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Enterprise customers now ask for Linux by name

By Grant Gross

Companies pitching Linux to enterprise customers say they’re seeing a change in attitude from potential clients in recent months — the customers are now asking for Linux instead of getting it sold to them.
Linux specialists at companies such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard, both of which seem to be announcing new Linux conversions weekly, say some of their recent high-profile Linux sales went to customers who specifically asked for Linux.

Michael Callahan, CTO and co-founder of PolyServe, says his company has seen an explosion of Linux interest in the last six months. PolyServe announced its Matrix Server multi-server file system/application manager software Thursday, and the product is first available for Linux, with a Windows version slated for early next year.

Although “Linux hype has ebbed and flowed” in the two years the PolyServe team has been working on Matrix Server, Callahan says he’s seen a continually growing interest in Linux during that time, with interest “burgeoning” in the last six months.

“We talk to customers just about every week who say, ‘Six months ago, if you’d been talking to us about Linux, we’d have said we’re interested in that, but we’re not really ready to look at it that seriously. But today, we’re really interested because we see Linux taking over our operation in 24 months.'” He adds, “I think Linux at the moment is a victim of under-hype.”

Over at HP, a recent announcement of Reuters moving its Reuters Market Data System to Linux servers is an example of a company that was interested in Linux from the start, says Judy Chavis, director of the HP Linux Programs Office.

Reuters’ customers had worked with the old Compaq in the past in moving Solaris applications to Linux, Chavis says. So Reuters approached HP after it was considering moving the the Market Data System to Linux and was already interested in the total cost of ownership advantages of Linux, although Reuters also was considering staying with Solaris. Many customers are asking for total cost of ownership comparisons, says Chavis, and one of HP’s best Linux sales tools is running a TCO study comparing Linux to other choices.

Chavis says she sees a lot of customers porting their old Unix applications over to Linux because they see cost savings. “I don’t think there’s a lot of convincing any more of customers around Linux,” she says. “Their question to me is, ‘Can the new HP support me?’ That’s really what we’re down to — when you look at enterprise customers like a Reuters, they’re used to a very complex environment, and they want one throat to choke.”

Some customers do have questions — about Linux scaling or support or applications available under Linux — but there’s little time spent on convincing customers they should look at Linux. “We’ve lived through this 11-year history around Linux, and the last year or so, it’s really taking off,” Chavis says. “People are using it for applications, they’re not playing around with it. It’s not an engineer exercise anymore, it’s solving a business problem.”

One of IBM’s recent big announcements was paint seller Sherwin-Williams adopting Linux for its in-store PCs, one at each store working as a server, with a second Linux box as the store manager’s workstation. Like Reuters, Sherwin-Williams was interested in Linux because of its stability and its cost savings over the company’s former OS, SCO Unix, says Scott Handy, director of software solutions for IBM. Sherwin-Williams was also interested in Linux’s open code, which allows the company to customize its applications easily.

IBM customers considering Linux, like those at HP, are looking for one company to provide service, Handy adds. But after one company in an industry moves to Linux, word gets around and Linux interest seems to snowball. IBM customers tell Handy their first source for information about Linux is people they know in the same field.

One recent IBM Linux customer is NextWine, a seller of high-end wines that uses its Web site, plus phone and email sales, to sell its products.

NextWine is using IBM’s WebSphere Commerce 5.1 and Linux to tie its Web site to its database. In moving from Windows to Linux, the company can update two separate database “orders of magnitude” more quickly than in the past, when workers had to manually update inventory lists, says company president Dain Dunston. That instant inventory update is important, he says, because NextWine deals in rare wines and sometimes has only one or two bottles of a particular vintage.

NextWine uses Linux as the connection between the Web site database, its bookkeeping databases and a proprietary inventory management system.

While NextWine didn’t approach IBM about using Linux, it didn’t take much convincing to make the switch, says Dunston. Linux’s cost wasn’t even a big consideration, other than it was much less expensive than other options that were hundreds of thousand of dollars higher.

Dunston says he was aware of Linux and has followed the open systems vs. proprietary systems debate. But choosing an operating system isn’t a priority for the company; Dunston just wanted something that worked.

“The advantage here was very clear that if it’s running on Linux, it’s going to be really easy to access data in and out,” he says. “There was zero resistance on our part. What I’d thought in my head was, ‘Yeah, that’s kind of hip. What I’d heard was Linux was this hip new system doing a lot of good things. It was like a no-brainer for us.”

J. D. Edwards makes a Linux move

From CNet news.com:
“Business software maker J.D. Edwards is embracing the open-source Linux operating system with a new version of its software that lets companies keep
track of their customers.”

