Home Blog Page 9043

Makefile achieves self-awareness

Author: JT Smith

From the humor site, Segfault: “At 10:48PM, Thursday, September 13th, a Unix C Makefile created to aid in compiling the
DBD-Oracle Perl module on HPUX gained total self-awareness.”

Category:

  • Management

Review: NuSphere MySQL

Author: JT Smith

It’s from the Linux Journal: “Is the package a good value? I think so. The O’Reilly handbooks retail for $10 US each, and having the MySQL reference in a bound format
is probably worth another $30–$40. If you were going to install the suite on a number of machines, the time saved with the package is
more than worth the rest of the price. With the addition of some tutorial information and broader platform support, NuSphere would have a
really solid product.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Nimda worm slows

Author: JT Smith

IDG News Service reports that the Nimda worm is no longer significantly slowing Internet traffic.

Category:

  • Linux

Napster hires Netscape exec

Author: JT Smith

CNet has a short note: ”
Napster says it has appointed a former Netscape Communications executive as vice president of
engineering, a newly created position. Claire Hough will manage ongoing development of
Napster’s forthcoming subscription service as well as future projects.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Metro Link, Stream Machine, Sigma Designs support personal video recording for set-top boxes

Author: JT Smith

Metro Link announced today that
they will provide integrated support for the newly introduced Harmony
reference design into their Metro Media PVR architecture. Metro Link
will be working with both Stream Machine and Sigma Designs to support
mutual customers developing Advanced Set-Top Boxes and PVR products
using the Harmony reference design. Metro Media support for the Harmony
Reference Design will allow customers to retain a proprietary branded
look and feel for their PVR products in an open hardware and software
environment without sacrificing functionality or performance.

Advanced Set-Top Boxes, alternately known as “convergence” products
because they bring together video, voice, and data features in one
package, offer consumers full control over their viewing experience by
providing pause, instant record and other time-shifting features during
live broadcasts, as well as offering the ability to record one or more
programs at specified times in the future. The Harmony reference design
cost-effectively adds this functionality by providing a high-quality
viewing experience on low cost x86 platforms running LINUX. It is
able to do this by leveraging the power of Stream Machine’s SM2288
MPEG audio/video codec and the flexibility of Sigma Designs’ EM8475
DVD/MPEG-4 decoder.

This advanced hardware will be optimized by Metro Link, who will provide
dedicated support and integration for the Harmony reference design
within their Metro-Media PVR architecture. This modular architecture
conveniently provides an easily customizable user interface which is
integrated with a full media infrastructure layer. Metro Link will be
working with both Stream Machine and Sigma Designs to support mutual
customers developing set-top boxes and PVR devices using the Harmony
reference design.

“The complete solution offered by the Harmony reference design is a key
piece in promoting full-scale PVR deployment in set top boxes,” said
Greg Lafferty, Vice-President of Sales for Metro Link. “Our Metro Media
Toolkit for the Harmony Reference Design offers an integrated turn-key
PVR solution which provides customers with a powerful, flexible way
to offer a branded look and feel. We look forward to working with the
customers of Stream Machine and Sigma Designs to bring a new class of
product into the mainstream.”

“Metro Link’s support of the Harmony Reference Design will ensure
dedicated customer support, integration and rapid deployment of our
hardware in advanced set top boxes,” said Ken Lowe, Vice-President of
Business Development for Sigma Designs. “Adding PVR functionality to the
set-top box offers service providers the opportunity to roll out potential
revenue-generating services such as personal video recording and video on
demand, and our solution is timed perfectly for the needs of this market.”

“The Harmony solution is ideal for OEMs who wish to capitalize on the
convergence wave by building custom-branded products on top of an open
x86 hardware and LINUX software environment,” stated Brian Heuckroth,
Vice-President of Marketing for Stream Machine. “We are convinced that
there is world-wide demand for this technology, and that our combination
of chips, system design, and middleware will enable OEMs to offer the
most cost-effective, branded solution with the highest-quality video
available.”

