What Ray KnewPosted By: Eugene Taylor
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For example, Mr. Noorda oversaw the initial development of UnixWare, a general-purpose UNIX operating system for Intel-based PC hardware that was quite stunning for its time, then acquired Unix Systems Laboratory (USL) and all rights to UNIX in 1993. He then settled long-standing licensing disputes between USL and BSDI so as to strengthen the position of UNIX as a whole. As one of his last acts in office, Mr. Noorda also acquired GroupWise, WordPerfect, Quattro Pro, and a variety of other productivity applications in June 1994 in an effort to diminish Microsoft's budding dominance in that part of the market. Mr. Noorda arguably made some mistakes in his zeal to attack Microsoft, such as pursuing Digital Research's DR-DOS as a lawsuit vehicle against Microsoft, and sinking development into GEM as an alternative graphical environment to Windows. But in terms of overall strategy, he was demonstrably correct to pursue diversification, and many of his initial steps have since been mimicked by other vendors. But by 1993, Mr. Noorda had already begun to suffer early symptoms of Alzheimer's, and his days at the company were already numbered, even while he was driving the realignment. According to historical SEC filings, Mr. Noorda resigned as president and CEO in April 1994, resigned as chairman of the board in August 1994, and then was forced to leave the board entirely in November 1994. Over the next three years, subsequent management teams at Novell abandoned Mr. Noorda's diversification projects--first by selling off UnixWare to SCO in 1995, then by selling off WordPerfect to Corel in 1996). This left the company with just a handful of significant products, a declining share of a collapsing NOS market, and few significant opportunities for growth. The company has made recent moves to correct some of these mistakes--mostly by replaying Mr. Noorda's previous strategies including the acquisition of SUSE Linux in 2003 and porting the bulk of its networking products and technology to run on Linux. It's reasonable to believe that the intervening ten years of pain and misery for the company could have been avoided if it had simply stuck with Mr. Noorda's original vision. Providing the software catalyst for this change was significant, but it was not enough to move the entire industry, and Mr. Noorda's true genius shows through in the secondary work that he undertook to ensure success. For example, Mr. Noorda recognized early on that one of the hindrances for wide-scale adoption was the relative high price of PC networking hardware, such as Ethernet adapters. So the company borrowed a reference design for a cheap Ethernet card from National Semiconductor, and had it manufactured for sale at a low cost. This simple act drove down the cost of building a NetWare network and helped drive sales of NetWare. But it also had the secondary effect of making Novell a leader in the Ethernet hardware space, as the company's low-cost cards were picked up for use by other markets as well. As a present-day observation of the significance of this simple act, many of the network cards that are sold today still claim to be "NE2000 compatible" so that they will continue to work with the broadest set of platforms. Mr. Noorda is also widely credited for developing "the channel" distribution system on which our industry currently depends. Software certification for technology "engineers" is another marketing technique that was pioneered by Novell under Mr. Noorda's leadership, and is still heavily used by Novell's competitors today. Mr. Noorda also enunciated and advanced the concept of "coopetition" whereby competitors could cooperate long enough to build the industry, while still competing for customer dollars in the larger market. All of this contributed greatly to the success of Novell and NetWare, and within a decade of release, the company was doing a billion dollars in business per quarter, with NetWare retaining 70% of a booming PC network market. Novell did not reach its pinnacle without notice or competition, and NetWare was attacked from multiple angles throughout the latter 1980s and early 1990s. Vendors such as LANtastic tried to undercut it at the low-end, while companies like IBM, 3Com, and Microsoft tried to squeeze Novell out at the high-end. Still, as the software market heated up, Novell made sure that NetWare was always the most functional, with the fastest performance and the most features including fault-tolerance, cross-platform connectivity, and eventually directory services. The company also courted and counted the broadest reseller base and a hoard of fanatically loyal customers, thereby retaining the majority market position. Before it was over, IBM was selling NetWare in a blue box, 3Com had effectively abandoned the networking software market, and Microsoft had to bundle its networking code into Windows NT to get any significant market share. In short, Mr. Noorda retained Novell's leadership position throughout the first decade of PC networking by always ensuring that the company was driving the industry--first with the move from hardware to software, and then later with service and features. After his exile from Novell, Mr. Noorda directed his efforts into a venture capital firm called Canopy Group that he had started in 1992 with the intention of investing in Utah technology firms. One of its better-known investments was in a company known as Caldera Systems, which was launched with the purpose of building a commercial version of Linux. (According to Ransom Love, co-founder of Caldera and SCO Group, Caldera had also been started as a back-room project at Novell, but was killed by the post-Noorda management team, and then resurrected as an independent venture by Noorda at Canopy.) Caldera initially met with some success in the industryNetwork Computing awarded Caldera OpenLinux 1.3 the NOS of the year award in 1999, beating out NetWare and Windows NT alike. At the time it appeared that Mr. Noorda had managed to replay his winning formula, driving the development of a cheaper and better technology, and changed the industry along the way. But eventually this effort would also fall apart. A few years later, Caldera renamed itself The SCO Group and launched a series of lawsuits claiming violations against its Linux-related intellectual property.
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