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Apache Software Foundation reaches agreement with Sun Microsystems

bryam writes “The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) today announced that it has reached an agreement with Sun Microsystems and members of the Java Community Process (JCP) to secure the basic right to implement Java specifications in open source. This is the result of extended dialog over the past year. Sun has pledged to use licenses that enable open source independent implementations for all its Java specifications and Test Compatibility Kits. Sun has pledged this for all future Sun-led Java specifications as well as key specifications already released.

The story is at The Jakarta Site.”

Does Open Source software really work?

NewsFactor Network writes “In the ongoing debate between open source advocates and proprietary software makers and users, it turns out that — to at least some extent — both sides are right: Open source does work, but only in some cases. With respect to enterprise computing, analysts agree that for smaller projects that do not involve mission-critical elements, there is room for open source software, such as Linux.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Mandrake Linux 8.2 released for downloading

Mandrake 8.2 is out! Download links and release info on MozillaQuest Magazine (MozillaQuest.com), which reports: “Mandrake Linux 8.2 includes the Linux 2.4.18 kernel. You . . . can download it from the Mandrake FTP site . . . now. Boxed product should be available by the end of April, 2002.” . . . “[It] includes both the GNOME 1.4.1 and KDE . . . 2.2.2 windows-like desktops . . . Ximian’s Evolution 1.02 — a desktop, Outlook-like, e-mail client and personal information manager. Sun’s new StarOffice 6.0 desktop office productivity suite is included with the Mandrake 8.2 ProSuite and PowerPack Editions. Emphasis on desktop here, folks. Looks as though the Linux desktop is live and well in Mandrake Linux 8.2.” . . . “The new KDE 2.2.2 desktop features an improved Konqueror browser and file manager, an improved KOffice 1.1.1 office suite, and an improved print system. And for you Mozilla fans, Mandrake Linux 8.2 ships with Mozilla 0.9.8.” . . . Check this MozillaQuest.com story for details & download links.

Category:

  • Linux

Robin “Roblimo” Miller to speak at SWFLUG

Anonymous Reader writes, “Robin “Roblimo” Miller (editor in chief of OSDN, including Linux.com and NewsForge.com) will be speaking at the SWFLUG meeting on April
13th. The meeting starts at 12:00 noon. More info can be found on their
website http://swflug.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=163.”

Category:

  • Linux

Understanding the X Window clipboard

Author: Benjamin D. Thomas

Chris Jones writes “Many people get confused by having the middle mouse button acting as a paste. It is very useful, but there also seems to be some confusion about the Cut/Copy/Paste items in applications and why the menus don’t seem to work very well with that middle mouse button paste.

The key to understanding this is that there are two clipboards. The first clipboard is anything that is selected, e.g. selecting some text in a web browser. The contents of that clipboard are retrieved using the middle mouse button.

Choosing Cut or Copy from an application menu places whatever item was selected into the secondary clipboard, which can be retrieved using the corresponding Paste item on the destination application.

The two clipboards do not interact.

It’s not exactly intuitive, but it is useful!”

Understanding the X Window clipboard

Author: Benjamin D. Thomas

Chris Jones writes “Many people get confused by having the middle mouse button acting as a paste. It is very useful, but there also seems to be some confusion about the Cut/Copy/Paste items in applications and why the menus don’t seem to work very well with that middle mouse button paste.

The key to understanding this is that there are two clipboards. The first clipboard is anything that is selected, e.g. selecting some text in a web browser. The contents of that clipboard are retrieved using the middle mouse button.

Choosing Cut or Copy from an application menu places whatever item was selected into the secondary clipboard, which can be retrieved using the corresponding Paste item on the destination application.

The two clipboards do not interact.

It’s not exactly intuitive, but it is useful!”

Shawn Gordon: We won’t use the GPL for anything anymore

Anonymous Reader tells us this guest column on Linuxandmain.com from theKompany’s Shawn Gordon: “Since I started theKompany in August of ’99, we’ve had a growing presense and influence on a variety of things Linux. Being the first real company that was focused on KDE brought with it joys and frustrations and now over 2 years later, iIve experienced a large amount of both …

So what has happened in that time? Well, we’ve come out with a lot of software, and sold a lot of units. We’ve got supporters so ardent they would take a bullet for us, and detractors so vocal that it makes me want to give it up at times. The main source of frustration for me has typically centered on the GPL license and the common misunderstanding of it by the general masses in the Open Source world. Sure, the basic premise is clear, but it becomes a bit murkier the more detail you have to spend on it.”