Metro Link’s Metro-Media PVR Tool Kit

Metro-Media with PVR is a modular and flexible software toolkit that
can be custom-built to individual specifications. The toolkit allows
you to build full-featured PVR solutions quickly without worrying about
the hardware details during application development. The Metro-Media PVR
Tool Kit includes the Metro-Media Device Connection (MMDC) server, and
a variety of hardware support. A typical PVR application will include
modules supporting: Audio/video capture/compression and decompression;
TV tuning (DVB,NTSC,ATSC); TV picture control; User input device; and
Disk Storage; Electronic Program Guides; and PVR Engine.

The MMDC server acts as a communications hub. It routes commands between
the various plug-in modules and provides a unified interface through
which other system components communicate with hardware drivers and with
each other. The PVR engine coordinates activity of the various hardware
modules in order to host PVR functionality, such as: Time-Shifting,
Program Recording, and Disk Space Management. There is also an EPG
Manager, which provides integrated support for TV listing information,
and a complete TV Tool Kit designed to simplify development of user
interfaces optimized for TV output. The optional Universal Plug ‘n Play
module allows remote devices to control the PVR and access the Electronic
Program Guide data using standard UPnP services.

About Stream Machine

Stream Machine is at the heart of digital home entertainment, providing
cost-effective semiconductor solutions that enable industry-leading video
and audio compression. Stream Machine’s proprietary compression technology
offers the highest quality video at the lowest possible bit-rates and is
compatible with all the important consumer standards, including MPEG-2,
MP3, and Dolby Digital. Stream Machine’s high level of integration
provides the low system cost necessary to bring top-quality digital
video and audio entertainment to consumers at a price they can’t resist.
Cirrus Logic recently announced a definitive agreement to purchase Stream
Machine which is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter. For
more information, please visit www.streammachine.com. Phone 408.435.9166
(USA) or 86-10-8453-4071/4075 (Beijing, China).

About Sigma Designs, Inc.

Sigma Designs specializes in silicon-based MPEG decoding for streaming
video, progressive DVD playback, and advanced digital Set-Top Boxes.
The company’s award-winning REALmagic( Video Streaming Technology is used
in both commercial and consumer applications providing highly integrated
solutions for high-quality decoding of MPEG-1, MPEG-2, and MPEG-4.
Headquartered in Milpitas, California, the company also has sales
offices in China, Europe, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea and Taiwan. For more
information, please visit the company’s web site at www.sigmadesigns.com.
Phone 408.262.9003

About Metro Link, Inc.

Metro Link specializes in analog/digital video software solutions,
customer integration support and 2D/3D2d/3d and MPEG support for embedded
systems. Metro Link’s solutions are deployed in single board computers,
system on chip (SOC) devices, internet appliances and set top boxes. Metro
Link also offers a suite of device connectivity solutions focusing on
Universal Plug n Play for consumer electronics, home appliances, white
goods, micro controllers, and computer networking products.

Metro Link’s multi-media infrastructure solutions include Metro-Media
PVR and DVD multimedia software, which provides a complete and scalable
PVR/DVR media support layer and extensible architecture supporting
simultaneous record/playback of video with synchronized audio. To learn
more, visit www.metrolink.com. For more information, please contact Greg Lafferty at greg@metrolink.com, 1-800-821-8315; phone 954-660-2500; fax 954-938-1982.All trademarks are property of their respective holders.

Contact:

Brian Heuckroth
Stream Machine
408.435.7113
brianh@streammachine.com

Ken Lowe
Sigma Designs
408.957.9850
kal@sdesigns.com

Greg Lafferty
Metro Link, Inc.
954.660.2444
greg@metrolink.com

Whither FSF? Group faces more challenges than ever

Author: JT Smith

By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols

What roles do Richard Stallman and the Free Software
Foundation (FSF) really play these days and what roles will they
play in the future? All is not well with Open Source and its older
brother, Free Software. Some Open Source companies, like VA
Linux, are heading to proprietary software development, and Microsoft’s top brass has been throwing the old trinity of fear, uncertainty and doubt at the GPL.

Caldera Systems is moving
away from the FSF vision as fast as its feet can
carry it, and in mid-August, Ulrich Drepper of Red Hat, a
leading Free Software developer and long time critic of the FSF,
denounced Richard M. Stallman, the FSF’s president, in the
glibc 2.2.4 release notes. Never before has the FSF faced so
many varied challenges.

