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Microsoft puts on the Tux

Microsoft Executive: “I can’t honestly say that I believe everyone at the show will be happy to see us… But I think most
people will take our presence at LinuxWorld in the spirit in which it’s intended — a sincere attempt to open a
positive dialog between Microsoft and the open source development community….. In the past I think we talked too much about the Linux ‘negatives’ and not enough about the advantages of
Windows… It made us sound myopic.” More stuff to make you puke at Wired.

New computer security dilemma: lack of viruses

“The first half of 2002 has been an eerily quiet period for the computer
experts on watch for worms and viruses, leaving some to trumpet their effectiveness even as
their predictions of doom are now looking overblown.

Nobody has a bullet-proof explanation, but theories range from the introduction of enhanced
anti-virus software to stiffer anti-hacker laws to more vigilant computer users.” More at InfoWorld.

Category:

  • Security

ICS’ BX PRO 6.0 available on Itanium

Mark Hatch writes: “Integrated Computer Solutions, Inc. (ICS), the world’s
leading supplier of user interface development tools for
professionals building high-performance, scalable enterprise
applications, announced today that its flagship product,
Builder Xcessory PRO (BX PRO 6.0), is now available for
Itanium® based systems running the Red Hat Linux system.”

Builder Xcessory PRO (BX PRO) is widely used by enterprise
software developers to speed the creation of graphical user
interfaces for mission critical applications that require high
performance, scalability, and high reliability. ICS customers
report 25%+ savings in development time through using BX
PRO.

High performance, ease of use, and scalability have been
the distinguishing hallmarks of the ICS product line for more
than ten years. Support for the Itanium processor family
underscores ICS’ ongoing commitment to provide enterprise
software developers with timely access to the tools and
services they need to create and maintain mission-critical
applications and to migrate their applications to Linux. More
detailed product information is available under the Products
section of the ICS home page at http://www.ics.com.

“We ported the latest release of Builder Xcessory to the
Itanium processor family based on customer demand,” said Mark
J. Hatch, Chief Operating Officer of ICS. “In customer
surveys, we found a clear trend for enterprise developers to
identify Linux on Itanium based servers as a key part of their
strategic plans to economically deliver the next generation of
applications.”

“The Itanium processor family delivers price-performance
for mission critical,enterprise applications,” said Melissa
Laird, director of Intel Developer Services. “Intel is pleased
to have had the opportunity to work with ICS through the Intel
Early Access Program and we welcome the availability of
Builder Xcessory PRO on the Itanium processor family because
it helps corporations more quickly develop enterprise
applications written in C/C++ or Java.”

About ICS

ICS is the world’s leading provider of software development
tools that professionals use when developing the high
performance, software applications on which their mission
depends. ICS’ customers include military, aerospace,
financial, automotive, telecommunication, entertainment,
pharmaceutical, and research companies. Founded in 1987, ICS
was chartered to create software development tools for
developers working with the then emerging X Window System?.
The company’s first offerings included X training and a
version of Motif for systems manufactured by Sun Microsystems.
Prior to the widespread adoption of Motif by the UNIX
workstation vendors, ICS was the leading independent shipper
of the Motif toolkit. In 1998, The Open Group chose ICS to
provide technical support for its Motif source code licenses.

ICS’ flagship product, Builder Xcessory, is in its sixth
major release and represents over 100 person years of effort.
BX defines a level of sophistication, functionality, and
ease-of-use that is unmatched in the industry.

ICS sponsors the MotifZone (http://www.motifzone.net), a
community site for Motif developers to gather additional
knowledge and request input on technical problems from other
engineers. The MotifZone hosts the Public CVS source code
repository for Open Motif as well as the defect database. The
MotifZone hosts over 5000 active developers, has delivered
almost 100,000 downloads of Open Motif, and experiences over 5
million hits per year. It is the most active website dedicated
to user interface software development.

For further information on ICS, its products or services,
call 617-621-0060, or visit the ICS website at http://www.ics.com/.

Press Contact:

Mark Hatch
ICS
617-621-0060 x108
mhatch@ics.com
http://www.ics.com/

Linux Security Week – August 12th 2002

LinuxSecurity Contributors writes: “LinuxSecurity.com reports on the security news this week including “Advanced Log Processing,” “Securing WLAN Links,” “Wireless Security: An IP VPN Conspiracy Theory,” and “Simplicity Is Key To Keeping Code Secure.””

Category:

  • Security

Russia is fertile for standardizing on Linux

Anonymous Reader writes: “This Linux and Main column discusses the tendency in Russia to bootleg Windows operating systems and software, and the reasons why developers and users there are likely soon to choose Linux instead.”

