Home Blog Page 8576

Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting 26th February 2002

Author: JT Smith

Gwynne: “Late. Mea culpa.”

Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting 26th February 2002
          =====================================================

Present:

        Jonathan Blandford
        Jim Gettys
        Jody Goldberg
        Telsa Gwynne (minutes)
        James Henstridge (:35)
        Miguel de Icaza (:35)
        George Lebl
        Tim Ney
        Havoc Pennington (chair)

Regrets:
        Daniel Veillard 

Missing:
        Nat Friedman
        Federico Mena Quintero



Actions done:
=============

  ACTION: Havoc draft the agenda of the Advisory Board meeting
        => Done. See discussion section below. 

Actions
=======

  ACTION: Tim, John and Havoc to get a draft statement on the relation
          with the free software foundation and license policy.
        => Still pending.

  ACTION: Jim to restart the font discussions with various parties
        => Jim had a meeting last week with various people and 
        will continue to work on this. 

  ACTION: Nat and Jonathan talk to gnome-sysadmin about adding ssh
          tunneling for GNOME CVS access
        => This has been postponed until after Gnome 2.

  ACTION: Nat to talk to Havoc to get a discussion about rules
          w.r.t. backward compatibility rules in the 2.x time.
        => Nat has been on holiday; got back yesterday. 

  ACTION: Tim and Miguel check for logistic and policy of funding
          people travels and accomodations.
        => Tim has been following this up. We have several individual
        nominations/requests for funding, but need the overall
picture.
        
  ACTION: Jody and Leslie to find possble presentators from KDE,
          StarOffice and CUPS.
        => Still pending

New Actions:
============

  ACTION: Havoc to bounce draft by-laws to foundation-list so everyone
can
          see them.

Discussion:
===========


On the Advisory Board meeting agenda: the general theme is sharing
information. Current proposal:

        o Presentation on Gnome 2.0 to open meeting.
        o Looking at current and future userbase: will invite members
        to make presentations on that, as we expect several Advisory 
        Board members to have information on that.
        o Find out what features the Advisory Board members would
        like to see in Gnome.
        o Discussion of future releases: what is contained in 
        'platform', 'apps', 'fifth toe' (that name makes sense to
        people who know the Gnome foot has four toes but not to 
        anyone else..) 
        o What is Gnome currently lacking? (This might be part of
        the initial 2.0 presentation.)


Nat wanted to discuss ABIs: guarantees and plans. He wasn't here,
so postponed.

Tim Ney forwarded the proposed by-laws for the legal entity that
is the Gnome Foundation. They're long and legalistic and arrived
yesterday, so not everyone has read them yet. It will take a
foundation board meeting to adopt them, so we all need to read
them and agree (or disagree..). Havoc will send them to
foundation-list too so everyone has a chance to see them and 
comment. We hope to adopt them (or to say why not) at the next 
meeting. This is in two weeks' time so comments should come 
before then.

Telsa

Category:

  • Open Source

Abusing the GPL?

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot is discussing abuse (but not violation?) of the GPL by obfuscation; apparently there’s a company out there ready to go with just such a plan.

Category:

  • Open Source

SnapGear announces powerful new Linux-powered VPN

Author: JT Smith

Miles Gillham writes: “SnapGear today announced a radically new VPN Router appliance for global markets with integrated V.90 modem for automatic failover for ADSL and Cable-connected customers. Known as the SnapGear PRO+ the unit will be shipping as early as April and expected to retail for US$849.

Targeted directly at business and enterprise customers the new router presents the ability to switch to a conventional modem connection in the event of an ADSL or Cable outage.

Miles Gillham, VP Marketing, said: “This product is a big step forward for broadband users who require a higher level of fault tolerance. Narrowband fallback means no downtime if a carrier experiences ADSL or Cable outages.”

Many corporations and government departments are increasingly aware of not only the advantages of being Internet-connected but also the risks. SnapGear offers a complete solution – firewall protection, fully-fledged routing, VPN connectivity between remote offices/departments, secure remote worker connectivity, and anti-intrusion defenses coupled with logging facilities to integrate into any network. The SnapGear solution is considered attractive by SnapGear customers as providing an enterprise-ready solution at a fraction of the cost of other vendor’s products.

