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The binary nature of freedom

“There are subtle lessons about freedom in the GPL, but you’ll never find them by just reading the license. Instead, you’ll have to read between the lines (so to speak) and try to see what can’t be seen. Furthermore, these lessons, despite being deceptively simple, could have a profound impact on human freedom if only people understood them. In a sense, software freedom can be seen as a metaphor for human freedom.” More at Advogato.org.

Category:

  • Migration

Intel invests in Linux clustering

“Intel Corp has joined a group of Norwegian investment and technology companies in providing second-round funding to Linux-based clustering software company Scali AS.

Oslo, Norway-based Scali is the developer of clustering software for the open source Linux operating system. The company has its roots in a defense research project from the mid-1990s, and in 1997 was spun off from Kronsberg Gruppen, a Norwegian technology vendor that focused on the maritime, defense and aerospace markets.” More at The Register.

Category:

  • Linux

Microsoft books LinuxWorld stand in bid for ‘dialogue’

“Microsoft is to exhibit at LinuxWorld Expo this August, and it appears that the company wants to be nice. Yesterday, Linux Today spotted the Beast’s presence on the Expo exhibitor list, and after publicising this was contacted by an apparently kinder, gentler Microsoft.” More at The Register.

Lawrence Berkeley Lab and 10Gb/s ethernet

Anonymous Reader writes: “Just yesterday, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and several key
partners put together a demonstration system running a real-world
scientific application to produce data on one cluster, and then send
the resulting data across a 10 Gigabit Ethernet connection to another
cluster, where it is then rendered for visualization. Publicly proving
more than switch interoperability, the demonstration was a first. More at Supercomputingonline.

Category:

  • Migration

The only thing dying faster than our civil rights

Ian Bell writes: “We have a great article on Designtechnica which addresses the concerns that many of us have in the IT world. It seems that the hottest rage in software development is not J2EE, or  .NET. It seems like the biggest trend is off-shore software development. This article talks about how people have lost their jobs over the last 18 months as companies come to terms with the high price of development versus the need to get work done in spite of shrinking revenues. As IT professionals, have we over priced ourselves into dangerous territory? This is a good read for anyone with a current IT career or for those thinking about entering the IT field. Check out the article here.”

Free Software Institute offering inexpensive classes

mrbrklyn writes: “NYLXS, home of the New York City Linux
Scene, wishes to announce the continuation of our inexpensive GNU/Linux operating system Classes. Coming in July will be our Unix 1 class, Linux 2, Perl 2, Unix 2 and Perl 1 classes. These classes are part of our craddle to grave efforts to promote Free Software by giving people hands on Training. Check out the home page for details on coming class times and registration”

Linux manufacturing a lead in Asia

– By Jack Bryar –

What better application for an industrial-strength operating system
than heavy industry? It isn’t making much news in the West, but Linux
is on the verge of becoming the dominant platform at many integrated
manufacturing companies in East Asia.
Most people familiar with the history of computing can cite a variety
of government and industrial applications that drove the early market for
computers. The very earliest applications of all involved the automation of
industrial processes. In fact, the granddaddy of all “data processing”
applications allowed French garment manufacturers to automate the process of
creating patterned sweaters — back in 1801.

In the 1970s and ’80s IT pioneers such as Digital Equipment Corp. spawned
an entirely new business focused on industrial automation, and heavy
industry grew to become an important market for software developers. Over the
last 20 years, American enthusiasm for computer assisted industrial
control systems has faded, along with big chunks of the country’s traditional manufacturing base.

However, in the rapidly expanding industrial centers of East Asia,
computer integrated manufacturing is alive and well, and increasingly a
Linux-only environment. As vendors are quickly discovering, if you want to
market computing systems to heavy industry, they’d better be Open Source.

The most recent evidence for this Linux breakthrough is in the Japanese
steel industry. From a global perspective, there is far more steel-making
capacity in the world than the market would justify. The result has been ruinous
hyper-competition. Many North American and European steel makers have been run out of business. Japanese steel makers have survived by a mix of ruthless cost cutting
and by heavy investment in automated technologies.

Steel making is like most other highly integrated manufacturing
processes. Steel plants almost always require the development of highly customized
IT equipment and software. Most have relied on a limited number of
specialty integrators to develop and operate these closed systems. Toshiba and
Hitachi have traditionally won the bulk of these deals. While these business
relationships have produced reliable systems, they have also proved to be extremely
expensive. In the current competitive environment, it is not sustainable.

