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Tonight on The Linux Show

Author: JT Smith

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2001, from the home of Wayne’s World, Aurora IL — Tonight LIVE on
www.thelinuxshow.com: At 6pm pt, 7pm mt, 8pm ct, and 9pm et…. Kevin Hill, Jeff Gerhardt, PJ Hyett, Doc Searls(Linux Journal), Arne Flones and Russ Pavlicek; have another great show lined up tonight on The Linux Show!! Joining us tonight will be Marc Torres as a guest panelist.
In Segment One – Hot News: We will be covering the hot Linux news of
the last few weeks. In particular, we will talk about the latest on ALS and Windows XP.

In Segment Two- Should The Linux Show Call For Public Protest Against SSSCA and Disney at all? OR, has The Linux Show become TOO political?

ANNOUNCEMENT:
The Editorial Board (Jeff and Kevin) at TLS is expanding our protest against Disney (to bring attention to the SSSCA) this week by asking for people to go to Disney Stores accross the US on Thursday the 25th (the day of the SSSCA hearings) and protest in a pleasant, polite and informative way against the Walt Disney Corporation and their support of the SSSCA bill. If you are not available during the day, please take an hour in the evening to do so at your local mall. There is a Disney Store at about every mall in the US.

If you choose to help us with this effort, please check the laws within your community. We WILL NOT take legal responsibility for you breaking any laws. We will not be there to bail you out of jail. Make a sign that is clear to read and understand. PLEASE use no vulgarities. We want to win hearts and minds for Open Source. A formal announcement will come tonight.
END ANNOUNCEMENT

Because of our previous efforts against the SSSCA, we have been getting a fair amount of email saying that we should not be calling for our Disney Boycott at all.

  • Some say because we can not do enough economic damage to Disney there is NO POINT.
  • Some say we are focused on the wrong goals and should not waste our efforts on SSSCA.
  • Some say that because of some supposed journalistic standard we should not be so involved with creating a movement (it is ok to report and support but not to create the effort).

These are all legitimate points. In light of our calling for active physical protest in front of Disney Stores, we thought we should discuss the question. The opinions of the members of our regular panel are mixed on this issue. So, is The Linux Show TOO Political? COme to the IRC chat and tell us.

In Segment Three- Linux Corporate Autopsy, ATIPA the end of a bright prospect.
Because we will have Marc Torres on the show tonight, we thought that we would discuss the demise of Atipa. There are limits to the comments that Marc can legally make, but we thought the opportunity was too good to miss. Atipa, a company with great people, a great plan, but like so many new IT firms today, did not make it through to profitability.

So, taking advantage of Marc Torres being on the show, we will do our little autopsy and discuss why bad things can happen to good people and good companies.

Other opinions are welcome at GeekCast. If you would like to join us on the show, check our IRC Chat(irc.thelinuxshow.com #linuxshow).

Remember tune in at 6pm pt, 7pm mt, 8pm ct, and 9pm et.
Catch the Linux show at www.thelinuxshow.com

Learning from Mozilla’s mistakes

Author: JT Smith

– By Robin “Roblimo” Miller

When the Mozilla project started, it immediately became the number one poster child for Open Source software development. Now its luster is tarnished to the point where closed source advocates point to Mozilla as an example of how Open Source cannot compete one-on-one with proprietary software, in this case with Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. Is this true? Or was Mozilla’s development process, not the fact that it was Open Source, to blame for its problems?Netscape was one of the first examples of dot-com excess, with liberal work rules that allowed employees to bring dogs to work, Nerf gun battles at all hours, and a generally quirky corporate style. From all reports, working at Netscape during the glory years was so much fun that some employees spent all of their waking hours there.

Sadly, while Netscape employees were engaging in company-sponsored play that liberated their creative juices, Microsoft’s developers were grinding on, perhaps without passion, making Explorer a little better and more usable, one step at a time, day after day, month after month.

Then Netscape decided to throw open their development process so thousands of eager volunteer programmers all over the world could participate, hoping this would lead to a surge in productivity by creating a mass coding frenzy that would make more software faster than it had ever been made before.

At the time, I was suspicious of Netscape’s motives: Were they going in the Open Source direction because they truly believed in sharing, or were they trying to … exploit is a harsh word … the efforts of Open Source believers to further their own corporate fortunes?

The idea of having people work for free is certainly wonderful from the viewpoint of a corporate executive whose primary duty is to enhance shareholder value. Anyone who thinks this kind of thinking isn’t at least partially behind many companies’ adoption of Open Source has a shaky grasp on reality. Do you think IBM would embrace Linux to the tune of one billion dollars if the bean counters there didn’t figure that investment would either save two or three billion dollars worth of internal development costs or create many billions of dollars in sales IBM wouldn’t otherwise get?

So there was Netscape, suddenly a division of AOL, asking software developers to donate their time to what was, at heart, a corporate project. I asked Netscape PR people more than once, back then, how many outside developers, as opposed to Netscape employees, were working on Mozilla. Not once did I get a concrete answer. I asked for interviews with internal Mozilla project leaders, but got no replies to my emails and phone messages. Finally I gave up. Perhaps the project itself was open, but the corporate structure behind it certainly wasn’t.