Linux carves a niche in PDA market

From ZDNet: “One obvious draw is that many developers and tech enthusiasts like using the open-source OS whenever possible. IT pros toiling in a Linux environment
likely prefer to put PDAs on the same platform. While Linux-based PDAs have undeniable appeal for tech shops, device manufacturers certainly want a
share of the consumer market, as well. And that may happen sooner than most think, as both market newcomers and traditional device manufacturers are
bringing Linux system products to the marketplace. But what will propel Linux devices toward widespread adoption is user satisfaction.”

Category:

  • Linux

SELinux and patent problems?

Anonymous Reader writes: “There is a potential problem. Much of the actual work in the implementation of SELinux was done by Secure Computing Corporation (SCC). SCC, in its implementation of SELinux, used a technology that it calls type enforcement. As it turns out, SCC has a patent on this technology.”
http://lwn.net/Articles/2376/

USENIX begins with a chilly warning

Anonymous Reader writes: “DesktopLinux.com Contributing Editor Malcolm Dean reports on the keynote speech at opening day of the USENIX conference in Monterey, CA where over 1100 attendees are on hand for a week of high-powered conferences. Predicting a ‘silent spring’ on the Internet, Stanford University’s renowned Lawrence Lessig lectured on the scope and extent of laws affecting the Internet. Lessig also discussed Microsoft’s domination of the desktop as “not that they have been dominating the desktop, but that they have been leveraging this domination over the next generation of technology.” Read full story.”

Category:

  • Migration

Linux Devices Embedded Linux newsletter

LinuxDevices.com has published the latest installment of their Embedded Linux newsletter. Subjects covered include contructing a Linux-powered IrDA device, a report for the Linux Expo and Conference, as well as other noteworthy news and announcements.

      WELCOME TO THE LINUXDEVICES.COM EMBEDDED LINUX NEWSLETTER 
                            June 13, 2002
       by Rick Lehrbaum -- Executive Editor, LinuxDevices.com
  
                        (online html version)
     http://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/jun13-02.html


***************** this week's newsletter sponsor ******************
    WE THANK OUR SPONSORS FOR MAKING LINUXDEVICES.COM POSSIBLE

LinuxDevices.com would like to take this opportunity to thank our 
Sponsors for supporting our ongoing activities.  Please view their
company and product description pages, and consider purchasing
and using their products!               

               http://www.linuxdevices.com/sponsors/
*******************************************************************


_____________________ * * * TOP STORIES * * * ____________________


CONSTRUCTING A LINUX-POWERED IRDA PRINTING DEVICE
Tired of filling out forms?  Nobody can read your handwriting?  
or spell your last name?  In this technical article, Entrepreneur
and Linux hacker Gerd Rausch explains how (and why) he created a
small device that could be installed at rental-car agencies,
hotel/airline check-in desks, or health-care facilities to receive
data beamed directly from your PDA.  It runs on a Linux platform,
of course.
http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT4881592383.html


REPORT FROM THE EMBEDDED LINUX EXPO AND CONFERENCE
Kevin Dankwardt attended the Embedded Linux Expo and Conference
(ELEC) held this week in Dallas, TX and filed this report with his
impressions of the event:  "The turn-out for the event was good. 
The single-track event featured an interesting and entertaining
opening Keynote by Matt Harris, CEO of Lineo . . ."
http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT4151746996.html


DEVICE PROFILE:  TOSHIBA SG20 WIRELESS MOBILITY SERVER
This LinuxDevices.com 'device profile' takes a peek at the new
Toshiba Magnia SG20 wireless mobility server, a compact, Linux-
based portable wireless server.  About the size of a typical
notebook computer, the appliance-like device is intended to make it
easy to pack up an entire network and take it on the road. 
Described by Toshiba as a "wireless network in a box that allows
users to securely access and share files, printers, and an Internet
account", the Magnia SG20 contains a Linux OS derived from Red Hat
version 7 along with Apache (which provides web-based
administration and application support).
http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT7915816249.html

HITACHI UNVEILS NEW MODEL OF LINUX-ENABLED INTERNET APPLIANCE
Hitachi has released a new model of its Linux-based FLORA-ie
wireless web pad.  The device has a 10.4-inch TFT LCD screen and is
based on a 400 MHz Transmeta Crusoe processor running Midori Linux.
It has built-in Ethernet and 802.11b wireless, and also provides
two USB ports plus both CompactFlash Type II and PC Card (PCMCIA)
expansion slots.
http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS9150314714.html


THOUGHTS ON ADEOS
Kevin Dankwardt provides a perspective on Adeos, which is being put
forward as a patent-free, GPL alternative approach to adding
hard-real-time capability to Linux (among other uses).
http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT5540510496.html


_______ * * * OTHER NOTEWORTHY NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS * * * ________

Here are some additional news items and announcements of interest
from the past week . . .