Category:

  • Linux

OEone’s Linux desktop experiment enters a new phase

– By Robin “Roblimo” Miller
One of the biggest complaints about popular Linux desktop environments is that they ape Windows and Mac instead of breaking new ground. OEone, a Canadian company founded by programmers who worked on the original, well-regarded CorelDraw application, has designed a desktop that breaks with all the “windowing” traditions. The desktop is now freely downloadable as a front end for Red Hat 7.x, with a Mandrake version scheduled for release within the next few months.
We wrote about an earlier version of the OEone desktop several months ago. Our original review copy of OEone came preloaded on a FuturePower “single unit” PC similar in appearance to an older iMac but not nearly as sleek. We liked the OEone desktop overall (even though we didn’t think much of the hardware) despite several flaws, and have been waiting eagerly for a more polished version of OEone to hit the streets. It’s here now.

Some of our biggest problems with OEone’s earlier attempts had to do with lack of software choice. Some people are natural-born fuddy-duddies, and we are among them. We’re used to XChat, and that’s that. A desktop that wouldn’t let us use our favorite IRC program just wouldn’t do for us. We were and still are accustomed to StarOffice or OpenOffice. Yes, we could have installed them. opened up a terminal window, and run them that way, but we wanted to point and click; that is, after all, the point of having point and click applications. Now OEone gives us that ability — along with Red Carpet-style automatic updates and dependency-satisfied RPM software installation for a wide enough range of applications that we can now use OEone not just as an “Internet Appliance” front end, but as a complete, ultra-efficient desktop for general purpose home and office computing.

Talking with OEone CEO Eid Eid

That’s his real name, just as “Griffith Griffith” was the real name of the person after whom the famous Griffith Park in Los Angeles was named. Eid worked for Corel for years, and along the way became a devoted Linux user. He has long felt that that the interface on most computers was obsolete. In today’s world, he says, “the Internet is the universal interface, and the browser is the platform.”

Eid does not claim he and his people came up with this idea. “We are really confident that the world is moving in this direction with or without us,” he says. “We did not invent it. We just saw it coming.”

He is also a major convergence fan who expects the line between TVs, stereos, and PCs to become much more fuzzy in the future than they are today. Already, he says, you can use OEone with any video card or TV tuner card that supports Video for Linux as a “time shift” TV program recorder. With a large enough hard drive, you could use your Linux computer (running OEone) in place of a TiVO or a VCR. Eid is proud of this feature, and hopes it is especially interesting to makers of set-top boxes he hopes will license OEone technology and use it as the base of their systems.

OEMs are where OEone hopes to get the bulk of its income one day, along with custom Linux installations for companies and institutions that are fed up with Microsoft’s recent licensing changes and are frantically casting about for a user-friendly Open Source desktop alternative. Eid believes many (if not most) corporate IT people are already “sold” on Linux and Open Source, with most of the remaining resistance coming from non-technical desktop users. “Now,” says Eid, “IT managers have enough motivation to say to users, ‘You have no choice but to learn the new system.'” And Eid hopes plenty of them turn to OEone, because the learning curve for this new desktop is as close to zero as it can possibly be, no matter what kind of operating system a user has been accustomed to in the past.

When it comes to answering the chronic “but will it work with Microsoft Exchange?” question that has derailed so many potential corporate desktop migrations to Linux, Eid is not shy about saying, “You don’t need
Exchange. There are many Linux alternatives.” Sure, he says, you need to use IMAP email in most corporate environments, and you need group calendars and schedulers, but he says OEone’s Home Base (server) software can take care of that with no problem — and take care of the chronic, “But can I take my work files home and use them there?” question, too, because you can access OEone’s Home Base servers through any browser, using any operating system.

Eid is also talking to AOL. Imagine a PC with a desktop based on a Mozilla or Netscape browser, one with an AOL logo on it, that is as tightly integrated with the AOL service as Microsoft would like all PCs to be with its own .NET, MSN, and Passport services. Or imagine that OEone-based PC tied to any other large ISP or even sold by a company like Wal-Mart or another retailer as part of a package that included everything needed for home computing and Internet access in one easy-to-learn, low-cost package, including data backup and recovery, automatic software updates, and everything else most people need from a computer. It could happen. It wouldn’t even be hard to do, using work OEone has already done.

Meanwhile, for the rest of us…

Right now, the big OEone push is to get lots of OEone desktops onto computers all over the United States and the rest of the world, and lots of developers to work on modifications and extensions to the basic OEone software. The licensing is right: OEone software is triple-licensed under GPL, LGPL, and the Mozilla Public License (MPL) that allows for commercial licensing of derivative products.

