Thursday, May 01, 2008
5/1 SNR: "Darl took issue..."
From GL's now heavily-updated Day 2 story, we learn that Darl took the stand yesterday, and it sounds like it was quite a show. One courtroom observer delivers a quote for the ages:
And the morning batch of media coverage:
Darl took issue with what he believed was Mr. Acker calling him a liar. Mr. Acker took exception and said he thought it had already been established that Mr. McBride tells the truth in the 10Qs.
And the morning batch of media coverage:
- Ars Technica: "Deluded SCO CEO on witness stand: 'Linux is a copy of UNIX'"
- OSNews: "McBride: 'Linux Is a Copy of UNIX'". Seems like Darl's star turn in the witness box isn't garnering many rave reviews. It's kind of puzzling really -- he had to have known he'd be on the stand sooner or later. And for the kind of money SCO's paying the guy, he could certainly afford some basic intro-level acting classes. But noooo. That's hubris for ya, I guess.
- CIO Today reprints yesterday's Deseret News story, in case you haven't seen it.
- Salt Lake Tribune: "Novell may expand its claims". Confusingly, the title refers to the possibility of Novell going after Sun and Microsoft. I actually don't see that happening, or at least I don't see those potential disputes ending up in court like this one. They'll sit down behind closed doors and work something out, the way normal companies usually do, and we'll see some PR about an exciting new partnership between various firms, the financial terms of which will not be disclosed. Happens all the time. Sometimes I think people forget just how abnormal SCO's behavior really is.
- Ians-Blog: "Novell v. SCO -- PJ needs your help!" Fortunately these days "help" just means PayPal donations, as SCO appears to have gotten out of the stalking business. At least for the time being.
- CelebrityPro.com: "Chris Brown News - First Word from Day 1 of the Novell v. SCO Trial". This one is probably not worth your time other than for the amusement value. Apparently there's another, R&B singing, non-courtroom-observing Chris Brown out there. It looks like CelebrityPro just aggregates all stories and blog posts containing a name. For each story, it generates a page full of cheesy youth-oriented flash ads (Axe body spray and so forth), with a link back to the original story.
At least I think that's what's going on. The other possibility is that "our" Chris Brown is the real celebrity, and he's finally getting his 15 minutes. It's unlikely, but possible -- after all, I've never heard of that other guy, so how famous could he be, really?