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DOJ defends Microsoft settlement

Author: JT Smith

The Associated Press on Salon.com reports that the U.S. government considered but rejected penalties against Microsoft that would have required the company to reveal the secret
blueprints to its flagship Windows software and to distribute products from its
fiercest rivals.

Trinux site defaced

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity.com has the info. “On November 11, 2001, a defacer known as “w00tx0rs” defaced the home page for ‘Trinux’. Since the defacement, the site has not
responded to any attempts to load the web page.”

Category:

  • Linux

iXsystems’ iXtreme Internet hosting servers to be powered by Plesk

Author: JT Smith

From PR Newswire: iXsystems Inc. (formerly BSDi)
has announced that their iXtreme Internet Hosting Servers will be powered by
Plesk Server Administrator (PSA) v2.0. The iXsystems’ iXtreme Internet Hosting
Servers are purpose-built server systems developed from Internet
infrastructure-grade hardware and software to accelerate deployment of
e-business solutions. The iXtreme Internet Hosting Server (iHS) is designed
specifically for ISPs and NSPs who need to maximize horsepower per square inch
and operate complex Web sites and e-commerce applications.

Linux looks for a home in iPaq handheld

Author: JT Smith

IDG on CNN.com reports on Tuxia, a German maker of embedded Linux operating systems for television set-top
boxes and other computing devices, which announced its Open Source operating
system for Compaq Computer’s iPaq handheld computer.

Comdex: Linux pros team on real estate ‘office-in-a-box’

Author: JT Smith

By Jacqueline Emigh
A couple of dozen Linux developers, distributed throughout the United States, are teaming up to build code for a Linux-based “real estate office-in-a-box” Internet appliance, targeted at the 780,000 members of the National Real Estate Association.

Under development for the past three months, the project is being spearheaded by two members of the association’s technology team, who outlined their progress on the “Realtor Appliance” project during LinuxFest at this week’s Comdex show in Las Vegas.

The appliance concept can be applied to any such “vertical market” industry, says Keith T. Garner, strategic architect for the association’s Center for Realtor Technology (CRT).

The office-in-a-box project is aimed at “increasing technology use within different (state real estate) associations and large real estate firms,” says Mark A. Lesswing, v.p. of the CRT, which is based at the association’s headquarters in Chicago.

Six CRT staffers and consultants are collaborating on the box, along with more than 20 “virtual” participants, who are logging in to the CRT Web site from throughout the United States. The remote collaborators are largely IS staffers at state associations and large real estate brokerages.

Executives at many real estate offices “want to be on the Web, but aren’t sure how,” says Lesswing. The Linux collaborators envision much more than just static Web sites showing pictures of properties, the current state-of-the-art in the real estate industry.

Garner says he sees the CRT’s Web-based development effort “as sort of a SourceForge for real estate.”

Already, the Linux collaborators have built code for a “Realtor-Client Communications Gateway.” Demonstrated at a recent real estate show in Chicago, the Gateway Web site features separate areas for realtors and clients. The client site, for example, gives customers personalized views of properties they’ve already toured. Email is available on the site, too.

Real estate show-goers in Chicago reacted enthusiastically to the demo, according to Lesswing. “The realtors were stunned,” he says. “To them, this was better than a VCR.”

The distributed code developers are also also at work on “Imagekeeper 0.7.1,” a project for uploading, cataloging, searching, thumbnailing, and distributing images.

A couple of applications the team foresees include agent/client house tour scheduling, and Samba for file-sharing within real estate offices.

As the two LinuxFest speakers see it, real estate organizations are likely to save money by sharing code. An application created for a real estate association in Texas, for example, might be easily repurposed by associations in other states. This will spare organizations from either starting from scratch, or investing in commercial software.

Another goal of the project, Lesswing says, is to “re-energize commercial vendors in this space” to provide more useful and compelling applications.

“The idea of an appliance isn’t new,” Garner says, pointing to previous efforts such as Novell NetWare boxes. However, the dedicated Real Estate Appliance, which runs embedded Linux, will be “an entirely new product.”

The 75-minute presentation by Lesswing and Garner was punctuated by bits of advice for developers. For his part, Garner shines a light on the advantages of Linux as a development environment.

He takes issue with a number of myths about Linux, most notably, “it’s written by amateurs” and “there are no applications.”

“A large proportion of (Linux developers) are professional developers. There are a lot of PhDs. These are not high schoolers,” he says.

In the applications area, Garner mentions StarOffice, Apache, and TomCat, among others.

Selling Linux to your office

Lesswing focuses on how IS pros can overcome cultural and political barriers to Linux within their organizations. “Bringing Linux into an organization can be very difficult,” he says. “It’s easy to get killed. A lot depends on how you sell it internally.”

Barriers can include entrenched “bonds” to either legacy software or vendors, as well as cultures in some organizations that work against creativity. Before trying to introduce Linux into an organization, you should analyze the organization, Lesswing says. If you decide to go ahead, you should devise a plan. “Know the issues, and be a (Linux) practitioner. Just reading about Linux on the Web is not enough to get corporate money.”

It’s critical, he adds, to be willing to “play well” with other technical and non-technical people throughout the organization, to help them understand what you want to do and why.

He also advises hiring an experienced lead, investing in support and getting customer backing. It’s easier to convince marketing people about adopting a new technology if customers are generating demand, Lesswing says.

Past successes

Also during the talk at Comdex, Lesswing and Garner delve into their own earlier “success stories” with Linux. Lesswing, for example, was previously a player in two earlier “turnarounds” to Linux, including a deployment at a company called Yes.com.

As CTO at Yes.com, Lesswing was able to drastically slash operating expenses by buying out the leases on most of the company’s 35 Windows 2000 servers, replacing them instead with Linux boxes.

“Uptime rose 60 percent, too, because the Windows 2000 servers had kept crashing,” he says during an interview. The now defunct dot-com was a division of CMGI, a big Microsoft shop.

Lesswing and Garner first met up with each other at a systems integration firm known as SRI, which has since morphed into Envisio. Lesswing helped recruit Garner to SRI from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where, as a student, Garner had headed up the campus Linux user group.

Category:

  • Linux

Compaq moves toward “grid” computing

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Compaq Computer has advanced its “grid” computing effort, announcing a deal to
use Platform Computing’s software.

Compaq will offer its Unix and Linux computers and services in combination with Platform’s
software.

Category:

  • Linux

DOJ files report on impact of Microsoft settlement

Author: JT Smith

IDG News Service reports that the U.S. Department of Justice has filed a
lengthy report outlining the impact of the
proposed settlement it reached with Microsoft to end its 3-year antitrust
battle.

FTC, DOJ to hold hearings on patents

Author: JT Smith

Newsbytes.com has a story saying U.S. Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice will
hold hearings in December “to examine whether a dramatic increase in patents awarded each year has upset the balance between
intellectual property and antitrust laws.”

Travel ASP takes Linux down the road

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports on Viata, Honolulu-based application service provider to the
online travel industry, and its decision to use Linux. “The need to operate on a shoestring budget led to his
controversial decision to use Linux as the operating system
not only on the servers, but also at the desktop. The move
was unusual because few companies had gone wholesale
with Linux at the time, and not many people understood its
inner workings.”

Category:

  • Linux

VMware Workstation 3.0 now available at SuSE Linux

Author: JT Smith

Posted at LWN.net: Today, SuSE Linux, the
international Open Source technology leader and solutions
provider, announced that SuSE now offers VMware Workstation 3.0.
One of the main new features of VMware Workstation 3.0 is the
support of Windows XP. Using Workstation 3.0, a virtual Windows XP
PC can be started under Linux or vice versa.