software, much as the X86 platform emerged as a common computing substrate a decade earlier. Software may be eating the world, as Marc Andreessen correctly asserted nearly a decade ago, but some parts of the world are crunchier than others and take some time for the hardware to be smashed open and for software to flow in and out of it. Software Is Eating Every Layer Of The Datacenter.Their influence and impact are so great that you might actually believe a commercialized Linux distro is some fictional character. However, a significant portion of the Linux community is taking the open-source approach. We cannot completely state that all Linux distros are open-source because others are commercialized to cater to some business and enterprise needs in the market place. The most convincing Linux philosophy that made us turn against other popular OS distros is its open-source standard. The easiness context mentioned above defines most Linux distros’ architecture and design to cross your path. It might not be a joy at first, but once you grasp the Linux OS, you enter a state of supreme awakening after realizing you were being restricted from a complete OS experience and exposure. This easiness has nothing to do with the required skillset because we will need to get our hands dirty. It is not just about achieving such functional objectives but also the easiness of achieving them. Reason? It applies to any OS functionality that you want to achieve. ![]() ![]() The Linux distro is what we call the Jack of all trades in the Operating System world. ![]()
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