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The HP-Perens union could be good for all of us

Author: JT Smith

-by Tina Gasperson
Hewlett-Packard today becomes the first traditional company to employ a well-known Open Source advocate — on purpose, that is. Bruce Perens, the guy who says he was the first to use the phrase Open Source, the former Debian project leader, and the co-founder of the Open Source initiative, has stepped squarely into the mainstream corporate world by accepting the role of paid advisor for HP’s Linux and Open Source initiatives. And as the saying goes, it’s all good, for everyone.Still, it’s not hard to tell who is getting the best part of the new union of Hewlett-Packard and Open Source founding father Perens. “I really like the pajama commute,” he says of his work-from-home position. “Valerie (Perens’ wife) will still be taking care of the baby, but at least I’ll be there at lunch time in case she needs some relief.”

As the strategic advisor for Hewlett-Packard’s fledgling Linux Systems Operation division, he says he is still Open Source’s number one advocate, “but now HP is footing the bill for that.”

How this deal is good for Hewlett-Packard

Back in October, another big Open Source dude, Eric Raymond, penned a frank missive to HP CEO Carly Fiorina. He spoke for the entire Open
Source community when he wrote, “You’ve talked the talk. Now, can you walk the walk?” referring to statements made by Fiorina in a speech at an October 17, 2000, IT expo in Florida, calling Open Source “natural” and “inevitable” and “part of the next wave of computing.”

He criticized HP for holding on to the source code for its printer drivers, and for not releasing printer interface specifications, thus hindering development of drivers ported to other operating systems, namely Linux and the BSDs.

Not only that, but he asked HP either to kill its HP-UX operating system and replace it with Linux, or just Open Source the Unix splinter. He finished up the letter with this warning: “You’ll also find that we’re rather cynical about ringing endorsements; we’ve heard those before without result, and they won’t earn you a lot of cred by themselves without actions and commitments that back them up.”

Looking at developments within HP shortly after the receipt of that letter, it would be natural to assume that the strengthening of the Linux division, the founding position on the KDE board, and the decision to hire Perens were all responses to ESR’s (and by default, the Open Source community’s) challenges.

But it appears that Perens’ hiring, at least, was not a knee-jerk reaction. He says he was already in negotiations with Hewlett-Packard by the time that letter was published. “I sent an email to Jim Bell, then the manager of HP’s Open Source and Linux Operation (OSLO), asking if they could use the services of a highly visible Open Source advocate. It just happened that it was at the right time. But it was before the letter from Eric.”

HP appears to be serious about getting involved with Linux. But there’s a big difference between involvement and commitment. As someone once said while staring at a breakfast plate piled high with eggs and bacon, the chicken was involved, but the pig was committed. Hewlett-Packard states as part of its published Linux strategy: “One camp insists that Linux is all hype, while the other claims that world domination is inevitable. HP is taking a pragmatic but optimistic view. The question we are asking is not ‘will Linux dominate the world?’ but rather ‘what part of the world will Linux dominate?'”

When asked about that bit of diplomacy, Perens says, “Well, HP-UX is still a vital part of the package for HP, and it should be.” As for Open Sourcing the Unix-based proprietary operating system, “there are parts of it that might be worth opening, but for the most part, I’d rather concentrate on Linux.”

With Perens, HP gets an in with the Open Source community — a go-between, if you will. But interestingly, they also get something much more valuable: a continuous flow of feedback from a vocal representative of the growing Open Source contingency.

And even though he’s an HP representative, and as such will speak for the company, the normally outspoken Perens isn’t turning into a schill any time soon. He’s been given carte blanche to continue expressing his own opinions — both to the public, and to Hewlett-Packard.

“They’ve encouraged me to provide criticism,” and to step in where he feels that the Open Source cause is being under-represented or trampled within the company.

How this deal is good for the Open Source community

It is that criticism, says Perens, which is the biggest benefit for the community. “It’s representation. Really, no one from Open Source has ever been in a company this size.” Perens will serve as the foot in the door for this often under-heard segment of technology.

“I’ll be doing a lot of traveling,” says Perens. He’ll take the HP goodwill message on the road in speaking engagements at Linux shows, conventions and other events all over the world.

And hey, now that we have an in, what about the printer drivers situation? “I’m on top of it,” says Perens. There are several development projects already hosted at SourceForge, he says, including new work on drivers for the all-in-ones. But how long will it take for some real progress now that Perens is on board? “It will take months,” he says, but they’re working on it. Honest.

NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.

Category:

  • Linux

osOpinion: UNIX Sendmail vs. Exchange 2000

Author: JT Smith

From OSOpinion: “Some of our more advanced users had been asking to use Outlook, but we were not successful
installing both Outlook and Novell GroupWise on the same PC because of conflicts with the MAPI
protocol. It seemed like a good fit with our overall MS Office setup, virus concerns aside. This is
the topic of another paper. I checked out the options in Outlook: no e-mail (not an option),
Internet-only, and Corporate/Workgroup mode. I tried the Corporate/ Workgroup mode, but that
seemed to require an Exchange server. “

Linux 2.4.0-test12-pre5

Author: JT Smith

LinuxToday has posted Linus’ latest missive to the community.

Category:

  • Linux

M stands for MLVWM and memories

Author: JT Smith

Brian Proffitt at LinuxPlanet writes: “I have a certain affinity for Apple computers. It was, after all, an Apple IIC that I first cut my computer
teeth on, lo, these many moons ago. How many of us future geeks first played with these screaming
green monochrome screen machines during our high school and elementary days? Quite a few here in
the United States, where Apple got a serious foot in the door of the education market.”

MS bug of the day: saving files with Corel WordPerfect 9

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC tells us: “In WordPerfect 9 for Windows, the error, ‘File
appears to be corrupted’, may be set off when a
file is saved in Microsoft Word 97 or 2000 with
or without a ‘Suppress’ code in the Initial
Document Style.”

Cambridge Silicon Radio tunes in Bluetooth

Author: JT Smith

A Cambridge, England, startup claims that it can produce Bluetooth chips at one-sixth their
current price — a feat that would make long-awaited Bluetooth devices a reality. From Red Herring.

Category:

  • Unix

Free Photoshop for the people

Author: JT Smith

Berkeley’s Experimental Computing Club has produced some
of the Net’s most cherished software. Salon reports.

Category:

  • Open Source

Interview with Kurt Seifried of SecurityPortal.com

Author: JT Smith

Newsforge reader Renato Murilo Langona writes to tell us: “LinuxSecurity Brasil did an interview with Kurt Seifried from SecurityPortal. Kurt is the author of the well known Linux Administrator’s Security Guide (LASG) and is working now at SecurityPortal.com. The interview is available in English and in Portuguese.

Category:

  • Linux

Obtaining Evolution

Author: JT Smith

Linux Planet reviews Evolution, a graphical email programme, and how to get it.

Category:

  • Open Source

On the train of life with Nethack’s papa

Author: JT Smith

By Julie Bresnick

Open Source people
While most people turn toward entertainment to be removed from the
drudge
of day-to-day life, look to be lofted into fantasy by film and
television,
Jay Fenlason, the creator of the Open Source computer game, Hack, which
evolved into the increasingly popular Nethack, is not impressed by what
he
sees on the silver screen.

“No special effects in the movies will ever live up to those in your
head.” Of course, Fenlason doesn’t just boast the imagination
prerequisite
for creating a computer game, he boasts one lively enough to propagate
a
game that offers up just enough visuals to trigger the real show in the
player’s head. Hack and its progeny, are all text-based, and so simple
to
get and operate that even I was undaunted. I simply downloaded and
double-clicked.

The latest slew of releases began in July 1999 and by January 2000,
had created enough excitement to warrant recognition in Salon Magazine
which, by Web standards, is a major publication. Recent reviews of
Nethack
suggest that its majesty (which they all agree it possesses) lies in
that it
leaves the spectaculars up to the imagination. It is a notion quite
contrary to demands exhibited by mainstream gaming market trends, the
products of which seem to be moving closer to virtual reality, laying
the
burden of performance increasingly on the graphics and leaving less and
less
up to the imagination.

The repercussions of this trend are not lost on Fenlason, who keeps
his
eldest son away from the kind of screens he spends his own days at.

I knew he had kids because I called his home the day before we spoke
and
his wife answered the phone. Given the hysteria in the background, I
was
sure I had called the shoe where the old woman lives by accident. I
wouldn’t have been surprised if she said there were four kids but there
were
only two. The next day Fenlason introduces them into our conversation
as
“hacker version 3.0 and 3.1.” When he does, he’s overtaken by a
chuckle, the
pride in his voice audible even over a cellular connection.

