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Open Source Printing Summit, round 2: Can group create a standard?

Author: JT Smith

Dan Berkes
At the second annual Open

Source Printing Summit last week in San Jose, participants offered progress reports, corporate party lines were espoused, and
somewhere in there, working groups were formed to further flesh out a set of
common printer interfaces. If these groups deliver, then printing tasks within
Open Source applications and operating systems could eventually become a whole
lot simpler.
The summit, last Thursday and Friday, was coordinated by NewsForge
parent OSDN and sponsored by Hewlett-Packard and IBM. Approximately 50
developers and company representatives hunkered down in a partitioned-off
ballroom to discuss the creation of a series of standard interfaces to
facilitate hard copy textual and graphic output, otherwise known as printing.

The first printing summit took place in July 2000, at the former VA Linux corporate
offices in Sunnyvale, Calif. Back-of-the-room murmurs seemed to indicate that
this year’s summit had a decidedly more corporate flavor than the previous
version, where representatives from various independent Open Source projects,
including GNOME, KDE, Ghostscript, and CUPS held forth in attendance and
presentation.

Patents and teamwork
At this year’s summit, the corporate tone was set by keynote from HP’s Open Source advocate Bruce
Perens, who touched upon patent and intellectual property issues and how they
relate to Open Source development procedures. Many of the printer-related
patents and technologies held closely by companies including HP and IBM could
help summit participants in creating their own specifications.

“[HP] doesn’t want to give up all of its patents,” said Perens, bringing some of
the pre-conference discussion back down to reality. “Think they want to give up
their printer patents?”

Companies are going to need very good reasons to set their patents free, and
Perens advised the audience not to fight the patent battle on generic grounds.

There’s something else that could make developing printer specifications a
headache, and not only for Open Source developers. Pending legislation in the
form of Sen. Fritz Hollings’ (D-South Carolina) Security Systems Standards and Certification
Act could make for all matter of hobbling restrictions.

“HP, for example, would have have to comply with its printers to stop someone
from physically printing out someone else’s intellectual property,” Perens said.

After Perens’ relatively short keynote, it was time to get down to work. The
basic summit ingredients from this point onward could be summed up as one part
pep rally, one part reality check, and two parts cooperation.

Ben Woodard, Red Hat developer and co-creator of Cisco’s Enterprise Print System, made his first presentation, displaying a comprehensive flowchart of
the components needed to build an enterprise-capable printing system. A barely
perceptible hush passed over the assembly as everyone got a better look at just
how much work would go into creating reliable, usable interfaces that could
become part of Woodard’s example system.

“We have to work together,” Woodard reminded participants. “No one has the
resources to go it alone in this community.”

Woodard’s slide was a sobering moment, but more easily understood when each segment of
the proposed system was broken down into easily-understandable blocks. The
entire presentation was designed to give context to the discussions and team-building taking place at the summit.

“I made the slide small on purpose, so you couldn’t read it all at once,”
quipped Woodard. That small-scale look, he explained, makes the bit-by-bit development needed to
create such a system a little more appealing to developers, not to mention
adaptable for any other projects.

Bulletin from Japan
Open Source is a global effort; so is the need for a set of common printer
interfaces. In August 2001, the Free Standards Group, along with Sun
Microsystems and the Linux Internationalization Initiative presented the Global
Printing Forum in Tokyo, Japan.

The Free Standards Group’s Hideki Hiura was at the Open Source Printing Summit
to deliver a report from that August gathering. More than 50 attendees, representing
printing and data titans Canon, Epson, Xerox, Oki, Kyocera, and Fujitsu were
present at the Tokyo Forum.

Much like the two American summits that have taken place so far, the Tokyo forum
met to identify issues and concerns affecting current Open Source printing
projects, and agreed on a 20-point list of conclusions that include the
formation of a printing workgroup under the Free Standards Group.

Some forum participants joined the San Jose summit via teleconference link from
Tokyo.

Industry perspective
Also on hand were representatives from IBM, Sun Microsystems, and
Hewlett-Packard to detail what their companies were doing for the printing
efforts.

IBM presented its OMNI project specifications. OMNI, touted as supporting moer than
300 devices, is a driver framework that supports dynamic loading of printer
drivers and can be installed on Linux without the need for a kernel recompile.
Like its co-presenters in this particular area, IBM wants to see a friendlier,
easier printing installation and output experience for home and enterprise users
alike.

A brief overview from Sun’s representative outlined why the company was
motivated to invest in a common printing framework. According to Sun, it’s the
experience of the Open Source community and its programming expertise, items it
simply can’t duplicate.