This past week, Nippon Steel, NKK Corp., and a number of other Japanese
steel firms let it be known that they are requiring vendors to
convert their systems to Linux platforms and to open up their source code. These steel companies are also expanding their vendor lists to include in-house Open Source
developers and IBM.

For example, starting in a few months, NKK will introduce a new
general-purpose computing system that will handle all 118 production lines at its huge
plant in the city of Kawasaki. Based on its internal cost of ownership
study, the company expects to save over $8 million a year in licenses,
support and administration costs. The company’s Fukuyama operations are
undergoing a similar changeover.

According to the company, this conversion program began with the
conversion of its galvanized strip steel line back in early 2001. As part of that
conversion, the company dumped its centralized, special-purpose systems and built a
decentralized system of process control computers. NKK used modified white box PCs
running Linux and open software. Its initial studies suggested the firm would
save as much as 40% a year in IT costs. In addition, the company
hoped that it would be able to reuse many system elements as it upgraded. In
the past, the company had to strip out entire systems, forcing periodic
shutdowns and other costly disruptions to manufacturing.

Much of the code has been developed by an in-house team at the
company’s KDK subsidiary, and the company hopes to market its expertise to other
steel makers.

Nippon Steel is undergoing a similar conversion. It recently introduced
a Linux-based process control system at its steel bar plant in Hokkaido
and at its blast furnaces in Kimitsu. The company estimates it will save
better than 50% over the proprietary systems it had used in the past.

These deployments presage a major shift in the Asian IT market.
According to the newspaper Nihon Keizai
Shimbum
, Japanese manufacturers are rapidly converting to Linux systems and
leading much of the Japanese market in the process. The Linux server market in
Japan has exploded. Compound growth rates have approached 40% a
year since 2000. By 2004, computer makers are projecting Linux will be
on nearly a quarter of all servers in use across the country, and that
figure could prove to be conservative.

The vendor community is getting on board. Recently IBM, Fujitsu, NEC, and Hitachi announced they would be combining resources to develop a Linux distribution optimized for large Japanese corporate systems.

Other Asian manufacturers are jumping on the bandwagon. For
example, Linux is poised to become an important element in the IT strategies
of India’s pharmaceuticals business. In China, government -linked
manufacturers are leading a phalanx of other companies and institutions by adopting
Linux or using the threat of Linux to force price wars among closed systems
developers.

Chinese and Hong Kong news outlets have been watching with some
amusement as Microsoft has become embroiled in a ruinous race with Sun
Microsystems to see which company can give away the most software to Chinese
businesses and institutions. Last spring, Sun donated millions of StarSuite
licenses to Chinese schools and business-affiliated “research
institutions.” In response, Microsoft announced it would donate what it claimed would
be nearly $750 million worth of product and training services to China’s
State Development Planning Commission for distribution to these same
institutes, universities and government-affiliated businesses. Many of these
institutes are little more than dressed-up manufacturing centers.

It all represents a staggering turnaround from the bullying stance
taken by closed system developers toward businesses and governments in the
area, and suggests how quickly Linux has begun to emerge as a viable and
potentially dominant player in the manufacturing sector.

Category:

  • Linux

KDEvelopers on KDE users

Anonymous Reader writes: “There is an interesting column on Linux and Main about an online debate among KDE developers over what if anything they owe users. The author says the discussion raises many questions about how far the free software development model can go.”

Category:

  • C/C++

Autoconf sucks!

Anonymous Reader writes: “There is an interesting weblog entry on LiveJournal written by Slashdot’s Brian “Krow” Aker about his idea for a replacement to GNU’s autoconf system. It brings up a good question about why the Open Source movement still makes use of autoconf.”

Debian: Usability developers?

Ash writes: “Many people decide to go for becoming a Debian maintainer – the new maintainer system is showing hundreds of applicants. Everyone must have their reasons – to create new packages, to help maintain packages, etc. And there are loads of little sub-groups within Debian – Debian documentation, X Strike Force, Debian Junior, loads of them. It seems there is something for everyone, no matter whether you are a software developer or not. Read it from Debian Planet.”

Category:

  • Linux