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Former Microsoft CEO Ballmer does about-face on Linux technology as threat recedes

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Steve Ballmer is shown at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in this 2012 file photo. He said the Linux threat is now in Microsoft’s ‘rearview mirror’. Photo: Reuters

Fifteen years after calling the open-source operating system Linux a “cancer,” former Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer has softened his position.

Speaking this week at a dinner hosted by Fortune magazine, Ballmer said the position was right for the time, but the threat from Linux was now “in the rearview mirror.”

“The company made a tonne of money by fighting that battle very well,” he said.

“It’s been incredibly important to the company’s revenue stream” to maintain its position with its own Windows operating system.

READ MORE: A Chinese OS at last? More than 40 per cent of Dell PCs in China now running homegrown Windows alternative

These days Microsoft is softening its anti-Linux position, including announcing earlier this week that it would sell a Linux-compatible version of its SQL Server database software.

Ballmer said he “loved” seeing the announcement, which prompted him to email current chief executive Satya Nadella in support.

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