OEone is giving all downloaders 60 days of free access to their online software update, file backup, and “access from anywhere” service. Naturally, the OEone people hope you’ll love it so much that you’ll pay a nominal sum, say $20 per year, to go on using it, and that someday you’ll be willing to pay as much as $69 per year, an amount Eid says the company’s marketing surveys show individual users are willing to pay for what they offer. He also says, “Right now it’s a penetration issue,” so they are keeping the price low.

A big point Eid makes over and over about this latest release is that it holds to the promise OEone has always made to the Open Source community: that OEone’s work would be released under a free license. Okay. Promise kept.

A second big point is that by offering, in essence, something that works on top of Red Hat — and soon Mandrake — OEone skips the endless hardware detection and installation hassles that plague developers who have a great Linux software or desktop idea and try to put out a complete distribution instead of sticking to what they know best, namely their own software. (If anyone should know this, it’s a group of former Corel employees, right?) The competition OEone faces is from KDE and Gnome, not any of the distribution publishers, and even the competition with Ximian, the for-profit company that grew out of Gnome, is not really competition, because OEone uses (with permission) Ximian’s Red Carpet software as the basis for their automatic software installation and upgrade system and, says Eid, hopes to merge that slightly forked version of Red Carpet back into the main development tree before long.

There’s still work to do

OEone is a fully functional Linux desktop right now, but it is so different from other PC desktops that it hardly competes with any of the existing ones. Maybe it’s the wave of the future, and maybe not. It represents both promise to users and a threat to all operating system developers, because it is a desktop that is not really tied to any one operating system. Eid says OEone could be ported to Windows in three months, if and when he and his people have the time and desire (or a customer comes along and pays them for the port). Presumably a port to Mac OSX, which is based on BSD Unix, would take even less time and effort.

Imagine users moving from Linux to Unix to Mac to Windows computers, using the exact same desktop on all of them, using OpenOffice on all of them (once the OpenOffice Mac OSX port is ready), seeing either their own or company-mandated customized software packages and desktop themes on all of them, using cross-platform personalized features, and having all of those features at their fingertips no matter what operating system is beneath their desktops at any given moment.

This is a grand vision, and it is entirely feasible. OEone’s desktop looks the way it does because the company ran focus groups and this is what the users in those groups chose, not because this particular look and feel is the only one you can make with OEone’s software. Both free and commercial software developers are welcome to make all the changes they want; to put this over here and that over there; to use their own favorite colors; to make any themes they please; to customize OEone’s software any way they want, the same way they can now customize Mozilla.

I would not want to be in Microsoft’s shoes if OEone manages to pull off this coup, because the end result would be a world where the desktop operating system doesn’t matter, and in a world where more and more software is becoming browser-accessible (including Microsoft’s, through .NET) it is only a matter of time until this happens, whether under OEone’s aegis or under someone else’s.

This story was written before the final release of the new, freely downloadable OEone desktop — and before OEone’s Web site was revised to reflect the new offering. Check OEone.com for download links, brochures, Flash “tours” of the new desktop, and all that groovy stuff. OEone says its new servers will handle almost any load anyone throws at them — and it’s expecting the load to be pretty heavy once word of their new, free download gets out.

Category:

  • News

Konqueror SSL fix

Anonymous Reader writes: “Waldo Bastian has told the KDE development list that there is a patch in CVS for the SSL certificate forging vulnerability reported today in The Register. He says he’s working on a patch for KDE-2.2.x, which is also vulnerable. Details are on Linux and Main.”

Category:

  • C/C++

Review of Wal-Mart’s Mandrake/Microtel PC

Albator writes: “Although WalMart’s Mandrake/Microtel systems have been available for over a month, there hadn’t any product reviews on the Web yet. Here is a personal review of a new WalMart system which was purchased late July, on MandrakeForum:

http://www.mandrakeforum.com/article.php?sid=2371& lang=en.”

LinuxWorld: Sun’s Linux server announcement

LPH writes: “Sun announced the LX50 x86 entry level server, shipping with Solaris and Linux. Birdie from TuxReports has a short little blurb and impressions from a 10 year old.”

More at TuxReports.

Category:

  • C/C++

Which is easier to install, W2K Pro or RH 7.3?

warthawg writes: “http://www.linuxworld.com/site-stories/2002/0812.i nstall-p2.html.

Which is easier to install, W2K Pro or RH 7.3? The answer might surprise you.”

Category:

  • Linux