Home Blog Page 8708

The Napster facelift – strings attached

Author: JT Smith

NewsFactor Network writes: “Napster, the company that brought digital music trading to the masses only to be brought down by legal complications, has quietly provided the public with the information we’ve wanted about the future of its software. According to the Napster Web site, the company plans to launch a new music trading service in early 2002. But this time around, there will be a few strings attached. Unlike before, the new Napster service will keep its members from trading music the way the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) says we shouldn’t.”

The geeks who saved Usenet

Author: JT Smith

Wired: “What are these geeks talking about, anyway?
It’s a meta-post about the system itself, of course! It’s part of a technical
discussion of how Usenet should be administered. And catch that corny
play on words, goofing off Rusty’s last name: “or is that ‘Rusty is Wright’?”

Geeks talking amongst themselves on Usenet about how Usenet should
best be run, while having fun with homonyms: Almost 20 years later, has
anything really changed?”

Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting January 3 2002

Author: JT Smith

“Tim, John and Havoc to get a draft statement on the
relation
with the free software foundation and license policy.”

          Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting January 3 2002
          =================================================


Presents:
=========

    Havoc Pennington (chairing)
    James Henstridge
    Daniel Veillard  (minutes)
    Jody Goldberg
    George Lebl
    Telsa Gwynne
    Jim Gettys
    Tim Ney 
    Nat Friedman
    Jonathan Blandford
    Federico Mena
    Miguel de Icaza   (0:20)

Decisions:
==========

  - Happy New Year to everybody
  - switching back to a telconf every two weeks, no telconf next
week.

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

  ACTION: Tim to get the membership logos on the foundation page
     => We will publish the logos we have agreement to put on-line
        at this time

  ACTION: Tim to work on the Trademark registration for "GNOME"
and the foot.
     => Done, the application had been filed. it may take some
time
        before we get the final decision.

  ACTION: Tim to organize a call with Nat, Tim, Leslie and Jeff
Waugh to
          finalize the description of the 2.0 release
     => Done, got a consensus on the call. The result should be
propagated
        back to the board and the foundation at large soon.

  ACTION: Nat to solve the arrangement for the teleconferences
     => Resolved by trying to find alternate way, trying to round
robbin
        between multiple hosts

Actions:
========

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

  ACTION: Jim to restart the font discussions with various parties
     => pending

  ACTION: Nat and Jonathan talk to gnome-sysadmin about adding ssh
          tunneling for GNOME CVS access
     => A description has been sent, waiting for a reply, other
work
        need to be done, pending.

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

  ACTION: Tim to get the membership logos on the foundation page

  ACTION: Jonathan and Jim will look at Red Hat and Compaq to find
          if they can host phone meetings
          
  ACTION: Tim to grant provision to get a screenshot of our home
page
          to a printing company which requested it

  ACTION: Havoc to update the main page www.gnome.org, we need a
link to
          the Gnome-2 effort and need some cleanup.

  ACTION: Jonathan to draft a possible official answer to the Uk
Gov Talk
          request for comment on the use of open source software
within
          the UK government.

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

 - approve last meeting minutes:
   
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/foundation-announce/2001-December/msg00005.html
 - Conference call.
   Trying to find more possibilities for hosting the
teleconference.
   Jonathan and Jim will check
   
 - GNOME 2 release naming.
   after call with the promotion group it seems there is consensus
on using
   "GNOME 2.0 Development Platform and Desktop"

 - GNOME naming/definition in general and for the release
   We had some comments on the content of the release modules.
   The member of the Board also on the Release team will transmit
those
   comments for discussion at their meeting tomorrow.

 - GUADEC3:
   The web site is on the work it's not on-line yet needing some
graphics,
   they are back at work after the hollidays.
   There will be an on-line submission for papers and
presentations, possibly
   within a week, and a possible deadline at the end of the month.
   We expect to have the travel informations up on-line as fast as
possible
   so that people can make the needed travel arrangements.
   
 - GNOME2:
   There is progresses at the technical level. Trying now to get
   weekly updates and there is contacts for all the modules.
   There is a revised schedule on the Web site.

Daniel

-- 
Daniel Veillard      | Red Hat Network https://rhn.redhat.com/
veillard@redhat.com  | libxml Gnome XML XSLT toolkit  
http://xmlsoft.org/
http://veillard.com/ | Rpmfind RPM search engine 
http://rpmfind.net/

Category:

  • Open Source

Keeping in Sync with Intermezzo

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes “There is a very well-written and interesting article by Moshe Bar at BYTE on the new Intermezzo file system. Intermezzo was introduced with Linux 2.4.15 and is both a network file system and a clustering file system. The URL is http://www.byte.com/documents/s=2289/byt1010012679 751/0107_moshe.html.