“Alex takes after his papa in a lot of ways, but I’ve been carefully
keeping him away from computers so far. Computers let you focus on them
exclusively. It’s a lot like TV in some ways, and at that age they need
to be
learning more about how the world works, like climbing and building
towers
out of blocks and all the basic physics things that we take for granted
because we learned them when we were three.”

Blocks and climbing trees; Fenlason is a purist. He is a
do-it-yourself
kind of guy in an industry founded on its ability to automate. He even
considers the current versions of Nethack, still in simple text, still
representing monsters with symbols found on any pedestrian keyboard, to
have
drifted from his original priority of gaming over graphics. “They got
so
busy adding cool features and didn’t spend enough time thinking about
how it
would effect playing the game.”

But as Open Source allows for, it has evolved without him. It
doesn’t
bother him, he simply plays the original version. (His wife, on the
other
hand, fancies playing the latest release.)

He has voluntarily avoided participation pretty much since spawning
the
original Hack almost 20 years ago. He was a junior at a high
school in
a small suburb outside of Boston when he went to visit UC Berkeley.
There
he was introduced to Rogue. Like any
good
hacker, his imagination went into the game before it went out. He was
intrigued and went looking for the source. When he was denied that
access
(the Salon article states it was available, but at the time Fenlason
sought
it, it was not) he simply started experimenting.

“I was curious about some of the game play issues involved in
designing
it, things like how the rooms and corridors were generated, so I
started
hacking up some random level generators and stuff to try things out.
Someone looked over my shoulder and said, ‘what’s that?’ So I sort of
explained and they said, ‘oh, that’s cool; when do we get to play it?’ “

Though indifferent toward most of school, he would often stay after
to
work on the computers he discovered there. His school was near
Maynard,
where DEC (now part of Compaq) headquarters were located, and his ninth-grade teacher convinced DEC to sell him a PDP 11 at a 75%
discount and
instead of loading DEC’s operating system, he loaded Unix, then significantly discounted for
the
education community. It was under the guise of
work
for his advanced computer class that Fenlason indulged and built Hack.

Usenix had biannual meetings, Unix
users would get together and swap war stories. For each meeting they’d
put
together a tape of some of the contributed software. I put [Hack] on
the
tape and forgot about it until someone I know mentioned that the two
most
popular pieces of software on that particular tape were my silly game
and my
friend Jonathon’s text editor. Since then there’s been several
different
versions of Hack written, and I think I’m the only person who still uses
that
text editor.”

The text editor author was Jonathon Payne, whose
net
worth, after Marimba went public, was significant enough to be reported
in
the the Wall Street Journal, let alone retire on. Fenlason, who would
be
happy to retire in order to play with his kids and concentrate on a
couple
of projects he’s got on the back burner, currently labors away as a
software
engineer for Clearway.

Even though his commute is long, he says on his cell phone that it’s not ample time to
explain
what exactly Clearway does, so instead he promises me it’s interesting
enough
to lure him through the two-plus hours a day he spends getting to and
from
their offices in downtown Boston. If it weren’t for the paycheck
though, he
might prefer to spend more time developing the Unix file system, and
the
successor for the GNU
tar

that he wants to get to an alpha quality and eventually release for
community development.

The file system he proposes would “keep track of what files you use
and
which ones simply take up space and arrange to have the files you don’t
use
moved to a less expensive medium. They get burned onto a CD ROM and if
you
attempt to use the file afterward, the system would put up a message
saying,
‘insert CD ROM x to get at this file.’ The file system part isn’t
terribly
difficult but the utility programs that actually move the file onto CD
and
keep track of which CDs they’re on, turns out to be a bit of work. Not
conceptually difficult, just work I haven’t had time for yet.”

He still gets emails on the GNU programs he worked on while with the
Free Software Foundation and
thus
his interest in the tar successor. He was with FSF for five years but
ultimately left, he says, because of their insistence on sticking with
Hurd instead of
building a complete system out of say, the BSD sources. “And to this
day the
FSF still hasn’t released a complete operating system based on Hurd so
I
think I kind of made the right choice.”

Choices, like an gamer at a crossroads. Between the audio of the
offspring, the sounds of his commute, the train, the traffic, I hear
throughout our conversation, the cries of “papa” that bring him joy at
the
end of his day; I imaging him, as I’m sure he imagines himself, to be
an
adventurer in his own game of life.

NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.