I have tried a number of Mozilla builds along the way, but so far I am sticking with tried-and-true Netscape Communicator 4.7X, despite its flaws, as my primary Web browser and email client. I have tried Konqueror and Opera and all the rest, but old-fashioned Netscape still fills my needs best. Yes, I would like to have Mozilla and all its promised stability and new features. But a fully work-usable Mozilla seems to keep sliding farther into the future.

Meanwhile, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer has gotten pretty darned good. Note that AOL, Netscape’s owner and Mozilla’s sponsor, is only now even considering the Mozilla-generated Gecko rendering engine for use in a default browser, and even then only for its much-smaller-than-AOL CompuServe division.

(The latest AOL software, just released, uses Explorer as its default browser.)

I have watched other Open Source projects progress at amazing speed without direct corporate sponsorship. I have watched eager volunteer developers contribute endless hours of time, and I’ve produced a number of detailed bug reports and helped with documentation on several projects. I have no problem contributing to the community. If anything, I believe it is my duty to do this because I use plenty of Open Source and Free Software, and I regard the time I spend helping Open Source development, wherever I can, as my personal in-lieu-of-cash payment for the “free as in beer” software I use every day. But I am not going to work for AOL for free.

There is nothing inherently wrong with corporate sponsorship of an Open Source project, but if that project is going to attract a large number of volunteers, it must not be seen as little more than a chance to help the sponsoring corporation make money. Sun seems to have figured this out with their OpenOffice project, which they say “… will be administered by the OpenOffice.org Foundation,” a promise weakened greatly by the disclaimer, “At this point we are working on the concrete structure and agenda for the foundation.”

An endowed foundation, not directly controlled by the company that funds it, may be the best and purest way to funnel corporate support to an Open Source project. It removes most of the odor of corporate greed, and if the foundation uses one of the widely accepted “generic” Open Source or Free Software licenses, it removes suspicions that taint corporate lawyer-generated licenses like the Mozilla & Netscape Public Licenses or the only slightly less complex dual licensing scheme Sun uses for OpenOffice.

I respect IBM, Netscape/AOL, and Sun for their attempts to move toward Open Source. It is not easy to give up corporate control over intellectual property, especially for companies whose fortunes are based on patents, copyrights, and other methods of preventing competitors and potential competitors from using their work. But “sort of” Open Source or Free Software development doesn’t seem to work as efficiently as the pure, unadulterated, variety — or necessarily as well as straight-up proprietary software development, either.

What if, instead of trying to keep Mozilla development under their direct control, Netscape had set up and funded an independent non-profit foundation to develop Mozilla from the start? I suspect that if this had happened, we would all be using a reliable, full-featured, tightly-coded 2.X version of Mozilla today, and if that foundation’s output had carried a BSD-style license, AOL would have been able to add proprietary code to the Open Source base to create a default browser for their customers that would be much better than Internet Explorer.

To use a trite phrase, “Hindsight is always better than foresight.” Netscape was a true pioneer in corporate-sponsored Open Source development and had no real past experience to go on. Mistakes were — inevitably — made.

But another trite saying says, “Those who don’t study history are doomed to repeat it.”

Critical analysis of current and past Open Source development successes and failures is not always fun, especially for the people and companies whose projects are being analyzed. But the lessons we learn by looking at high-profile Open Source projects through clear — even jaundiced — eyes, instead of through rose-colored glasses, are more important to the future of Open Source and Free Software than any amount of boosterism for a single project, even one with as many hopes riding on it as Mozilla.

Category:

  • Open Source

Procedures and timeline for 2001 GNOME foundation elections

Author: JT Smith

“[This supersedes a slightly earlier draft announcement sent to
foundation-list.]

The GNOME Foundation Membership & Elections Committee is proud to
announce the beginning of the 2001 elections for the Foundation’s
Board of Directors. All eleven spots on the Board are up for
election. A description of the role of the Board can be found at
http://foundation.gnome.org/overview.html.”

Procedures/Timeline for 2001 GNOME Foundation Elections
Date: Mon, 22 Oct 2001 23:23:57 -0400
From: rms39@columbia.edu (Russell Steinthal)
To: foundation-announce@gnome.org,  gnome-announce-list@gnome.org,  foundation-list@gnome.org
Reply to: gnome-hackers@gnome.org


[This supersedes a slightly earlier draft announcement sent to
foundation-list.]

The GNOME Foundation Membership & Elections Committee is proud to
announce the beginning of the 2001 elections for the Foundation's
Board of Directors.  All eleven spots on the Board are up for
election.  A description of the role of the Board can be found at
http://foundation.gnome.org/overview.html.

If you are a member of the GNOME Foundation and are interested in
running for election, you may nominate yourself by sending an e-mail
to foundation-announce@gnome.org with your name, e-mail address,
corporate affiliation (if any), and a description of why you'd like to
serve.  You should also send a summary of your candidacy announcement
(75 words or less) to elections@gnome.org.  If you are not yet a GNOME
Foundation member and would like to stand for election, you must first
apply for membership and be accepted to be eligible to run. (You may,
however, announce your candidacy prior to formal acceptance of your
application; should your application not be accepted, you will not be
included on the ballot.)