Dan”

Category:

  • Linux

Linux Kernel 2.4.18-pre2 patch available

Author: JT Smith

Martin Andrew (a.k.a. Mayhem) writes “You can now download the 2.4.18-pre2 Kernel patch from here. Read more for the changelog.

pre2:
– APIC LVTERR fixes (Mikael Pettersson)
– Fix ppdev ioctl oops and deadlock (Tim Waugh)
– parport fixes (Tim Waugh)
– orinoco wireless driver update (David Gibson)
– Fix oopsable race in binfmt_elf.c (Alexander Viro)
– Small sx16 driver bugfix (Heinz-Ado Arnolds)
– sbp2 deadlock fix (Andrew Morton)
– Fix JFFS2 write error handling (David Woodhouse)
– Intermezzo update (Peter J. Braam)
– Proper AGP support for Intel 830MP chipsets (Nicolas Aspert)
– Alpha fixes (Jay Estabrook)
– 53c700 SCSI driver update (James Bottomley)
– Fix coredump mmap_sem deadlock on IA64 (David Mosberger)
– 3ware driver update (Adam Radford)
– Fix elevator insertion point on failed request merge (Jens Axboe)
– Remove bogus rpciod_tcp_dispatcher definition (David Woodhouse)
– Reiserfs fixes (Oleg Drokin)
– de4x5 endianess fixes (Kip Walker)
– ISDN CAPI cleanup (Kai Germaschewski)
– Make refill_inactive() correctly account progress (me)”

Category:

  • Linux

Ralph Nader wants Microsoft to pay

Author: JT Smith

From CNet: “Consumer advocate Ralph Nader has called for Microsoft to start paying dividends to investors, saying the software giant’s $36 billion cash pile amounts to an illegal tax shelter for wealthy shareholders such as Chairman Bill Gates.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Confessions: Looking back and making predictions about Open Source businesses

Author: JT Smith

By Jack Bryar
It’s tradition among journalists trying to avoid working over the holidays to knock out an article that sums up the big events of the past year or that makes bold predictions about
the future. I think that many writers miss the big events even as they write about them, and that most self-appointed pundits stay in business by hoping the public forgot all the stupid things they said in the past.

For the past several years, I’ve dedicated the first column of January to an examination of the stories I should have covered as well as the ones I wrote about and to confess about the stories where I was completely
wrong as well as the places where I got the story right, early.

This past year featured two predictions that were gloriously inaccurate and a few that, unfortunately, look to be more accurate than I would prefer. More troubling, there were a few stories that didn’t get covered as well as they should have.

To start with the worst, I got
pretty excited
when ABN Amro, a hard -headed Dutch bank, made an investment
in the Conectiva, the Brazilian Linux shop. The investment was reportedly close to $100 million for 10 percent of the company. The fact that a bank would consider a company that had grossed less than $4 million to be worth a billion dollars was news to me. Perhaps the sky-high valuations placed on several Linux companies during the dot-com mania weren’t so crazy after all? Well, of course they were.

The valuation of Conectiva was crazy, too. Admittedly, the company
has created
some useful tools
such as the APT addition to Red Hat Package
Manager. Conectiva has popularized Linux in local press and helped make
a pop star out of
Linux kernel maintainer Marcelo
Tosatti
in Brazilian newspapers like O
Estado Sao Paulo
.

As I mentioned last February, less developed countries are a hot market for Linux.
Unlike the States, Brazil is a place where you can find a PC with Linux
on a retail store shelf. Conectiva has made inroads into the Brazilian
state and local government markets and established a presence in many
parts of Latin America. However, the marketing effort has flagged recently.
Press releases and newsletters, which were coming out at the rate of two to three a
month earlier in the year have nearly stopped. The company got sidetracked by
a

lengthy political battle with the Brazilian government over whether
Linux rather than Windows should be installed on PCs purchased for
educational institutions. And while it has attracted talented hackers like Tosatti,
the teenage “successor” to Alan Cox on the 2.4 kernel project, it’s
still a smallish, struggling enterprise. What’s it worth? Who knows? As
I pointed out in August
, the valuations of highly speculative
growth companies in the United States continue to be driven by self-interested sell-side
analysts, many of whom ought to be hauled before the SEC and beaten with a stick.

In an article that was nearly as bad, last spring I decided to be
more optimistic about Linux as a business proposition. I predicted that the
gains Linux had made in the Web server market meant that the platform
had a real shot to take over local networks in 2001. In a paragraph I
regretted the rest of the year, I
actually quoted Eric Raymond
as some sort of authority about the
prospects for Linux in the enterprise server market. Whatever Eric’s attributes,
an acute business sense isn’t one of his strengths.

As it has turned out, the shock troops from Microsoft’s Consulting
Service worked with prospects to wall off outward facing architecture from
inward facing domains, particularly as companies moved away from Windows NT.
MCS also focused on business issues rather than technology. The result was
a growing domination of the internal enterprise architecture by Redmond’s
Windows 2000. That development didn’t get covered sufficiently, and it
should have. I wrote an article in October that touched on the methods MCS used to win
the market, but the bulk of the “Envisioneering” exercises Microsoft
used to win over business executives were run in late 2000 and the beginning
of 2001, and should have been covered then.

