Category:
- Open Source
Category:
Category:
ArcSDE 8.2, which also began shipping April 29, 2002, is the GIS gateway for managing spatial data in a commercial database management system. ArcSDE serves spatial data to a wide variety of clients and is the key component in managing a multi-user spatial database. ArcSDE 8.2 for Oracle is the first ArcSDE release that supports Linux servers.
MapObjects–Java Standard Edition, which began shipping on April 1, 2002, is a suite of more than 900 Java-based GIS and mapping developer components that can be used to build custom, cross-platform GIS applications or applets. Because it is pure Java, MapObjects–Java Standard Edition can be used with Linux, Windows, and a variety of UNIX operating systems.
ArcExplorer 4–Java Edition is the newest version of ESRI’s free GIS data viewer. Because it is built with Java, ArcExplorer 4 allows users to enjoy cross-platform support including compatibility with Linux, Windows, and a number of UNIX operating systems. ArcExplorer 4 can be downloaded free of charge from www.esri.com/arcexplorer.
For more than 30 years, ESRI has been the leading developer of GIS software with more than 300,000 clients worldwide. ESRI also provides consulting, implementation, and technical support services. In addition to its headquarters in California, ESRI has regional offices throughout the United States, international distributors in more than 90 countries, and more than 1,400 business partners. ESRI’s goal is to provide users with comprehensive tools to help them quickly and efficiently manage and use geographic information to make a real difference in the world around them. ESRI can be found on the Web at www.esri.com.
ESRI, the ESRI globe logo, GIS by ESRI, ArcIMS, ArcSDE, MapObjects, ArcExplorer, www.esri.com, and @esri.com are trademarks, registered trademarks, or service marks of ESRI in the United States, the European Community, or certain other jurisdictions. Other companies and products mentioned herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective trademark owners.
Category:
If you think the argument over Linux on mainframes has cooled, think again. This week, Alexander Tormasov, the chief scientist at Linux virtualization company SWsoft, has crafted a response to Sun Microsystems chief competitive officer Shahin Khan’s response to Tormasov’s first letter that responded to Khan’s “Linux on the Mainframe — Not a Good Idea.” Tormasov’s new letter questions Sun’s business model, and suggests that’s why Khan is working so hard to discredit Linux on mainframes.
Okay, for everyone who’s confused, let’s try this again, working forward instead of backward:
In addition, a couple of tech analyst companies are now jumping into the fight. A week ago, ZDNet published an article featuring the conflicting views of Giga and META. “The META report says that mainframe configurations of Linux will fall out of favor as soon as 2005, by which time Unix and Intel-based Windows and Linux solutions will have enough mainframe-like features without the mainframe-like costs to make those options the better choice.”
Back to the newest Tormasov letter: The associate professor at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology lists a number of technical points where he sees Khan’s argument failing. Tormasov takes issue with Khan’s assertion that “mainframe systems still only go up to 16 CPUs, when Sun made 64-way systems five years ago and has 106-way single-cabinet systems today.”
Tormasov writes: “The ‘Amdahl law’ states that any workflow can be broken into parallelalizeable and serial (non parallelalizeable) parts. This shows that CPU number is not as important as how efficiently the server is used.”
If all that stuff is just a bit too technical for your taste, Tormasov also questions whether Khan’s objections to Linux on the mainframe are because of Sun’s own “weak” market position. “If someone like Sun says this is technically wrong, it just means that Sun is afraid of such things, because their own efforts in the area may have some problems,” he says.
From the Tormasov letter: “For years, Sun was content to dominate the market for general purpose open systems for mid-to-large enterprises. Unfortunately for Sun, Linux emerged as a formidable opponent. Linux on Intel servers are now winning in the mid-enterprise market for general purpose ‘Open Systems.’ Mainframes have long dominated the enterprise market and Linux on the mainframe suddenly turned the previously closed mainframe into the perfect ‘Open System’ for large enterprises. Customers wanting immediate access to Linux on enterprise hardware did not have to wait the three years technologists predicted it would take Intel-based servers to catch up to the mainframes high availability features. These large enterprise customers rapidly rushed to embrace Linux on the mainframe.”
He continues: “Sun’s position will continue to worsen as multi-processor Intel servers improve and new dynamic partitioning technologies like carrier-grade Virtuozzo for Linux on Intel enable Linux to beat Sparc/Solaris in both the mid enterprise and large enterprise markets. Due to its open nature, Linux already dominates in the hosting market and with rock-solid service provider solutions like HSPcomplete for Linux that enable much better cost management and hundreds of CPUs than a comparable Solaris solution … “
If all this sounds a bit self-serving (Virtuozzo and HSPcomplete are SWsoft products, after all), Tormasov and SWsoft’s PR rep admit that this pissing match with Sun doesn’t hurt their company’s profile in the Linux community and with its enterprise customers, just as it doesn’t hurt Sun among customers interested in its non-Linux enterprise products.
But Tormasov says he and SWsoft, as members of the Linux community, also have an interest in seeing Linux succeed on the whole. “We’re alerting our customers to the fact that Linux is now a viable business tool across the board, in every aspect of the data center,” says Alex Plant, SWsoft’s PR person.
