Mandriva: Difference between revisions
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{{About|the company|the Linux distribution produced by this company|Mandriva Linux}} |
{{About|the company|the Linux distribution produced by this company|Mandriva Linux}} |
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{{Infobox company |
{{Infobox company |
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|name = Mandriva S.A. |
|name = Mandriva S.A. |
Revision as of 00:46, 29 November 2012
Company type | Société Anonyme |
---|---|
Euronext: MLMAN Grey Market: MDKFF | |
Industry | Software industry |
Founded | 1998 (MandrakeSoft) 1995 (Conectiva) |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Products | Mandriva Linux |
Website | www.mandriva.com |
Mandriva S.A. is a publicly traded Linux and open source software company with its headquarters in Paris, France and development center in Curitiba, Brazil. Mandriva, S.A. is the creator and maintainer of Mandriva Linux, describing itself as a "project initiator and a skills organizer in the Open Source arena", and a founding member of the Desktop Linux Consortium.
History
Mandriva, S.A. began as MandrakeSoft in 1998.[1] It currently has about 70 employees (45 of whom are engineers) and has offices in France, the USA, and Brazil.[2][3] The company sells its products in more than 140 countries and estimates the number of Mandriva Linux users to be approximately 3 million, according to mandriva.com website.
MandrakeSoft changed its name to "Mandriva" after losing litigation to the Hearst Corporation over the name "Mandrake." The Hearst Corporation had a comic strip called Mandrake the Magician. The litigation concluded in February 2004, and appeals expired in early 2005. In 2005, MandrakeSoft acquired the assets of Lycoris, and purchased Conectiva. The name "Mandriva" was selected to reflect the names "MandrakeSoft" and "Conectiva."[4]
On 2008-01-16, Mandriva and Turbolinux announced a partnership to create a lab named Manbo-Labs, to share resources and technology to release a common base system for both companies' Linux distributions.[5]
On 2010-09-18, a group of former Mandriva employees and community supporters announced their intention to fork Mandriva Linux and create the Mageia Linux distribution and organization, in response to the liquidation of "Edge-IT". The liquidation of the Mandriva-owned company resulted in layoffs of some employees who had worked on Mandriva Linux. It was the result of a deep disagreement on the direction of Mandriva. The company decided to move most development of the desktop distribution to South America, where it was mostly sold. At the same time, European development focused on servers and professional software development, leading to the releases of Pulse2 1.3 and MES5.2 in 2011.
On 2011-03-18, Mandriva will officially change its company structure to a limited liability company with a management board and supervisory board (French: Société Anonyme à Directoire et Conseil de Surveillance). There will be two Russians and one French person: Leonid Reiman, Arthur Akopian, and Bertrand Glineur. Arnaud Laprévote will remain president of the management board ("directoire"). The main shareholder will be LinLux, which is owned by the Ocam fund, which itself is owned by the French bank Bryan Garnier.
Innovations
Mandriva has, like other Linux distributions, created several applications that give it a distinctive feel. Probably the most notable are the urpmi package management tools and the graphical system configuration tools in the Mandriva Control Center.
Another example is transfugdrake, a tool designed for easy migration of documents and settings from Microsoft Windows to Mandriva Linux.[6][7] It is a front end to Migration Assistant.[8]
Financial state
MandrakeSoft operated under bankruptcy protection from 2003-01-27 to 2004-03-30.[9][10] The déclaration de cessation de paiement (similar to the US Chapter 11) gave the company protection from its creditors. MandrakeSoft recorded its first quarterly profit since 1999 of €270,000 on €1.42 million of revenue between October 2003 and December 2003.[11]
Currently Mandriva has almost, if not completely, run out of operational funds and is actively seeking a buyer of the company to remain a solvent business.[citation needed]
Shares of Mandrakesoft are again being traded on the Euronext Marché Libre exchange (ISIN code MLMAN) and on the US OTC Bulletin Board (Stock symbol MDKFF).[10]
Mandriva Club
In addition to selling Linux distributions through its online store and authorized resellers, Mandriva previously sold subscriptions to the Mandriva Club. There were several levels of membership, at costs ranging from US$66 or €60 per year (as of 2007) to €600 per year.[12]
Club members gained access to the Club website, additional mirrors and torrents for downloading, free downloads of its boxed products (depending on membership level), interim releases of the Mandriva Linux distribution, and additional software updates. For example, only Gold-level and higher members could download Powerpack+ editions.
