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SSJ to begin shipping Linux-based accounting software

Author: JT Smith

AsiaBizTech: “SSJ KK and Miracle Linux Corp.
announced Feb. 5 that they would collaborate in the technology of Linux
software.

SSJ is a leading provider of accounting software packages for
middle-scale companies and Miracle Linux is an affiliated company of
Oracle Japan Co., Ltd.”

Sun joining the Open Source bandwagon? Really?

Author: JT Smith

By Jack Bryar
Has Sun Microsystems hitched a ride on the Linux bandwagon? According to a flurry of press announcements last week, it sure looks like it. However, there remain a lot of
business observers who are still trying to decide if the company really means
it. Others are still undecided if Sun and Linux are a good business
combination. What do you think?

In a series of announcements, press releases and calls to analysts
in the United States and Asia last week, Sun officials said the company was making a full-throated commitment to the Linux platform. At least that is what it sounded
like, at first. Sun President Ed Zander said the company would become
far more involved in the Open Source development community. Sun would be
shipping its own, Sun-centric Linux distro and port its Sun Open Network Environment
software to Linux. The company announced it would expand its array of
lower-end servers by extending its Cobalt platform and developing cheap
Linux-on-Intel based servers. It also announced that it would support
Linux on its StorEdge line of enterprise storage devices and get serious
about developing a Linux-oriented services business.

It sounded good. A number of analysts said that Sun was making an
overdue change in the right direction. They suggested that Sun’s embrace of
Linux, along side that of IBM and HP — and possibly AOL — was another sign that
the ABM Coalition (Anybody But Microsoft) was continuing to consolidate
around the Linux codebase as a common platform. Jay Stevens of Buckingham
Research upgraded the stock and predicted the stock price would return
to the $20 mark within a year. Merrill Lynch’s analysts were more
cautious, but they upgraded the stock as well.

None of these announcements did much to buoy the price of the company’s stock, which has been spiraling downward
for months as investors speculated about the impact of Open Source on
proprietary Unix vendors.

Many observers suggested that that there was less here than met the eye. Many elements of the Sun ONE software environment had been ported to Linux some time ago. The company recently announced that
iPlanet
would be ported to Linux.
. The company had all but committed to Gnome as the default desktop interface as
far back as August 2000
. Sun already contributes to Open Source
projects such as Mozilla, OpenOffice, Gnome and Apache. Further,
Sun’s newly announced Linux compatibility assurance tool, called
LinCAT, looked a lot like another toolset Sun had previously announced,
allegedly to help Linux developers port their apps to Solaris.

The problem for Sun is that many of its customers have been going in
the Linux direction, as the Open Source operating system has continued to eat away at the market share and profits of proprietary Unix developers. This is the primary reason
the company’s stock has gone into the tank over the last six months.

Does Sun really intend to migrate its business over to an Open
environment? And, if it does, could the company make any money at it? There’s a lot
of doubters out there.

One observer doubted Sun’s ability to fully embrace any platform it
could not control. Sun’s history with open platforms has been mixed
at best. Sun’s Java development program had allowed for user
participation, but ultimate control of the platform has been left in the firm control
of the company.

Analyst Bill Sharpe of ABN Amro was another doubter. He said that even
in the midst of his announcements about Linux, Ed Zander was still
throwing mixed signals about the company’s commitment to the Linux
platform.

Sharpe had a point. Many of Zander’s statements were contradictory, at
best. At one point during an analyst call, Zander insisted the company’s
support for Linux would not change its emphasis on Solaris. He maintained that
the company’s strategic direction was focused on migrating Linux users
to the “more robust” Solaris platform. At another point he maintained
that supporting Linux and Solaris didn’t mean the company was supporting
multiple platforms. Instead, he suggested that Linux and Solaris were basically
the same thing, kinda.

In fact, if you didn’t listen closely, you would have sworn Zander claimed Sun invented Linux. According to Zander, “Linux was created over time and was mirrored on Solaris; so you can go back and forth easily.” At one point he went so far as to insist
that Sun was supporting Linux to keep the Unix market from fragmenting.
He also suggested that Sun could “advance Linux” by “adding Java and
Solaris features.”

A moment later he insisted that no one cared about operating systems
in the low-end server market in any case.

That was an issue for a number of other observers. Sun’s announcement
that it was going to create Linux-based servers on an Intel platform
mystified one hardware analyst I know. He called after the conference to remind me of the troubles other Linux-based hardware vendors have had. “Quite a business plan these guys have got,” he said.

Other portfolio managers felt that by conceding that Linux was the wave
of the future, the company was effectively acknowledging that IBM
had grabbed the lead in the Unix server marketplace. They wondered how
Sun expected to develop a services business fast enough to offset the
falloff of its proprietary equipment business. One noted that “70% of IBM’s
gross margin comes from other-than-hardware while Sun’s business model
derives 70% of its gross margin from hardware” and almost none from
services.

