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- Linux
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–jeremy
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So where is Caldera going with its older operating systems? Linux may be all fine and
dandy, but the fate of OpenServer is what the people at the DTR Business Systems reseller show in Las Vegas last week wanted to know, and Caldera’s CEO Ransom Love was there to give them answers.
First and foremost, Caldera will not put the older Unix OpenServer out to pasture after years of neglect from former owner SCO. In the past,
SCO tried to move OpenServer users and resellers to UnixWare –now OpenUnix — but they simply wouldn’t budge. Why not? Because, as Rene Beltran, vice president of sales for DTR, says: “OpenServer already does everything the customers want.” DTR, a value-added reseller that works with resellers, integrators and customers,
still sells 20 times the copies of the older OpenServer operating system as OpenUnix copies, he says.
It’s not just DTR. According to Dan Kusnetzky, IDC’s vice president for system software research, OpenServer has a much larger market share than the often touted, but it would seem seldom deployed, OpenUnix.
Caldera will continue updating OpenServer with driver updates and a refresh of the operating system, in the third quarter of 2002, that will bring OpenServer up to version 5.0.7.
At about the same time, to make OpenUnix more attractive, Caldera will be adding an
OpenServer Kernel Personality to OpenUnix. This will enable users to run OpenServer programs on OpenUnix come the day that they need OpenUnix’s much more powerful database infrastructure and or need up to eight-way processing power. Caldera hopes that OpenServer users who want server-consolidation will then use this as an upgrade path.
Even after this, however, Caldera doesn’t plan on giving OpenServer a gold watch on the way out the door. In 2003, if there continues to be a demand for it, Caldera will bring a Linux Kernel Personality to OpenServer. With the LKP, users will be able to run Linux programs on OpenServer.
Caldera will also continue to upgrade its Linux operating system, with
OpenLinux 3.1.2 due to come out in the third quarter.
Looking ahead, Love says on all three operating systems, there will be more frequent feature patches rather than frequent periodical major releases. Love added, “Users and resellers don’t want major releases, because installing them is too expensive, and they cause work disturbances.”
Caldera will also strive to make “it easier to switch between the operating systems, thus
enabling administrators to mix and match. This will also make it easier to migrate between environments and consolidate servers.”
How can Caldera afford to support three operating systems? Love explained that because
OpenServer and OpenUnix are already stable, they don’t require a tremendous amount of
development work. Instead, most of the development dollars are focused on Linux.
Eventually, though, Caldera thinks Linux will win out. OpenLinux alone is making the jump to the IA-64 architecture.
But, as Love says, while it’s possible that “Linux may replace Unix, we see Unix and Linux as compatible. We don’t see, as Red Hat does, one replacing the other.”
Love also made it clear that Caldera will not be following Red Hat to the enterprise space. Instead, Caldera will
concentrate on selling to small- to medium-sized businesses and branch offices through its reseller channel. As Love says, “The solution provider is our customer, not the end user.”
He said open source definitely takes people to run it, but corporations can shift and train staff on a less expensive system, rather than lay them off. “And that’s a much more attractive resolution.”
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As Free Software, anyone is free to use, study, learn from and modify GNU Bayonne. GNU Bayonne can be and has been packaged for commercial use by numerous vendors, both for turnkey products and in creation of custom tailored solutions. Software freedom enables both the wide commercial use of GNU Bayonne and promotes the development of tailored solutions in ways proprietary solutions cannot.
With this release we have brought GNU Bayonne up to date with the latest developments in the GNU project. This release may be built with the newer GCC 3.x compiler and supports the recently introduced GNU Common C++ “2” class foundation libraries. This release has been built and tested under some of the most current GNU/Linux distributions and the most recent Linux kernel releases.
GNU Bayonne “1” is just the start of how we envision Free Software enabling new and original development in telecommunications. Already, we expect to introduce GNU Bayonne “2” by later this winter as an advanced platform offering original concepts in telephony integrated web services for current and next generation telephone networks. Within GNUCOMM, we are developing softswitches, softphones, and other technologies that will help drive real innovation in telecommunication in a manner that can be commercially exploited using Free Software licensed under the GPL. As part of GNU Enterprise, we continue to evolve telecommunications as an integral component of enterprise software. GNU Bayonne will also evolve to support carrier grade Linux kernel enhancements and to provide an environment for developing high availability carrier class applications.