Clearly, the FSF still carries clout. The FSF claimed on
September 14 that FSMLabs had violated the GNU General
Public License in its RTLinux real-time Linux program. By the
following Monday, the FSF and Victor Yodaiken, FMSLab’s CEO had come to an agreement with Yodaiken in a press release declaring that “both sides agreed, in
principle, to a settlement of the dispute and a cessation to
‘hostilities.’ “

Even so, RTLinux wasn’t pleased to have been in the conflict in
the first place. In an earlier NewsForge report, Yodaiken indicated that the issue was a political one at the Free Software Foundation, and he suggested the
foundation is mixing its roles as defender of the GPL and
intellectual property advocate. Cort Dougan, FSMLabs director
of engineering also said on September 18 that “there
were those who were upset with us, and we appreciate their
idealism and enthusiasm. But we’re also ready to move on to
more productive activities.”

This is hardly the first time that the FSF has stepped forward to
defend the GPL, and the other side thought the FSF was
missing the point. But, as Eben Moglen, law professor at Columbia University Law School and pro bono General Counsel of the FSF, points out in his recently published
document, Enforcing the GNU GPL, “Despite the FUD, as a
copyright license the GPL is absolutely solid. That’s why I’ve
been able to enforce it dozens of times over nearly ten years,
without ever going to court.”

Beyond the GPL

Underneath this latest conflict lies the common mistake of
thinking that the FSF and the open software movement have the
same goals. They don’t.

Bradley M. Kuhn, vice president of the FSF, describes the
difference: “The FSF is not affiliated with the Open Source
Movement. We stand strongly for software freedom, and for
the philosophical, ethical, and political issues that arise from a
commitment to fighting for software freedom. By contrast, the
Open Source Movement focuses on the practical and technical
aspects, but avoids the philosophy and ethics.”

He continues: “For the most part, it was ‘Open Source’ that
VA Linux, Caldera, and similar companies signed on to. The
fact that those companies turned to proprietary software when
they couldn’t make as much money as they wanted with purely
Free Software is thus not surprising. This situation is exactly
what we warned the myopic view of Open Source might bring.
Since these companies never took a strong philosophical
stand, we aren’t surprised that when things got tough, they
abandoned the ideals of software freedom (or simply never
signed on to them in the first place).”

It’s not that simple, though, according to Linus Torvalds, Linux’s
creator. “I think the most common misconception people have is
thinking that the ‘Open Source’ group is one group. It isn’t. It’s
never really been that. And it’s equally wrong to think that it is
two groups (the ‘Open Source’ people and the ‘Free Software?’
people). That’s a refinement of the ‘one group’ theory, but it’s
still much too simplistic.”

Torvalds continues” “The fact is that there are a lot of different
people and groups, and they all have their own reasons to get
involved. And people tend to focus on the most vocal, and on
the fringe — the two often overlap strongly — while ignoring all the
shades of color in between. The only thing they have in common
is really that a lot of different people think they get things done
more easily if they work together — even if they really don’t tend
to share any other belief at all.”

Credit where credit is due

That said, Stacey Quandt, Giga Information Group’s associate
analyst for Linux and Open Source, speaks for many when she
observes: “Without the work of RMS and the Free
Software Foundation it is unlikely that Open Source software
would be as broadly used.” Bruce Perens, an Open Source
leader and Hewlett-Packard’s senior strategist for Linux and Open Source,
agrees: “One way that you can measure the effectiveness
of RMS and FSF is to look at licensing and the success of
projects. BSD is a good OS kernel, but Linux gets the attention,
because its licensing includes a good quid-pro-quo for the
developers. RMS invented that quid-pro-quo.”

But what about today? Quandt says, “While the underlying
philosophy of the FSF may be helpful to organizations
considering Open Source products, the highly charged political
agenda of FSF is not. To a large degree, RMS and the FSF have
become a moral compass but for many the ideology is at times
overwhelming and counterproductive to broad enterprise
adoption of Open Source technology.”

Of course, that’s the point. The FSF’s idealistic goals are not the
same as those of Open Source advocates. They never were, they
never will be.

