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By 2002 I was at Arbor Networks, shipping security software to tier-1 ISPs, and if we'd shipped it on a commercial Unix (let alone Windows) people would have looked at us like we had 2 heads. The writing was on the wall by end of the first dot com boom.


In 2003 I was somewhere south of Fort Worth, TX, having visited Dinosaur World, and shortly after leaving we stopped at a cafe that had three computers out which you could use. I looked at them while waiting for the coffee and they just seemed off, strange. It wasn't OS 9 nor X, it wasn't Windows... What was it? As I went over to look it hit me - holy cow, those are running that linux thing I've heard about! Their desktops were beautiful, totally different than the others. I knew then I wanted that.


We on the other hand were shipping software on Aix, HP-UX, Solaris and Windows NT/2000.

As MSFT partner, we also started our voyage to port the GUI frontends into the newly introduced .NET.

We used Red-Hat Linux internally for our CVS server, MP3 music shares and Quake lan parties.

That is how seriously we look at Linux in 2002.




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