Author: JT Smith
Category:
- Unix
Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
“Calm down, Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina told an audience at the
LinuxWorld conference in New York yesterday. Despite her high-profile
presence delivering the conference’s opening keynote, Fiorina made it clear that
HP sees Linux only as another revenue-earner, and is certainly not going to follow
IBM into making any billion-dollar commitments to the open source operating
system.”
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Author: JT Smith
Gone are the interesting giveaways, the company-sponsored lavish parties, and gone for the most part
are the guys with purple hair and tattered black T-shirts. LinuxWorld is all about business this year.”
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Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Big corporations have awakened to the possibilities of Linux in the enterprise.
Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina says that HP customers have started asking for Linux, and
manufacturers of handheld devices and set-top boxes are realizing the power and
flexibility of Linux as an embedded OS. Now, telecommunications industries are
looking at Linux as an alternative to pricey Unix-based carrier implementations.
The problem is the bazaar mentality of the developers that says, “I may or may
not get around to adding this feature, but that’s OK because I’m working on what
I want to do.” This attitude is keeping Linux from realizing its potential as
an enterprise grade operating system for telecommunications. To remedy that, the
OSDL says it will now provide a “forum for creating vision and guidance to
enhance Linux to meet the needs of both the data center and carrier grade market
segments.”
To facilitate the guidance, the OSDL has formed the “Carrier Grade Linux
Platform Working Group,” which, they say, “is not intended to redefine existing
architectures, but rather will identify requirements and encourage development
of common infrastructure requirements.”
Preventing fragmentation of the Linux kernel is a “key target” for the OSDL
team, says Ari Virtanen, v.p. of Nokia Networks. In response to media
questioning, he and other OSDL representatives speaking at a press conference
at LinuxWorld in New York City said that the Open Source Development Lab itself would
not pose a forking threat to the kernel.
“Adding the term ‘guidance’ (to the OSDL mission statement) was
something we thought long and hard about,” says Martin Fink of the OSDL board of
directors. “But we needed to go beyond providing resources. We need to provide
guidance.”
Another stated goal of the working group is to “support Open Source development
efforts toward a stable platform upon which commercial components and services
can be deployed.” It will be interesting to see how the group will exert its
influence on Linux kernel development.
The Open Source Development Lab is represented by the following companies:
Virtanen also said that OSDL will work closely with the Linux Standard Base to
avoid duplication of efforts. Additionally, the OSDL will pull in “at-large”
community members to sit on its advisory committee, which will have approval
privileges on proposed standards.
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