I miss Novell. It was just so absolutely rock solid stable. I once worked somewhere they'd had a Novell server in a closet and it had been there for over a decade, and when it went bad, nobody working there had any idea where it even was. Turned out it for some goddamn reason was in a maintenance closet on the other side of the building. And it was a big building.
It wasn't Novell that was the problem. It was that dust bunnies had blocked the fan and it overheated. Dust bunnies removed and a dose of duster for the rest of it, and it was back on.
Honestly, all the Novell drama was decidedly
before my time. I started daily driving Linux around 2010-2011ish as a grossly unsupervised minor on the internet, and by that point, Novell was either outright acquired by Attachmate or was seeking a buyer because they got too big for their britches. Not entirely sure what the situation was, but at some point, Novell as a company was wholly liquidated and its assets/IPs spread out across several if not dozens of other entities.
With hindsight, Novell's acquisition of SUSE was a blessing in disguise because SUSE wasn't at risk of getting acquired by a "hostile" third party like Red Hat before getting absorbed and ultimately dissolved within their product catalogue. The patent deal with Microsoft in 2006 was also critical for getting Microsoft to even
acknowledge Linux beyond Steve Ballmer's hostility to FOSS and the whole embrace, extend, extinguish rhetoric that got leaked decades ago. Causal relationships are rough to discern from a point of hindsight, but that patent deal with SUSE is what ultimately paved the way for Azure to rely
entirely on Linux, while also contributing
back once Ballmer left and Nadella entered the fray.
I can appreciate Novell for what they accomplished historically, but it's also easy to see why they received such acrimony throughout their lifetime. Novell
was one of the players behind that 1990s lawsuit with AT&T that stalled FreeBSD development iirc. I mean hey, that lawsuit was the reason why we got the Linux kernel in the first place. Novell oversaw the growth of SUSE Linux Enterprise, yet SLES/SLED
paled in comparison to RHEL, Ubuntu, and other such alternatives. All the while, they kept burning cash thanks to terrible business decision after terrible business decision.
One must wonder, however, if years if not decades of bad acquisitions and litigation that ended in settlement were ultimately what led to Novell going tits-up in the first place.