Category:

  • Linux

IBM to target $4.5B telecom industry with hardened Linux servers

Anonymous Reader writes, “IBM is once again going after Sun Microsystems’ customer base, and this time it is to take a bigger chunk of the $4.5 billion telecommunications space, from which Sun receives 17 percent of its total revenue. IBM will today unveil a “hardened” Intel-based server running Linux that the company claims offers 58 percent better performance than a comparable Sun Microsystems UNIX server, and at substantially less cost. More details at LinuxDevices.com

AtheOS fork brings BeOS on top of Linux

Eugenia writes, “Yup, Bill Hayden has forked AtheOS by using its app_server and Interface Kit (along with some other of its kits, like the filesystem layer) and ported it on top of the 2.4.x Linux kernel, without the need for X11. He already has the graphical environment working, and he also has some BeOS apps recompiled and working under Linux. Why BeOS applications? Because that was the reason of the fork. Exactly because AtheOS and BeOS have similar technical principles (highly multithreaded, truly preemptive, similar C++ API etc), by modifying AtheOS’s API to match BeOS, Bill is trying to resurrect the BeOS. By doing so this way, Bill is already way ahead from the other two efforts to ressurect BeOS, OpenBeOS (dependant on the ‘clean’ NewOS kernel) and BlueOS (which depends on Linux and X11).”

Category:

  • Linux

Red Hat exec tussles in court over Microsoft Office for Linux


By John Lettice
of The Register

Red Hat CTO Michael Tiemann said Monday that the availability of Microsoft Office and Internet Explorer would “open the door to a new range of potential customers” for Red Hat. Which we take as meaning that, if the States’ version of the Microsoft antitrust remedies were accepted, Red Hat would be one of the companies bidding for an Office licence. Tiemann had earlier said he though Red Hat would be “fairly interested” in bidding.

Tiemann, of course, may not entirely know what he’s talking about, if the trial transcript is accurate. Asked whether Red Hat had developed Linux from scratch, he apparently answers no, “that was Lina Torbaugh.” There you go — the Mortimer Mouse of Open Source, Linus’ evil twin Lina. This is almost as good as the one we found years ago, where Ray White of Wyse apparently claimed: “The future is always two ennunecs.” But we mustn’t make fun of the hard-pressed transcribers.

More seriously, Tiemann came under heavy fire from the Microsoft camp over Red Hat’s application development, or lack of it, culminating in the question: “Do you think that these examples suggest that one key to being a successful operating system platform vendor is developing applications that run on your own operating system?” He’d just been taken through a long litany of companies (Apple, Sun, IBM, about as long as it gets these days) who were OS vendors who also developed apps, and Microsoft attorney Stephanie Wheeler had taken some pains to establish a paucity of application development round at Red Hat.

Tiemann finally said that Red Hat’s employees involved in porting apps to the Red Hat platform was more than 10 and less than 50, and conceded that it was “most likely” many less than 50. There was also a clear difference between what he was talking about and what the questioner wanted to talk about — the app porting capabilities are virtually entirely “Red Hat-izing” existing Open Source apps, and the company neither develops applications from scratch nor ports third-party proprietary applications.

In the latter case it obviously wouldn’t, of course, but beneath the clear attempt by the defence to tar Red Hat as to all intents and purposes a distributor which puts minimal resource into development, there lurk a couple of serious points. For starters it is largely a distributor which puts minimal resources into development, at least by Microsoft’s standards. Granted, the Open Source model means that development is broadly spread, so you’re maybe comparing apples and pears when scrutinising Red Hat’s “less than 50,” but it’s possibly reasonable to observe that commercial Linux distributions in general could use a tad more polish and individualisation if they’re to play against Microsoft in business.

And if Red Hat did find itself in the position of licensing Office, what resources would it have to do anything about it? If Office were Open Sourced by the courts, then it could go into the standard development mill, but a licensee would find itself with one of those third party proprietary apps Red Hat doesn’t do to deal with.

Next, the matter of R&D spend came. Red Hat, it was pointed out, spent $18.8 million on R&D in fiscal 2001, and $12.1 million in 2000. Apple spent $430 million in 2001, Sun over $2 billion, and Microsoft $4.3 billion. You can see where this is driving, can’t you?

“Q. But as far as you know, Red Hat hasn’t devoted any effort to try and develop from scratch an Office productivity suite to run on Red Hat Linux; correct?

A. That is correct.

Q. And Red Hat has never spent any money trying to develop its own Office productivity applications suite to run on Red Hat Linux as far as you know?

A. That is correct. The money that we spend on that task is related to ISV relationships, development tools that we provide to ISVs and other efforts we make so third parties may do that job for their benefit and ours.

Q. Red Hat has never ported any office productivity applications from one platform to the Red Hat Linux platform; correct?

A. I believe it’s likely possible that some of our people have provided assistance to the Open Office project, which is an office productivity suite which can run on Red Hat Linux.

Q. Red Hat has never tried to reverse engineer Microsoft Office file formats, has it?

A. Some employees who work on things, such as ABI Word, have likely possibly looked at and attempted to reverse engineer aspects of the Microsoft Word format, for example.

Q. Likely possibly, Mr. Tiemann?

A. Uh-huh.

Q. You don’t know that for a fact, do you?

A. I don’t know.

Q. Red Hat includes in this box of Red Hat Linux 7.2 the StarOffice 5.2 Office Productivity Suite; correct?

A. That is correct.

Q. And StarOffice 5.2 is a Sun Microsystems’ product, isn’t it?

A. That is correct.”

Moving swiftly on to establishing that Tiemann didn’t know for sure whether Red Hat would bid for Office, or how much it would be prepared to pay, the defence had a pretty good run on this one.


All Content copyright 2002 The Register