Some, though, think that the FSF’s philosophical position is
diminishing its influence. Torvalds notes, “Does RMS tend
to get enemies with his black-and-white world-view? Sure. He
always has. Ask just about anybody that has known him for
more than ten years: They either hate his guts, or stand by him in
any weather.” And, “Does the FSF have the same kind of
relationships? Yes, although maybe not as strongly as RMS
personally gets.”

He continues: “Does it all really matter? I doubt it does. RMS
and the FSF are the equivalent of the right-wing Christian
coalition — a fringe group, but a group that perhaps exactly
because of its fringeness does sometimes get things done, just
because they believe in their agenda so strongly.”

What’s different now, according to Torvalds, is that “there is a
‘moderate’ group these days, something that didn’t exist ten
years ago. That moderate group is the one that tends to interact
with the rest of the world, and in many ways gets things done
that RMS and the FSF never could have.”

Does the FSF have a future?

Eric Raymond, the Open Source evangelist, isn’t that optimistic
about FSF’s future, saying, “Barring extraordinary
leadership and a major change of direction (which I don’t rule
out; it never pays to underestimate RMS’s intelligence) I think
the FSF looks likely to self-destruct before long.”

In any case, Raymond believes “RMS and the FSF are
facing a steep decline in their influence because they have
developed neither a sufficient practical reply to the Linux kernel
nor a sufficient theoretical reply to the Open-Source rationale and
marketing campaign (‘software that doesn’t suck’) developed by
Torvalds and myself and others. In retrospect it seems pretty
clear to most people (at least a 2:1 ratio, according to a recent
Web-content analysis) that the FSF’s rhetoric actually held us
back for a long time.”

Of course, Raymond’s “us” is Open Source advocates and that’s
not the same thing as FSF’s most hardcore supporters. But Raymond is more than willing to give the FSF credit: “Before the rise of cheap Internet in 1993-1994, the FSF had a vital role independent of its propaganda — it was seen as an essential
incubator, funding source and hosting service for large projects.”

But, he also notes that the FSF has had problems before. “The
EGCS/GCC flap, in which an outside group proved it could do
a better job maintaining one of FSF’s core projects than the
FSF’s own hand-picked designees, pretty much put paid to (the)
theory” that the FSF could do well for hosting large coding
projects, he says. “Since then, I think the community has increasingly
been asking itself. ‘What is the FSF good for?’ and not finding an
answer.”

Not all Open Source advocates though would agree with
Raymond’s assessment of FSF’s capabilities. Perens says,
“The successful (Free Software) projects, for the most part,
happen to be the ones that are closest to RMS’s philosophy. I
just sat through a meeting of Free Software and Open Source
Leaders, and it’s astonishing how little the (Open Source)
‘pragmatists’ can get done. The Open Source Initiative can’t
even keep its Web site up to date.”

Still Raymond believes that “the FSF’s support has been
dwindling to a progressively smaller hard core of True Believers
since 1998. As one might expect from studying similar historical
situations, the effect of this has been a kind of spiral into
fundamentalism; as they tend to take more extreme positions
more loudly, they shed their mainstream sympathizers, which
empowers the radicals to take even more extreme positions.”

To Raymond this “process began with RMS’s insistence on the
‘GNU/Linux’ label. It continued with his attempts to separate
the ‘Free Software Movement’ from the ‘Open-Source
Movement,’ a near-suicidal blunder that gave Microsoft exactly
the opening it was looking for earlier this year until the leaders of
both communities pulled together on a joint statement. The
process has now reached a late stage at which the FSF is
destructively purging itself — Tim Ney and Leslie Proctor, who
were the adult supervision over there, are gone. According to a
disgusted ex-staffer I spoke with at OScon, ‘the inmates have
taken over the asylum.’ “

But what could replace it?

Of course, that’s a matter of opinion. While words can get
heated on both sides, it’s worth noting that part of the conflict
between Open Source and Free Software is because, as Robert J.
Chassell, director and treasurer of the FSF, puts it, “Many of
the people involved in programming are stubborn and difficult.
Unlike salesmen or diplomats, they are not into social harmony.
They fight each other all the time.”