*  Trolltech announces developer contest winners
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS5777597272.html

*  Embedded Linux powers new medical device for radiologists
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4419913446.html

*  LynuxWorks releases BlueCat RT
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS3599053757.html

*  Lineo spins out RTXC technology to OS startup Quadros
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS3917457737.html

*  MontaVista joins Eclipse board
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS8157490860.html

*  Trolltech announces two partnerships in China
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS5622090295.html

*  New single-chip solution for Linux-based ADSL routers
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS8430601589.html

*  Linux Test Project releases test suite
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS7267658545.html

*  Super-Secure Linux, Inch by Inch [Wired]
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4172738571.html

*  MITRE: A Business Case Study of Open Source Software
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS5939927300.html

*  'Brickout' ported to Zaurus
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS9755613229.html

*  Open Group announces web services conference
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS6884285988.html

*  Visual Development with Qt 3.0 [Linux Journal]
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4431793388.html

*  PICMG adds new hot-swap and slot management features
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4723884749.html

*  Munich embedded systems show joins 'electronica 2002'
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS7519405992.html

*  Two tutorials on microcontroller based design [IBM]
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS2364332762.html

*  Configuring CVS on RedHat as an SCM Repository [IBM]
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS2321660520.html


______ * * * FREQUENTLY UPDATED QUICK REFERENCE GUIDES * * * _____

*  EMBEDDED LINUX INTRODUCTION & OVERVIEW ("start here")
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9888936014.html

*  EMBEDDED LINUX DISTRIBUTIONS
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2760742655.html

*  REAL-TIME LINUX
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT8073314981.html

*  EMBEDDED LINUX GUI/WINDOWING SOFTWARE
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT9202043619.html

*  JAVA TECHNOLOGIES FOR EMBEDDED LINUX SYSTEMS
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT8918758707.html

*  LINUX-FRIENDLY SYSTEM-ON-CHIP PROCESSORS
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT4313418436.html

*  LINUX-FRIENDLY EMBEDDED SINGLE BOARD COMPUTERS
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2614444132.html

*  LITTLE LINUX SYSTEMS FOR PROJECTS & PRODUCTS
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT2016997232.html

*  EMBEDDED LINUX "COOL DEVICES"
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT4936596231.html

*  LINUX-BASED PDAs
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT8728350077.html

*  EMBEDDED LINUX MARKET
   http://www.linuxdevices.com/articles/AT5991623822.html


____________________* * * BACK ISSUES * * * ____________________

Missed a previous LinuxDevices.com Embedded Linux Newsletter?
No problem!  Here are back issues for the past month . . . 

  http://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/jun06-02.htmlhttp://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/may30-02.htmlhttp://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/may23-02.htmlhttp://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/may16-02.htmlhttp://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/may09-02.htmlhttp://www.linuxdevices.com/files/newsbriefs/may02-02.html


______________ * * * VISIT LINUXDEVICES.COM * * * _______________

Be sure to stop by LinuxDevices.com (http://www.linuxdevices.com)
-- "the Embedded Linux Portal" -- for the latest news, articles,
forums, companies, products, jobs, and buzz in the fast-moving 
"post-PC" world of Linux-based intelligent devices, Internet 
appliances, and embedded systems.


_________ * * * QUESTIONS, COMMENTS, SUGGESTIONS? * * * _________

     You can reach Rick Lehrbaum at:  rick@linuxdevices.com
_________________________________________________________________



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The email address for your subscription is:  lwn@lwn.net

Ruling lets Iowans seek Microsoft refunds

DesMoinesRegister.com: “Thousands of Windows 98 users in Iowa could get $40 refunds from Microsoft Corp. after the Iowa Supreme Court reinstated a lawsuit Wednesday that alleges price fixing.”

Announcing Builder Xcessory 6.0

LinuxNews.com: “Integrated Computer Solutions, Inc. (ICS), the leader in user interface development tools for UNIX/Linux systems, announced today the general availability of Builder Xcessory PRO 6.0, a major upgrade to its flagship product.” Read more in this press release.

ELX Power Desktop 1.0 is finally here

“ELX proudly announces the release of ELX Power Desktop 1.0. The boxed version contains 2 Install CDs and 1 Application CD. A reference manual which is written keeping Windows users in mind and a Quick Install guide that is fun to read.” Read the rest of this this press release at LinuxPR.

What’s Gnu: RMS speaks on United Linux, Free Software

From an anonymous reader: In an interview with OfB’s Timothy Butler, Richard Stallman discusses the issue of UnitedLinux licensing, Free Software in the enterprise, and even about what he expected (or rather did not expect) concerning the position of Free Software today, when he founded the GNU Project in 1984. Get the full scoop here at ofb.biz.

Category:

  • C/C++