Microsoft GitHub: what will happen now? Is the destruction right?

The Bloomberg Reported that Microsoft bought it the , and the official confirmation of the agreement is expected to take place today Monday 4 June 2018. Of course not everyone could be happy.GitHub

You can just look at the posts that are circulating on Twitter and you will see that there are many who, along with the "death" of GitHub, declare the death of open source software. There are many who say they will switch to other competing services, such as BitBucket and GitLab.

But let's see what happens or what is going to happen, the more rationally it is.

GitHub plays a vital role in the software development ecosystem. Apart from the fact that the platform is based on countless companies that develop their own commercial software, it is also the focus of the open source community, with 80 millions of repositories hosted in the region.

Anyone who develops software to live depends on GitHub even if he does not have his own account.

Microsoft, on the other hand, does not always work in the spirit of open source software and collaboration. For a number of years Redmond was a leader in the controversy. The company "won" several lawsuits based on antitrust law in both the United States and the European Union. The lawsuits have explicitly stated that Microsoft was using its market leadership to foreclose competition.

Microsoft has also been accused of using the strategy "I embrace, expand and extinguish" to consolidate its position in a number of areas: from productivity software to the broader Internet.

Recall that in 2001, then-CEO Steve Ballmer referred to Linux as "cancer", something that upset many open source friends.

With all the above, you can understand why there are many developers who see GitHub as the end of the service.

But is Microsoft's 2018 the same as Microsoft's 1998?

When the took over the company in 2014, he tried to reform the company from the ground up. For the first time Microsoft stopped working entirely behind closed doors. She uploaded her major projects to GitHub and made them available under open source licenses. Today you can read the .NET framework code or view the Visual Studio code. The event was unthinkable ten years ago.

Microsoft does not have just one page in GitHub. The company is one of the most active, with contributions to open source, more than those of Google and Facebook.

When she's not opening her code to the public, she's porting it to other platforms. Visual Studio Code, for example, now runs on Linux and macOS. The system SQL Server database has been moved to Linux.

And if the above doesn't tell you anything, the company brought Linux to Windows, through Windows Subsystem for Linux, and made the Bash shell available on Windows 10.

So we see that all Nadella projects in Microsoft are trying to achieve a sense of transparency. If the company is not smart with GitHub, it will lose all the mood of change it is trying to show over the last four years.

Another fear of the acquisition of GitHub is that the service may lose its identity and be absorbed by Microsoft as another business unit.

But looking at the last big ones of the company, the fear appears to be unfounded. When Microsoft acquired LinkedIn in 2016, nothing changed for users. LinkedIn has retained much of its autonomy and identity. The company is still run by its pre-acquisition CEO (Jeff Weiner) although he is working with Microsoft leadership.

Will things change with GitHub? No one can know it. But this particular company is particularly fond of the developer community and has a very strong brand name. So big changes could cause problems for Microsoft.
It is quite worrying about this deal that by having LinkedIn and GitHub, Microsoft will be able to determine the way in which hiring in the technology industry is working.

But fears of a repeat of the 90s standoff are unfounded. Microsoft is clearly a different company.

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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