I spent a lot of the year covering a couple of trends I thought were
critical to the future of Linux. One was the stampede away from Open
Source by several Linux champions. I’ve covered what I call an evolving “Half Way Covenant” among many corporate developers. They pledge to
support Linux as an open road-bed on which to run their applications, but
most want to keep their own applications closed. I
reported
that Caldera has gone down that road. In
an interview
with Ly-Huong Pham, she said Turbolinux was, too. They have joined literally hundreds of firms who have ported Windows, and Unix applications to a Linux platform, but who have restricted access to their own code.

The other trend was the price Linux companies continued to pay for
amateurish marketing and less-than-experienced executive leadership. Whether it
was the vaporware that was the Yopy handheld, the fiasco

that was the Indrema game platform, the embarrassing noises made by SuSE as it engaged in year-long management struggle,
the willful refusal of Linux companies to
support a reseller channel
, or to consider basic
enterprise marketing strategies
(like solutions-based selling as
opposed to technology bake-offs) far too many of the problems faced by Linux
companies had nothing to do with Microsoft and everything to do with bad
management. It put at risk some
really good products
.

Big opportunities were ignored. I spent a couple of columns
suggesting that the telecommunications network and mundane systems like network-connected cash registers were great opportunities for Linux-centered
developers. Since then, executives from Intel and several communications
semiconductor shops pleaded with the Linux community to take on these markets.
Instead Linux-centric hardware companies like Penguin Computing tried
challenging IBM and Compaq for the traditional server business, and got their
brains beat in. Because nobody else was interested, IBM and a couple of Japanese
firms began making serious money building Linux cash registers.
And, while
I reported that Red Hat
was dabbling in the telecoms market, I’m
still waiting for a Linux-centered challenger to compete with the likes of
Cisco Systems.

The Linux start-ups weren’t the only ones with management problems.
The refusal of most hardware companies not named IBM to properly
support their Linux business was absolutely bewildering. The inability of Sony to prepare a coordinated response to Microsoft’s challenge
to their core business is even more puzzling given the unique
suitability of Linux to Sony’s biggest strategic problems. Maybe it will happen next
year, although the company’s Balkanized management structure and its
past fondness for proprietary solutions isn’t promising.

As for next year, I predict that Carly Fiorina won’t be running HP. I may
have been among the first
to question the logic
of the HP/Compaq merger, but now
everyone is wondering, and if HP’s management team is still intact next year
I’ll be shocked. I only hope that Compaq or its successor will continue to
support Linux and give IBM a run for its money on the hardware side.

As for the Linux pioneers, I won’t be shocked if at least three of them are
absorbed or collapse entirely. One
obvious survivor
is Red Hat. I’m just not sure who else will be
around.

Despite all that, I do think Linux has a bright future. I
agree with Robin Miller
that 2003 is likely to be the make-or-break
year for the platform. The withdrawal of support for NT by Microsoft,
the forced subscription program envisioned by Redmond, the rising
possibility that the state
attorneys general
or the
European Union
might overturn
a rigged antitrust settlement
, the rise of alternative technologies
such as XML all provide a window for alternative platform developers.
As long as Red Hat avoids the temptation to
fork the platform
, and Alan Cox and Linus Torvalds can
manage to get along
and not let egos get in the way of unified development,
Open Source and its champions can survive 2002 and make the following
year their own.

Happy New Year.

Category:

  • Open Source

Apple’s extraordinary Macworld Expo

Author: JT Smith

NewsFactor Network writes “It has been said that only those companies that have no way to differentiate themselves from the competition focus on price. These latest offerings from Apple allow the company to separate its products from competing ones, but many are still focused on price. So, I thought it might be entertaining to get prices from competing companies that create similar products and see how Apple’s new iMac fared in regards to this last remaining differentiation barometer that is so commonly used to determine a computer’s worth in the PC sector. Here’s what I discovered.”

Category:

  • Unix

Linux Kernel 2.5.2-pre10 Patch Available

Author: JT Smith

Martin Andrew (a.k.a. Mayhem) writes “You can now download the 2.5.2-pre10 Kernel patch from here. Read more for the ChangeLog.

pre10:
– Kai Germaschewski: ISDN updates
– Al Viro: start moving buffer cache indexing to “struct block_device *”
– Greg KH: USB update
– Russell King: fix up some ARM merge issues
– Ingo Molnar: scalable scheduler

Category:

  • Linux

Out the Windows : Breaking with Microsoft gets a little easier

Author: JT Smith

vasah20 writes “US News has an article spotlighting Linux as a viable alternative to windows. It briefly discusses the gradual migration from Linux being solely for geeks. Along with the article is a sidebar
regarding the user’s experience with various distros and software.”

Category:

  • Linux