The deadline for announcing candidacies is November 8, 2001.  The
election itself will be held by e-mail from November 13-November 20.

If you are not yet a GNOME Foundation member and would like to apply
for membership and vote in this election, you must submit your
application by November 8.  If you are application is accepted, you
will be eligible to vote in this election.  For more information on
the qualifications for membership and how to apply, see the Membership
Policy (http://foundation.gnome.org/ membership-policy.html) and the
Membership Application (http:// foundation.gnome.org/
membership-form.html). 

For full details, please see the newly updated elections procedures at
http://foundation.gnome.org/electionrules.html.

If you have any questions, please direct them to the Membership &
Elections Committee at elections@gnome.org or to
foundation-list@gnome.org.

The GNOME Foundation Membership & Elections Committee:
         Chris DiBona
         Glynn Foster
         Dan Mueth
         Mike Newman
         Russell Steinthal


-- 
Russell Steinthal                Columbia Law School, Class of 2002
                 Columbia College, Class of 1999
               UNIX System Administrator, nj.org


_______________________________________________
gnome-announce-list mailing list
gnome-announce-list@gnome.org
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-announce-list

Category:

  • Open Source

Defend your digital assets with ‘Hacking Exposed’

Author: JT Smith

PRNewswire: “As Internet security threats
like Nimda and Code Red continue to make businesses of all sizes see red,
McGraw-Hill/Osborne Media released “Hacking Exposed: Network Security Secrets
& Solutions,” Third Edition (ISBN 0-07-219381-6; 768 pages; $49.99) by Stuart
McClure, Joel Scambray, and George Kurtz. “Hacking Exposed” remains the
resource for IT administrators and security professionals, helping them gain
the critical insight needed to keep networks and systems secure. This latest
edition builds upon the popular theme of the first two books by providing
detailed examples of the latest attacks, tools, and techniques employed by
today’s hackers, as well as countermeasures that illustrate how to protect
against these devastating maneuvers.”

U.S. forces pack pocket computers

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC: “When the USS McFaul lobbed Tomahawk missiles into Afghanistan recently, an unlikely
new weapon was on board: the Palm Inc. hand-held computer.”

Nemein opens public Midgard and Nadmin Studio support number

Author: JT Smith

Henri Bergius writes: Nemein Solutions, the leading Nordic provider of
Open Source Midgard solutions for mobile collaboration and information
management has opened a public support number for finnish Midgard and
Nadmin Studio users.

The new support number is available to all finnish users of the
Midgard application server and the Nadmin Studio content management
system at 0600-1-2552.

“There is a tremendous level interest for Open Source solutions in the
market today. The lack of professional support has so far prevented
businesses from widely deploying these solutions. By opening a public
support number we continue our commitment in bringing the Open Source
Midgard application server to the enterprise”, says Henri Hovi, the
director of Nemein’s Content Management Services business unit.

Contact information

Henri Hovi
Director, Nemein Content Management Services
henri.hovi@nemein.com
+358-20-198 6036

Nemein’s Midgard and Nadmin Studio support number
0600-1-2552

http://www.nemein.com/

A wish list for AppleWorks 7

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes: “AppleWorks has become the program that everyone wants to love, but due to the industry’s dependence on Microsoft’s Office suite, Apple’s productivity application has not gotten the credit it deserves. Even Apple itself is having a love affair with the upcoming version of Office for MacOS X. This despite the fact that AppleWorks has been a native X application even before MacOS X was released. Instead of putting AppleWorks up against the Office behemoth as a competitor in the office productivity space, Apple could position AppleWorks as a must-have utility with the addition of only a few simple enhancements.”

MS “Bug” of the day: Money online banking hates to lose IE

Author: JT Smith

We tend to think this one is an intentional feature – MSNBC: “If Internet Explorer is removed, the following error may be dished out by Microsoft Money 98, 99,
2000, 2001 and 2002 when a user tries to use the online banking feature: “Money requires some
components of Internet Explorer in order to function properly. Please reinstall Money so that Money
can add these components for you.” To fix the problem, do as the message suggests: reinstall
Money. If that does not resolve the problem, do one of the following: 1) Remove and then reinstall IE,
or; 2) Download and install the latest version of IE from http://www.microsoft.com/ie.”

Compaq: VMS is alive and kicking

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “Move over IBM, Sun, and Microsoft. When it comes to operating systems that are scalable, reliable, and fully outfitted
to run enterprise applications and e-businesses, there’s a trusted name with a proven track record. It isn’t Unix, Linux,
IBM’s z/OS, or Windows. It’s the venerable OpenVMS, and it’s on a path to become more affordable.”

KDE 3.0 multimedia meeting

Author: JT Smith

The Dot: “Stefan Westerfeld has posted a summary of a IRC discussion held by the KDE Multimedia team last month. Essentially a
KDE 3 roadmap for the multimedia team, the discussion covers topics ranging from MCOP and OSS compatability to
recording and video embedding. A slightly edited version of his post follows.”

Category:

  • Open Source