Clearly, Sun faces a gauntlet of challenges as it moves more firmly
into the Linux marketplace. But the company seems to be committed, and
it doesn’t seem to have much of a choice.

Category:

  • Open Source

States seek ban on surprise Microsoft witnesses

Author: JT Smith

NewsFactor Network writes “Accusing Microsoft of trying to force a delay in its antitrust hearing, the nine holdout states that have sued the software maker on their own reportedly asked a federal judge Monday to ban more than a dozen surprise Microsoft witnesses. Angered by the 23 new witnesses that Microsoft introduced in its final witness list just before last Friday’s deadline, the suing states complained to U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly that the software giant’s intention is to slow down the hearing.”

Run streaming: Open Source netcasting

Author: JT Smith

LinuxJournal examines what it calls the “unreal world” of Open Source netcasting. “Last night I sat on the roof while wearing my winter headphones (the warm and beautiful Sony MDR-CD780s) and tuning down a long list of faraway radio signals. I started with KFJC, KPIG, RadioParadise and SmoothJazz, which are headquartered in California, where I live. Then I went to WUNC out of Chapel Hill, North Carolina and WCPE from nearby Raleigh. Then I moved across the waters to Radio FG from Paris, URGent (“De Gentse Studentenradio”), Beiruit Nights and a bunch of other stuff from who knows where: Radio Free Klezmer, Radiostorm Hip-Hop/R&B, BassDrive, Chemlab, Cyberspace Sonata, KI EuroDance and other stuff from Digitally Imported Radio, Factory188 and FlareSOUND.”

Mandrake: ‘openldap’ privilege violation

Author: JT Smith

Poste at LinuxSecurity.com: A problem exists in all versions of OpenLDAP from 2.0.0 through 2.0.19
where permissions are not properly checked using access control lists
when a user tries to remove an attribute from an object in the
directory by replacing it’s values with an empty list. Schema checking
is still enforced, so a user can only remove attributes that the schema
does not require the object to possess.

Category:

  • Linux

Review: Pogo Linux workstation among top 15 office PCs

Author: JT Smith

IDG News Service (on CNN.com) rates the top office PCs, and the Pogo Linux Pogo Altura Workstation is rated among the top seven power PCs for the office. “This speedy, well-rounded, reasonably priced system is a good choice for people who want to use Linux or who would like to try the OS out without having to install it on their own.”

Category:

  • Unix

CERT warns of flaw in SNMP

Author: JT Smith

Internetnews.com reports that the Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center (has issued an advisory to all network administrators of a flaw in the simple network management protocol (SNMP), the protocol used to remotely administer routers, switches and network management systems.

Category:

  • Linux

Amdahl IT Services adds Linux support to Millennium 2000C and 2000E Servers

Author: JT Smith

Feon PRNewswire: Amdahl IT Services, a strategic
member of the Fujitsu Group companies, today announced the immediate
availability of the Integrated Facility for Linux (IFL) on Millennium(TM)
2000C and Millennium 2000E System/390(R) and z/OS(TM) compatible CMOS servers
and the availability of native FICON(TM) in Q1 2002.

Vividata announces new character recognition product

Author: JT Smith

Frin PRNewswire: Vividata, Inc., a Unix and
Linux imaging software company, today announced the release of OCR Shop XTR,
its new Optical Character Recognition (OCR) product based on the latest
character recognition technology from ScanSoft, Inc., a leading supplier of
imaging, speech and language solutions. OCR Shop XTR, the latest in a series
of character recognition and image processing products from Vividata, provides
unsurpassed recognition accuracy for Sun Solaris(TM) production environments
and desktop users via an easy-to-use production interface.

practicalOS: A practical distribution of Open Source products for Windows

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes, “practicalOS: bringing the benefits of the open source movement to the situation of the Windows user. I finally have finished my latest project, a distribution of Open source products for Windows users. (Release 1). Now it’s time for feedback. Basiclly I was able to take the most common open source tools with Win32 ports that I use on my Windows machine when my Linux isn’t available and compile them into a software distribution, hopefully making it easier for Windows users to take advantage of the great tools. The Gimp, VIM, Apache, Tomcat, Bochs, CYGWIN, and a few others are on this release. As I struggle through license agreements to see what to provide next I’m hoping for feedback from the Open Source Community…the goal: provide a stable and ever growing distribution of open source software for the Windows platform…the method: low overhead, CD distribution…the dream: promote the benefits of Open Source in a PRACTICAL manner to the Windows world. So what did I miss, what should I have included, I hope to have a new release soon…but need the help to build this product to what it should be.”