The HP representative’s slide said it best, possibly speaking for everyone at
the summit: “Linux printing is important!” The company has made a significant
number of contributions to Open Source printing efforts, including sponsoring
both Open Source Printing Summits, the SourceForge Printing Foundry, and
offering Linux support for DeskJet and OfficeJet product lines.

Mission accomplished?
This year’s summit was designed to initiate a standards process, and if viewed
from that angle, it was a smashing success. Complaints are inevitable, of
course: Last year’s conference included much more discussion time, and this
year’s was more of a series of technical presentations without room for debate.

It’s too soon to know whether or not the discussions and teamwork initiated at
the summit will ultimately bear fruit. Some participants wondered whether such a
wide-ranging and diverse group of companies and individuals can actually create
anything resembling a standard.

Only time and practice will tell.

“What does HP do when their parts [of the printing interface] are ready, but the
other groups are not?” asked on audience member during one of Woodard’s
presentations.

“Ask me that in another month” was the answer.

Category:

  • Open Source

First look: iPod

Author: JT Smith

Mac World reports: “Apple’s iPod, a 6.5-ounce MP3 player the size of a deck of cards, is one of the most exciting products to come from Apple in years. Powered by firewire, the iPod can hold as much as 5GB of data, providing a compelling balance of size and capacity. However, this combination of features comes at a relatively high price: $399.”

Category:

  • Unix

MSN reopens to non-Microsoft browsers

Author: JT Smith

PC World reports: “Microsoft said Monday that users can once again access its MSN.com portal with Web browsers that compete with its own Internet Explorer product, although at least one rival browser appeared to be locked out Monday afternoon.”

Intel founder Gordon Moore pledges $600M to Caltech

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes “The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) announced Sunday that alumnus and Intel founder Gordon Moore has pledged two gifts to the institution totaling US$600 million, setting a record for largest amount ever bestowed upon a U.S. university. One gift will come directly from Moore and his wife of 51 years, Betty, and will be distributed over a period of five years. The other $300 million gift will be donated through the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and will be distributed over a ten-year period.”

Category:

  • Linux

About Linux: Introducing a great operating system and a way of life

Author: JT Smith

The Kompany explains what Linux is, where it got its name, what its place in the world is, and why we should use Open Source software.

Category:

  • Linux

Linux 2.4.14-pre5 has been released

Author: JT Smith

Two readers told us about this, Mayhem and Dave:

– Andrew Morton: remove stale UnlockPage
– me: swap cache page locking update
pre4:
– Mikael Pettersson: fix P4 boot with APIC enabled
– me: fix device queuing thinko, clean up VM locking

pre3:
– René Scharfe: random bugfix
– me: block device queuing low-water-marks, VM mapped tweaking.

pre2:
– Alan Cox: more merging
– Alexander Viro: block device module race fixes
– Richard Henderson: mmap for 32-bit alpha personality
– Jeff Garzik: 8139 and natsemi update

pre1:
– Michael Warfield: computone serial driver update
– Alexander Viro: cdrom module race fixes
– David Miller: Acenic driver fix
– Andrew Grover: ACPI update
– Kai Germaschewski: ISDN update
– Tim Waugh: parport update
– David Woodhouse: JFFS garbage collect sleep

http://www.kernel.org/mirrors/

Category:

  • Linux

Is Windows XP really a new operating system?

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes, “Microsoft’s browser may have started out as an application, but by the end, it was part of the operating system. You could download Internet Explorer over the Internet, but you have to recognize that this wasn’t an application you were downloading; it was an operating system upgrade. Windows Movie Maker may be really nice, but there’s no way it’s part of the operating system. It may be included on the operating system CD, it may take advantage of some multimedia support in the operating system, and it may be featured in the ad campaign for the operating system,but it’s an application.” More at osOpinion.com.

Win-XP vs. Red Hat 7.2

Author: JT Smith

The Register compares Windows XP and Red Hat 7.2, and apparently doesn’t like either one of them. On Red Hat: “Repeated three more times. No joy. This OS is nowhere near ready to compete with
XP. And that really is a pity, since it outclasses it by a mile.

Fit-and-finish. If these OS’s were cars, XP would be the Warner Brothers Special
Edition minivan, and 7.2 would be a Yugo well on its way to becoming a KIA.”

Category:

  • Linux

The iPod has an Easter egg

Author: JT Smith

From MacObserver.com: “If you thought the Easter Egg Era at Apple was over, you were wrong. MacityNet … is reporting that
Breakout, the classic game written by Steve Wozniak (and technically Steve Jobs) for Atari before the
founding of Apple lies hidden in Apple’s new MP3 player.”

Patent holder targets .Net, other tech titans

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Charlie Northrup, chief executive of software developer Global Technologies, holds one of
the earliest patents that “describe how diverse computer systems can talk to servers connected to
the Web and run software on multiple platforms.” Sounds like .Net to me.