The SnapGear PRO+ boasts an impressive 3DES capacity of 35Mbps and specific optimisation for the PPPoE protocol which is used by ADSL. Developed with European and American networks in mind the unit is capable of supporting network throughput of up to 18Mbps. Two 10/100 Ethernet interfaces are standard for WAN and LAN traffic in addition to the modem. The SnapGear PRO+ has in-built PPTP client and server which means that Windows users are able to remotely connect to a SnapGear without the additional expense of third-party clients. A key advantage of the SnapGear family of products is allowing unlimited users as other vendors charge significantly more for additional user licenses. Other benefits of the SnapGear PRO+ include RADIUS/TACACS+ authentication and dynamic DNS support.

The broadband to narrowband fail-over facility will be offered as a firmware upgrade to current owners of SnapGear VPN Routers. All SnapGear VPN Routers have serial ports ready for connection to external modems.

Pricing and Availability

Pricing for SnapGear products begins at US$249 for the SnapGear LITE, US$299 for the SnapGear LITE+, US$399 for the SnapGear SOHO+, US$549 for the SnapGear PRO, and US$849 for the SnapGear PRO+ (shipping April 2002). SnapGear appliances are available from an international channel network. Resellers and Systems Integrators are invited to contact SnapGear for further information on channel programmes.

About SnapGear, Inc.
SnapGear manufactures the popular SnapGear VPN Routers along with SecureEdge custom design solutions and has provided turnkey development, design, and manufacturing, fulfillment services for major telecommunications companies and silicon manufacturers. For more information on SnapGear please visit http://www.snapgear.com. For more information on SecureEdge reference designs, development platforms and services please visit http://www.secureedge.net

SnapGear and SecureEdge are registered trademarks of SnapGear Inc. Linux is a registered trademark owned by Linus Torvalds. All other products, services, companies and publications are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

###

Press only, contact:
SnapGear
Miles Gillham
E-mail: press@snapgear.com

Sputnik: Linuxcare founders launch Open Source wireless public network

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

The three co-founders of the Linux services company Linuxcare are on another Open Source adventure, this one an attempt to spread the use of public wireless networks, while at the same time providing a more secure wireless product for large companies.

David L. Sifry, Arthur Tyde and David LaDuke launched wireless networking company Sputnik in April 2001, but only last month did they launch a public Web site to reveal their plans. In an effort to “under-promise and over-deliver,” as Sifry calls it, the trio have thus far avoided marketing and advertising their product, an Open Source 802.11b wireless gateway designed to allow wireless access providers to authenticate users while sharing their bandwidth.

The three wanted to have a workable project before the hype started, says Sifry, and Sputnik.com was launched with a working download version of the Open Sourced 1.0 Sputnik Gateway Software, which turns a computer into an 802.11b access point. “Our goal here is, let’s make sure the software is up and running, let’s make sure it’s bug-free, let’s get a group of developers who are really interested, and let’s build something really cool,” Sifry says. “At that point, things start taking care of themselves. If we start hyping this thing before it’s real, we don’t want to deal with the backlash of that.”

Download the software to a spare machine or pop in a CD bought from Sputnik, and you have a working 802.11b wireless network, providing you have the needed wireless cards. The Sputnik software is run directly from the CD — no hard drive needed, and no need to mess with MAC addresses, or “goofy” Web interfaces to add users. “We wanted radical ease of use,” Tyde says. “We wanted to make this easier to use than the Apple Airport. That’s one of the reasons we took so long.”

The cat’s quickly coming out of the bag, with the New York Times mentioning Sputnik in an article Monday, and Slashdot linking to the article and pointing out Sputnik and competitor Boingo Tuesday.

Sputnik’s concept of a public wireless network, part of the company’s business plan, is similar to the Internet itself. The company is recruiting people or companies that have always-on Internet connections, such as DSL or T-1 lines, to become Sputnik affiliates. Affiliates offer other Sputnik users a piece of their bandwidth in exchange for free use of other affiliates’ wireless bandwidth when they’re roaming. In addition, affiliates get a cut of the profits that non-affiliate, regular users will eventually pay to log on to the Sputnik network. The Sputnik code is released under the GNU GPL, but the company’s products use code released under other Open Source licenses, including Apache.

Since the company’s non-marketed public launch February 1, more than 100 affiliates and more than 400 users have already signed up, Sifry says. Los Angeles, New York City, and the San Francisco area each have multiple Sputnik access points. When users walk into a Sputnik coverage area, they are able to boot their laptop — or in a couple of years their 802.11b-enabled cell phone — and have the device automatically recognize that a Sputnik network is available. The user then logs in and is surfing on the laptop, or in the case of an 802.11b cell phone, is talking using voice over IP.

Sifry says with his own San Francisco set-up, he can get the wireless signal up to four and a half blocks from his Sputnik machine sitting in a window, as long as he has a direct line of sight to the device.

