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Feature: Management

Why timing of Novell Linux chief resignation, Microsoft payoff is rather curious

By Jay Lyman and Chris Preimesberger on November 09, 2004 (8:00:00 AM)

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Before the dust whipped up by Linux executive Chris Stone's departure from Novell had begun to settle, the company announced today's $536 million settlement payment from Microsoft regarding Novell's NetWare. Industry insiders believe the timing of these two events -- which happened within four days of each other -- is curious, to say the least.

Coincidence? That remains largely uncertain, but the two events nonetheless have become cause of discussion for some industry analysts, including Yankee Group senior analyst Dana Gardner and Gartner Group's John Enck.

Gardner did not claim to have any inside information on either Stone's abrupt departure or the announcement of the huge settlement with Redmond on alleged antitrust violations related to Novell's NetWare operating system. However, the analyst did offer some insight on the two matters, that together, "smells interesting," as Gardner put it.

While some have speculated that the settlement was Novell's reward from Microsoft for getting rid of Stone -- a vocal open source proponent who was overseeing the integration of Novell's Ximian and acquired SUSE software -- Gardner said the peace pipe with Microsoft may have simply been intended as smoke over Stone's departure.

"[Stone leaving] may have given folks pause," Gardner said of Novell stakeholders. "[The settlement] was probably a defensive move to make up for losses as a result of Chris leaving."

Novell's stock price dropped 3 percent on the news of Stone's departure last week and rose about the same amount earlier today on the news of the Microsoft settlement. Novell was trading at about $7.25 today on the Nasdaq Exchange.

Gardner, who indicated Stone's position as co-chair along with Novell CEO Jack Messman was somewhat precarious in the first place, said the same sort of dynamic may have played into the timing of a truce announced last spring between Microsoft and Sun Microsystems, which had just announced layoffs and losses in the days prior to announcement of a far-reaching settlement.

"It's interesting how you can use a settlement with Microsoft to staunch the loss of stock price because of something else," Gardner said.

Gartner Group's Enck wrote in an email to NewsForge that "this will definitely represent a change in how Novell is perceived in the industry. Chris Stone was very outbound oriented -- he had come to represent the voice and face of Novell to the IT community. Of course, at the same time Jack Messman had continued to hold the reigns of the company in the back office. Chris and Jack also had very different philosophies: Jack being very conservative, Chris being more aggressive, willing to take higher risks. You have to assume that with Chris gone, Novell will gravitate toward being a more conservative organization (fewer acquisitions, fewer marketing stretches, etc.)"

What does this move mean for the Linux industry in general, to have a key proponent suddenly leave an "establishment" company like Novell?

"I don't think this has much of an impact on the Novell Linux strategy -- David Patrick is in charge of the Linux (and other platform) initiatives," Enck wrote. "David came from the Ximian acquisition, so he remains a strong proponent of Linux. I don't think Linux is the wedge that drove Chris out of the company -- I think it was a corporate culture issue as represented above."

Novell spokesperson Hal Thayer said there was "no connection whatsoever" between the resignation of Stone and the announced settlement, which does not include an end to the fight over WordPerfect.

"We've been in negotiations with [Microsoft] for more than a year on both issues around NetWare and WordPerfect and the timing for this was driven mostly by our coming to agreement," Thayer said.

The Novell representative also said that Novell would be suing Microsoft for damages in connection with WordPerfect during the mid 1990s.

"We will be filing suit in U.S. District Court in Utah against Microsoft for anti-competitive and monopolistic practices around WordPerfect," Thayer said.

News of the Microsoft settlement may have helped Novell's stock price, which rose about 10 percent Monday, but Stone's departure was still a blow to Novell's "reinvention of itself and becoming a cutting edge open source supplier," according to Gardner.

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on Why timing of Novell Linux chief resignation, Microsoft payoff is rather curious

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living

Posted by: SarsSmarz on November 10, 2004 03:59 AM
Perhaps another company that will just live off the proceeds of litigation.

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Re:living

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 05:04 AM
Given that Novell is very publicly flogging Linux to the corporate market, and trying to get a foothold on the corporate desktop, I'd say the Microsoft money gives them a cash cushion while they get the Netware base migrated and the Linux strategy spun up.

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VP of Worldwide Services Gone, Too

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 05:26 AM
Someone over on Slashdot posted that Bob Couture, the VP of Worldwide Services, is gone too. He ain't in the Novell intranet eGuide anymore! That is two execs in about a month. Sounds like Novell is cleaning house for something....

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He left out of protest

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 07:08 AM
It sounds to me like he knew that Novell was going to settle with M$, and left in protest...

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Or... Perhaps it is just a coincidence

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 11:20 AM
Or... Perhaps it is just a coincidence....
Has Mr. Stone commented at all on his departure and any link ?

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doubt there's a connection, but...

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 11:47 AM
Novell is reputed to have more internal religious strife than Iraq. I guess this settles one of them (relatively minor compared to proprietary vs. open source, GNOME vs. KDE, product vs. service orientation, etc.).

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these antitrust settlements

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 12:04 PM
It seems that after the DOJ settlement was reached, Microsoft's board decided to reduce its exposure to litigation by coming to agreement with the largest and longest running victims of its abusive Windows+Office monopolies, i.e. Sun, Real Networks, EU, etc. $500 billion is probably less than the profits it clears in one month from desktop software alone.

With these agreements in hand, maybe Microsoft will start aggressively asserting its IP claims a la SCO, although on less ridiculous terms ($10 per desktop instead of $699 for example).

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oops, I meant $500 million.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 12:06 PM
eom

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Mario Monti gone, too

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 10, 2004 07:28 PM
Mario Monti is gone, too, to be replaced by Nellie Kroes. That was a scheduled switch, so I now wonder how much of what went on earlier this year was just theatrics to fool the plebes.


Nelli Kroes is a fan of ol' Chairman Bill since way back. More recently, she helped crush Volvo while on the board. Ford is only interested in the name not the product, giving her a background of not working in the best interest of her organization.


At best, as as the European Commission's competition commissioner, Nellie might appear to be a quisling. At worst, I don't know what to call her. European need to sharpen up or they'll end up worse off than the U.S. -- a colony always does far worse.

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Not enough information

Posted by: ThoreauHD on November 11, 2004 03:08 AM
I can't see exactly going on given the information skimmed from the surface by these articles. The real reason Stone left and the real reason why Novell settled out of court- and it's implications to Novell- are not clear.

Not much to say otherwise.

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Re:Not enough information

Posted by: CJ Preimesberger on November 11, 2004 04:19 AM
As best we see it, Stone lost a power struggle. A common tale, and it's pretty clearly stated in this story.

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