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SCO Plans for the Future

SALT LAKE CITY—Darl McBride, the CEO of The SCO Group, has big plans for his company going forward, whether or not it wins all the current litigation it is involved in against IBM and others. The Lindon, Utah, company has sued IBM for some $5 billion, alleging it illegally contributed Unix code, to which SCO […]

Mar 22, 2005
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SALT LAKE CITY—Darl McBride, the CEO of The SCO Group, has big plans for his company going forward, whether or not it wins all the current litigation it is involved in against IBM and others.

The Lindon, Utah, company has sued IBM for some $5 billion, alleging it illegally contributed Unix code, to which SCO maintains it owns all the rights, to the open-source Linux operating system.

That case is currently due to go to trial Nov. 1, but the trial date could be moved back.

In a lengthy and candid interview in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, McBride discussed his future plans for the company, and the scenario remains largely the same whether it wins in the courts or not.

“We are concentrating on three core constituents: our shareholders, our customers and our staff. Whatever happens in the courts, we intend to drive our Unix business forward, particularly in the vertical markets,” McBride said.

Any cash from a legal win or a settlement would be plowed back into growing the business and developing its product lines, McBride said.

“If we don’t win the legal battle, we will still have the cash level of a typical startup, but with more customers and technology than many of those.”

McBride also observed that SCO’s loyal resellers and customers would still be there.

“You must remember these people have stuck with us through our legal cases and even though they’ve been told twice by two former SCO CEOs that OpenServer was dead.”

“We believe that it is around the vertical markets where we have the value-add. Our plan right now is to use any settlement to invest in the company’s growth and drive it forward,” he said.

There was also a skunkworks group within the company looking at new applications and services that would target handsets and other devices.

“We are working on products that can take strength of the server that can marry that up to devices,” said McBride.

This is not to say that SCO is considering a return to the embedded operating system space.

One of SCO’s forebears was Lineo, an embedded Linux company.

Instead, the group is working on ways to seamlessly connect server-based applications to handsets.

Read the full story on eWEEK.com: SCO Plans for the Future

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