Chassell still sees the FSF as having the same role it has for the
first 17 years of its existence: “Preserve, protect, and
promote the goals of freedom for people who
write, fund, or use software.” In contrast to Raymond, he sees a
groundswell of support for the FSF’s goals. “Yet in spite of difficulties, more and more people support the goal that this industry should be based on freedom.”

Kuhn amplifies this theme: “In the long run, a strong ethical
stance for software freedom is what will improve society. The
FSF works toward a world where all published software is Free
Software. It’s been a hard road this far, and it could very well
get harder before it gets easier. Laws like the DMCA and
UCITA can hamper and stifle Free Software development in
some countries if we don’t fight such laws.”

As for Microsoft and its attacks, Kuhn says: “Microsoft has
realized that users got a taste of software freedom with
GNU/Linux systems, and that users enjoy this freedom.
Software freedom is completely antithetical to Microsoft’s
strategy: Microsoft, and other proprietary software companies,
lock users into proprietary software licenses that
leaves them helpless. These freedoms, that are ensured by the
GNU GPL, are a threat to Microsoft’s plans, so Microsoft
attacks us and berates us.”

And, according to Perens, these attacks aren’t working. “The
consensus seems to be that the Free Software paradigm makes
MS executives say stupid things that they
later have to withdraw. Ballmer (Microsoft’s CEO) had to
withdraw the ‘cancer’ comment. Even Craig Mundie
(Microsoft’s senior vice president of advanced strategies) is
down to, ‘I just want people to be able to make informed
decision.’ “

Disagreements and all, even Raymond thinks that the fall of the
FSF “would be a pity, because I think the increasing number of
people who tend to write the FSF off as useless are actually
*wrong*. There is one important role that it is still uniquely
qualified to play — legal defense foundation and copyright-
holder-of-record for Open-Source software. I don’t know who’s
going to do that if the FSF doesn’t.”

And, perhaps that’s the crux of the matter. While clearly there
are profound philosophical disagreements between extremists on
both sides of the Free Software/Open Source divide, each side
needs the other. The FSF’s GPL and its dogged defense of it is
the legal foundation for some of the most important Open Source
programs, but the Open Source movement is what took Free
Software from academia into the hurly-burly of the business
world.

Regardless of the winners and losers of the politics of Open
Source and Free Software, in the middle ground of the real world,
the programming efforts still bear fruit. As Perens says,
“GNU/Linux system use is still increasing at least 33% per year,
making it by far the fastest growing operating system.” And
that’s true whether you call it Linux or GNU/Linux.

Editor’s note: VA Linux, mentioned in the story, is NewsForge’s corporate parent.

Category:

  • Open Source

Nimda worm spreads three ways

Author: JT Smith

Network World Fusion explains how the Nimda worm infects Microsoft products. Reuters suggests the Nimda worm is worse than Code Red. ZDNet reports that the worm is “double trouble” because it can infect both servers and email.

Category:

  • Linux

Microsoft 1, Justice Department 0

Author: JT Smith

From commentary at ZDNet: “The entire case against Microsoft was bogus from the start, a giant waste of taxpayer money,
pure Clintonesque pandering to the great unwashed, a slap in the face to a company that has
improved our lives and vitalized our nation’s economy. Worse, it has opened a Pandora’s box of
litigation that will hound the company for years, cost billions, and hamstring innovation.” Hey, we didn’t write it.

Category:

  • Migration

Red Hat reports loss, revenue slips

Author: JT Smith

IDG News Service reports on Red Hat’s newest financial report. “Linux software maker Red Hat Tuesday
reported a break-even quarter in terms of
adjusted earnings per share as its revenue
slipped 15% from the same quarter a year ago
in the midst of a slower market for corporate
software.

The maker of the Red Hat Linux open-source
operating system lost $100,000, with flat
earnings per share in the fiscal second quarter,
which ended Aug. 31, after adjusting for
one-time charges.” More from Reuters.

Category:

  • Open Source

KDE cleans up the Linux desktop

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet UK reports that the
KDE Project has released an update to its desktop software for GNU/Linux and other
Unixes, following the launch of KDE 2.2 and KOffice last month.

Category:

  • Open Source