Many Mandriva commercial products came with short-term membership in the club; however, Mandriva Linux was completely usable without a club membership.
When Mandriva Linux 2008.0 was released in October 2007, Mandriva made club membership free of charge to all comers, splitting download subscriptions off into a separate service.[13]
Mandriva also has a Mandriva Corporate Club for larger organizations.[14]
Acquisitions
On October 4, 2004, Mandrakesoft acquired the professional support company Edge IT, which focused on the corporate market in France and had 6 employees.[15]
On February 24, 2005, Mandrakesoft acquired Brazilian Linux distributor Conectiva for €1.79 million (2.3 million US dollars at the time).[16]
On June 15, 2005, Mandriva acquired Lycoris (formerly, Redmond Linux Corporation).[17]
On October 5, 2006, Mandriva signed an agreement to acquire Linbox, a Linux enterprise software infrastructure company. The agreement included the acquisition of all shares of Linbox for a total of $1.739 million in Mandriva stock, plus an earn out of up to $401,000 based on the 2006 Linbox financials.[18]
On January 12, 2012, Mandriva announced that an external entity wished to acquire Mandriva. [19]
On January 30, 2012, Mandriva announced that the external entity bid was rejected by a minority share holder and the deal did not go through. [20]
Products
- Mandriva Linux - Free of cost versions include Mandriva Free (open source version) and Mandriva One (Live CD with some proprietary components). The paid version is called Powerpack and includes licensed codecs for common audio and video file formats, Google applications and 3 months of web support.
- Mandriva Directory Server - An open source LDAP server that aims to be easy to administer via a web GUI. Similar in aims to Fedora Directory Server
References
- ^ Corrêa, Fernando Ribeiro (2000). "Linux in France: Guess MandrakeSoft's Next Move". Linux Gazette (53). Retrieved 2007-05-27.
{{cite journal}}
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ignored (help) - ^ "Mandriva aims its Linux at Mexican enterprises". DesktopLinux.com. 2006-12-27. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "Corporate information about Mandriva - Mandriva Linux". Mandriva Linux. Archived from the original on 2006-05-05. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "Mandrakesoft Announces Name Change!" (Press release). Mandriva Linux. 2005-04-07. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ Mandriva and Turbolinux announce a partnership and create a joint development lab called Manbo-Labs
- ^ [cvs] Index of /soft/transfugdrake
- ^ [cvs] View of /soft/transfugdrake/README
- ^ "migration-assistant". launchpad.net. Retrieved 2008-03-07.
- ^ "July 24th - 2003". Mandriva Linux. 2003-07-24. Archived from the original on 2007-02-25. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ a b "Mandrakesoft Exits Bankruptcy" (Press release). Mandriva Linux. 2004-03-30. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "January 22nd - 2004". Mandriva Linux. 2004-01-22. Archived from the original on 2007-02-25. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "Welcome to the Mandriva Linux Users Club Page". Archived from the original on 2007-10-02. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ "Arkub" (2007-10-26 at 04:12). "Mandriva Club: Where is the Club?". Retrieved 2007-11-03.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Welcome To The Mandriva Corporate Club". Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ O'Gara, Maureen (2004-12-04). "Mandrakesoft Back in the Black". Enterprise Open Source Magazine. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "Linux companies Mandrakesoft and Conectiva Announce Definitive Merger Agreement" (Press release). Mandriva Linux. 2005-02-24. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "Mandriva acquires Lycoris, boosts US presence, desktop prowess". DesktopLinux.com. 2005-06-15. Retrieved 2007-05-27.
- ^ "Mandriva Acquires Linbox for €1.3 million". boursier.com. Retrieved 2007-12-12.Template:Language icon
- ^ "The Future". Retrieved 2012-01-23.
- ^ "Not This Time". Retrieved 2012-01-30.