With this release the original GNU Bayonne core development team has been dissolved, and a new developer committee will be appointed under GNUCOMM and GNU Enterprise leadership to continue GNU Bayonne development. If you wish to contribute to GNU Bayonne development, you can join one of the project mailing lists. We have also established a GNU Bayonne grant program thru the FSF for those that wish to contribute monetarily.
Where to get GNU Bayonne:
GNU Bayonne and all related non-hardware specific software needed for building and running it may be found at the GNU ftp site (http://www.gnu.org/gnu). Individual drivers and telephony hardware related libraries are provided directly from the respective vendors. All information about GNU Bayonne may be found at http://www.gnu.org/software/bayonne.
About the Free Software Foundation:
The Free Software Foundation, founded in 1985, is dedicated to promoting computer users’ right to use, study, copy, modify, and redistribute computer programs. The FSF promotes the development and use of free (as in freedom) software—particularly the GNU operating system (used widely today in its GNU/Linux variant)— and free documentation. The FSF also helps to spread awareness of the ethical and political issues of freedom in the use of software. Their web site, located at http://www.gnu.org, is an important source of information about GNU/Linux. They are headquartered in Boston, MA, USA
About GNUCOMM, the GNU Telephony Project:
GNUCOMM, a subsystem of GNU, provides free software solutions to common telecommunications problems. GNUCOMM will free users of voicemail, PBX, and call-center applications from reliance on the proprietary software that currently dominates such telephony equipment. The system aims to be scalable and configurable enough to allow end-users to develop their own telecommunications systems with little or no special knowledge of GNUCOMM’s internals. GNUCOMM will support both VoIP and PSTN interfaces, as well as interfaces to existing phone systems. GNUCOMM will scale from individual user installations to carrier-class sites. The website of GNUCOMM is located at http://www.gnu.org/software/gnucomm/gnucomm.html.
About GNU Enterprise:
GNUe aims to provide a suite of tools and applications for solving the specific needs of the enterprise. GNUe will handle the needs of any size business, including applications for human resources, accounting, customer relationship management, project management, supply chain and e-commerce. GNUe is a free software project developed by volunteer software developers worldwide. The website of GNU Enterprise is http://www.gnu.org/projects/gnue/.
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Co-organizer Andrew J. Hutton gives two good reasons for the existence of the upcoming Ottawa Linux Symposium: It’s not the LinuxWorld Conference and Expo, and it’s not in the United States.
Hutton, CEO of contract Linux kernel developer Steamballoon Inc., says “several dozen” non-American attendees of OLS have demanded that connecting flights don’t land in the United States on the way to Canada, and some have even asked that they don’t fly over the United States, just in case they might have to make an unscheduled landing there.
Last July, Linux kernel hacker Alan Cox called for a boycott of U.S. technology conferences because of the attempt to prosecute Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov for alleged violations of the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Charges against Sklyarov [but not his company] were eventually dropped, but Hutton says non-American programmers are still concerned about U.S. legal issues, even during a change of planes.
“Anyone who doesn’t wish to be under U.S. jurisdiction can come [to OLS], which is a very serious issue for a lot of people,” he says.
Another advantage of OLS: it’s less of a trade show than LinuxWorld, Hutton says, and more of a gathering of Linux developers. Attendance is limited to 500 people, and if you’re interested in attending, it’s time to start thinking about making plans for the fourth annual OLS, June 26 to 29 in Ottawa, Ontario. About 40% of the slots are already filled, and May 1 is the deadline for getting the lowest registration price.
“LinuxWorld was pure marketing driven, and it had zero content for the people actually doing the work,” Hutton says. “We needed to do something to get them together instead of scaring them away of the idea of any kind of public event. That’s the goal — to get the community together so they don’t try to kill each other by email.”
The limited attendance encourages speakers and attendees to mingle, Hutton says. “It’s really a peer-type conference, not speaking to the masses.”
This year, the symposium happens right after a Linux Kernel Summit [co-sponsored by NewsForge/Linux.com corporate parent OSDN] at the same Ottawa venue June 24 and 25. “It’s going to make sure that everybody significant to Linux is there, not just 90% of them,” Hutton says.
Also worth noting is the number of tutorials and presentations, up from about 36 in 2001 to 61 this year. That’s “due to excessive good content being submitted,” Hutton says.
“We expect the quality of the audience to go up again, which if you saw the people who were there last year, it’s pretty impressive,” he adds. “The main obstacle to getting more people out is travel budgets. We’re not Silicon Valley, so all sorts of people who would normally take off from work and go have to pay to get here.”
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