The advantage of Sputnik over other wireless networking packages, Sifry and Tyde, say, is ease of use, firewalled security and that possibly of getting paid for offering your bandwidth to other users.

But public networks are just one part of Sputnik’s business plan, Tyde says. The company is offering the Sputnik Enterprise Gateway, which includes some proprietary software to help large companies put their wireless networks behind firewalls. The company network can be a Sputnik affiliate, allowing visitors access to the Internet and allowing company employees free access to other Sputnik networks, while at the same time keeping company information behind a firewall.

The problem with most wireless set-ups, Sifry says, is they are bridges, where information is indiscriminately sent and received. The Sputnik enterprise product acts like a router to limit intruders. Sifry says he knows people who are surfing free by tapping into their neighbor’s wireless network. Sputnik requires users to log in before using the system, so a wireless network provider knows who’s tapping its resources. The Sputnik enterprise product also has security mechanisms that allow companies to shut down unauthorized wireless networks employees may have set up on the sly.

Current 802.11b networks, which either feature security and little mobility or lots of mobility and little security, are rife for abusers. Sifry and Tyde note a “huge security problem waiting to happen,” where users looking for free wireless access drive around until they find a signal. “How would you like it if somebody parked in the parking lot of your building with a server in a van and ran a spam server or a game server or a porn server off your insecure wireless link?” Tyde says. “We call it drive-by spamming. You think it won’t happen, but somebody will do it.”

Right now, the small band of people working at Sputnik are looking to avoid the Linux hype of the late ’90s. They’re pitching their products to a few dozen companies and to a couple of West Coast cities. The hardware is so cheap these says, Sifry says, with network cards as low as $40 apiece and nothing but an old or stripped-down computer needed to run the access point software, that a tech-minded city could set up an extensive Sputnik network for a few thousand dollars.

Right now, the three founders aren’t actively seeking venture capital dollars, Tyde says. “Quite frankly, we’re not looking for the kind of money we’ve seen raised in the wireless space,” he says. “We’re not looking for a $15 million dollar hit. The best way to fund a company is through revenues. There’s a certain side of me that says, ‘Why take money?’ “

Next up is a developers’ site, scheduled for launch in a couple of weeks. Tyde sees all kinds of applications for wireless networks, from voice over IP to downloading movies to your laptop from a gas station’s Sputnik network while you’re gassing up the minivan.

“For the community side, it’s going to take time,” Tyde says. “It’s going to be one of those things where the code will slowly improve, hopefully we’ll get some developers and they’ll give us a hand. In terms of building a useful community networking tool, we’re there. We want to see it happen.”

IPv6: what’s the holdup?

Author: JT Smith

TechWeb sheds some light on why, ten years after it was proposed, IPv6 has still not been implemented. IPv6 is the next version of the Internet Protocol, intended to replace IPv4 which is currently the accepted standard. It is explained in more detail here [ipv6.org].

FTC gives green light to HP-Compaq acquisition

Author: JT Smith

From Network World Fusion: “Hewlett-Packard’s proposed acquisition of Compaq passed a regulatory hurdle Wednesday when the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) concluded its review of the deal.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Network Associates abandons search for PGP buyer

Author: JT Smith

From Network World Fusion: “Network Associates is no longer trying to find a buyer for its PGP desktop and wireless encryption products, after embarking on a drive to trim its product line in October.” Instead, PGP will no longer be actively developed and will continue to be maintained for one more year.

Category:

  • Linux

Linux start-up cuts 90 percent of staff

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC reports that Mission Critcal Linux has failed to find a buyer. The company, which hoped to provide a second, more mature generation of Linux companies, has been forced to lay off 90% of its workforce.

Category:

  • Linux

Can Linux push Microsoft to free Windows?

Author: JT Smith

NewsFactor Network writes “In its slow — some would say inexorable — march into the hearts and minds of computer users, the open source Linux operating system (OS) has made its way onto an estimated 18 million desktops around the world. The ever-increasing popularity of Linux, which is essentially free, prompts the question: Could Microsoft eventually be forced to release a free version of Windows in order to maintain its apparent stranglehold on the planet’s desktop operating systems?”

Category:

  • Linux

Why open source scares Microsoft

Author: JT Smith

NewsFactor Network writes “In his most recent comments, Microsoft’s Craig Mundie painted a fairly bleak picture of a world in which general public licenses exist. His argument was concise, if drastically flawed. Without commercial software, he said, companies would have to focus on service and support, which would result in lower R&D budgets. That, in turn, would lead to fewer developed projects, less taxes paid, and less money available to run universities and other government services.”

Category:

  • Open Source