Microsoft
has reportedly acquired GitHub, and could announce the deal as early as
Monday. Bloomberg reports that
the software giant has agreed to acquire GitHub, and that the company chose
Microsoft partly because of CEO Satya Nadella. Business
Insider first reported that Microsoft had been in talks with
GitHub recently.
GitHub is a
vast code repository that has become popular with developers and companies
hosting their projects, documentation, and code. Apple, Amazon, Google, and
many other big tech companies use GitHub. Microsoft
is the top contributor to the site, and has more than 1,000 employees
actively pushing code to repositories on GitHub. Microsoft even hosts
its own original Windows File Manager source code on GitHub. The
service was last valued at $2 billion back in 2015, but it’s not clear exactly
how much Microsoft has paid to acquire GitHub.a
Microsoft
has been rapidly investing in open source technology since Satya Nadella took
over the CEO role. Microsoft has open sourced PowerShell, Visual Studio Code, and the
Microsoft Edge JavaScript
engine. Microsoft also partnered with Canonical to bring Ubuntu
to Windows 10, and acquired
Xamarin to assist with mobile app development.
Microsoft is
also using the open source Git version control system for Windows development,
and the company even brought SQL Server to Linux. Microsoft’s Visual Studio
Code, which lets developers build and debug web and cloud applications, has
soared in popularity with developers. Microsoft’s GitHub acquisition will
likely mean we’ll start to see even closer integration between Microsoft’s
developer tools and the service. At Build last month, Microsoft continued its
close work with GitHub by integrating
the service into the company’s App Center for developers.
There will
likely be questions around Microsoft’s GitHub acquisition, especially among
some open source advocates who are wary of Microsoft’s involvement. If
Microsoft does indeed announce this acquisition on Monday then developers won’t
have too long to wait to get a better idea of Microsoft’s GitHub plans.







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