Plant says SWsoft doesn’t feel like it’s carrying the torch for IBM on this issue. The latest Tormasov letter has been informally endorsed by IBM, but Plant says the inspiration for the letters has come from individual developers inside the company who’ve been offended by Sun’s position.
Asked how long this debate has legs, Tormasov chuckles and says that depends on Sun. Adds Plant: “It seems that it’s maintained a certain level of interest around this process. When that’s going to subside, I don’t know, but it doesn’t seems that all this has derived from Sun or us, but from a communal perspective. People are talking about it … and that to me is the real life of this debate.”
Any bets on how long it’ll take for Khan to respond, or when this debate will end?
Category:
365 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10016, near 34th Street
on Friday May 24th from 10 AM till 4 PM.
We will be demonstrating cost savings and secure small business solutions
all through the day with emphasis on what local vendors and Free Software
people can do for you. If you want to volunteer to give a demonstration,
even at this late date, contact Evan Inker at hangout@nylxs.com.
Everyone is welcome!
We encourage copying and distribution of our flyer
http://home.earthlink.net/~scoffier/demo_new.pdf
http://home.earthlink.net/~scoffier/demo_new.ps
as long as the copies are exact copies, without emendation, addition, or
subtraction. We also encourage redistribution of this notice, under the same condition
that all copies be exact.
– Mail/Web/File Servers
– Wireless LANs
– Bayonne (Computer Telephony)
– OpenOffice.org & Evolution
– Samba
– VPN and Firewall Services
– SQL Database Management
– Audio Broadcasting Tools
– X Terminal Services
– The Gimp and Graphics Manipulation
– Accounting Software
– Project Management Software
Speaking Schedule
10:00 AM – 10:30 AM
Ruben I. Safir
Opening Remarks, GNU/Linux and the Small Business
10:40 AM – 11:10 AM
Jonathan Jacobs
X Terminal Services, cross-platform interoperability, the GNU/Linux Desktop
11:30 PM – 12:00 Noon
Phil Glaser
phpGroupWare
12:30 PM – 1:00 PM
Ruben Safir
SQL Database Management, Overview of GNU/Linux Mail/Web/File Servers
1:30 PM – 2:00 PM
Marco Scoffier
Graphics and Imaging Software
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM
David Sugar
Bayonne, Internet Telephony
3:30 PM – 4:00 PM
Marco Scoffier and Brett Wynkoop
Internet Audio Broadcasting Server
Category:
“Maintaining leadership in a competitive environment requires us to have
flexible technical solutions, and to build a customer facing platform that
can be easily integrated with our future and existing systems,” said Bill
Thompson, Director of Information Technology for Sherwin-Williams’ Paint
Stores Group. “The solution we’ve developed with IBM will help us do that.”
The company worked with a Linux services team from IBM Global Services to
design and integrate an in-store network that will consist of 9700 IBM
NetVista M41 small desktop personal computers for all 2500-plus stores, all
running Linux. In addition, all peripherals such as printers, scanners,
cash drawers and switches will be Linux compatible, offering a flexible,
open architecture that is easily adaptable with inventory and sales
applications running on the Linux platform at workstations throughout the
Sherwin-Williams chain. One desktop PC will serve as an in-store server and
another as a manager’s workstation, improving customer service by enabling
accessibility to both servers and their respective applications from any
workstation in the store.
Sherwin-Williams’ paint tinting and color matching applications will also
be tied into the network, enabling the formulas for custom paint blends to
be filed and kept securely for the customer’s next project. The
Sherwin-Williams ‘ Point of Sale and inventory applications will run in the
Linux environment. Sherwin-Williams will be using IBM E74 color monitors, a
17-inch CRT monitor ideally suited for accurate display of colors and
information.
Pilot installations have already taken place in stores in the Cleveland
area. Main deployment will begin in July and completed by second quarter
2003. The Sherwin-Williams project team designed, engineered, and developed
the overall solution. IBM Global Services will continue to provide Linux
consulting, integration, project management, installation and OEM
procurement.
“Linux is truly a business-friendly operating system that
simplifies the technical infrastructure,” said Patricia Gibbs, IBM vice
president, Linux Services. “It can also seamlessly integrate and thus
enhance the quality of service and relationships with all of a company’s
constituencies — its customers, employees, vendors and suppliers.
Sherwin-Williams understands this, and is installing Linux-based technology
in a highly visible, mission-critical area because it provides open-ended
flexibility for whatever the company wants to do next.”
About Sherwin-Williams
The Sherwin-Williams Company, established in Cleveland in 1866, is a $5
billion manufacturer, distributor and retailer of paint, coatings and
related products. It is the largest paint company in the United States and
one of the largest in the world. Well known brands include
Sherwin-Williams®, Dutch Boy®, Pratt & Lambert®, Martin-Senour®,
Thompson’s®, Minwax® and Krylon®. The Company has over 25,500 employees and
operates more than 2,500 paint stores and 52 manufacturing plants
worldwide. For more information, go to www.sherwin.com.
About IBM Global Services
IBM Global Services is the world’s largest information technology services
provider, with approximately 150,000 professionals serving customers in 160
countries and annual revenue of more than $35 billion (2001). IBM Global
Services integrates IBM’s broad range of capabilities — services,
hardware, software and research — to help companies of all sizes realize
the full value of information technology. For more information, visit:
www.ibm.com/services
Category: