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The Future of Linux panel: Hailstorm is no threat

Author: JT Smith

The Register quotes Linus Torvalds and others at the future of Linux panel discussion at LinuxWorld. Torvalds told audience members they shouldn’t worry about Microsoft’s attempts at a centralized Hailstorm.

” ‘Do not worry, it’s not the issue,’ said Torvalds. ‘If Microsoft is going to tax
everyone on the Internet, don’t think the governments will watch their monopoly on
tax collection go by.’ Nation states have as much power as a single corporation, he
said. ‘Trust in Uncle Sam,’ he said, to great applause.”

Category:

  • Linux

Amiga sells Win, Linux Amiga DE player for $20

Author: JT Smith

The Register has a story saying Amiga plans to charge $19.95 for its answer to the Java Virtual Machine, the Amiga DE
Player, in a bid to win support for its Amiga DE multimedia application environment. The player will run under Windows and Linux and gives both platforms “the ability to
run content developed for Amiga DE.”

Pioneer-Standard offers integrated Linux solutions to the enterprise market

Author: JT Smith

From PRNewswire: Pioneer-Standard Electronics, Inc.’s (Nasdaq: PIOS) Computer Systems Division
(CSD), a leading distributor and reseller of mid-range solutions, today
announced an innovative initiative to deliver Linux solutions and services to
the enterprise and Internet infrastructure markets. Built on Pioneer-
Standard’s expertise in providing hardware, software and services that address
complex business needs, this initiative will provide customers access to
integrated open source systems, in-depth knowledge of Linux coupled with
technical and marketing support.

IMA unveils Solaris/HP-UX-supported IEMS 5.1 at Linux show

Author: JT Smith

Not only does it run on Windows and Linux, but now
it also runs under Solaris and HP-UX operating systems. This is one among the many new
features that International Messaging Associates (IMA) made public during the
launching of its enhanced Internet Exchange Messaging Server (IEMS) 5.1 in the
Mandrake Pavilion at the Linux World Expo.

The enhancement comes less than three months from IEMS 5’s official release last
June. While this may be regarded as exceptional in the industry, it also reflects the
dynamic pace of development in the messaging technology market.

Aside from the added capability and compatibility to run across multiple Operating
Systems, IEMS 5.1 also added features to reinforce user and administrative security as
well customization qualities. To ensure the privacy of confidential data passing
through its system, IEMS 5.1 has added SSL and TLS support for its IMAP4 / POP3
protocols working with an SSL supported Apache server. Meanwhile, by opening up IEMS
5’s preprocessor API, third party developers can now build custom filter modules (such
as archiving agents, content filters, etc), or gateway modules.

Apparently, its thrust to capture the SOHO market has also made IMA re-strategize the
manner by which it is marketing IEMS 5. In a move that what most industry observers
say is a competitive maneuver targeted not only to gain a foothold of the SOHO market
but also gain a share of the Linux market from Sendmail, IMA now offers a free
scaled-down option for IEMS 5.1 – an MTA packaged with a three-user license in its
message store but with several of its key features disabled.

“Market dictates practically defined the kind of enhancements we added in IEMS 5.1”
IMA President Tim Kehres said. “Our inroads to the China market has made us decide to
add a simple and traditional Chinese language support for our Web Mail Client and
Administrative interfaces aside from French, German and Spanish GUIs IEMS5.1 now has.
Offering a three-user free version of IEMS 5.1 is just an option we want to offer SOHO
customers who simply need the bare essentials of a cost-effective messaging system, ”
Kehres said.

IMA sources say that more enhancements can be expected beyond IEMS 5.1. In fact,
Kehres is looking forward to announce plans for an IEMS 6 that are targeting release
in the next two to three months. In relation to this, IMA also announced that it
would be giving free 5.1 upgrades to current IEMS 5 users.

“It is a must to innovate continuously, but we also have to prepare our customers to
cope with the pace with minimal disruptions,” Kehres said.

Sales and Marketing Contacts:
Eric Arandez (jearandez@ima.com)
Justin Villanueva (justin@ima.com)
Toll Free No.: +1 (800) 549-2762
Fax: +1 (888) 562-3561
Website: http://www.ima.com

Skylarov lawyers arrested for circumvention attempt

Author: JT Smith

From the humor site, Segfault: “Dmitri Skylarov’s legal counsel was arrested today for attempting to ‘circumvent’ prosecution of their client, which is apparently illegal under the terms of the DMCA.”

Category:

  • Management

Red Hat CEO pushes Linux in schools

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports on Matthew Szulik’s closing keynote at LinuxWorld. “Linux developers must take some of the time they now devote to
programming and put it toward boosting open-source software in education, Red Hat Chief
Executive Matthew Szulik said Thursday.

Spreading Linux and other open-source software would have obvious benefits for Red Hat, but
Szulik steered listeners’ attention toward more altruistic and patriotic motivations in the closing
keynote address at the LinuxWorld Conference and Expo on Thursday.”

Category:

  • Linux

EFF: Russian programmer and company plead not guilty

Author: JT Smith

Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov
and his employer Elcomsoft today pled not guilty to charges
of providing electronic book format conversion software in
the United States. Sklyarov, who had the benefit of a court
interpreter, spoke the plea himself in English. (Editor: See also a “>press release from Elcomsoft at PR Newswire.)

The court heard a five-count grand jury indictment against
Elcomsoft and previously jailed programmer Sklyarov on
charges of trafficking and conspiracy to traffic in a
copyright circumvention device.

Sklyarov — who is out of custody on US $50,000 bail —
could face a prison term of up to twenty-five years and a
US $2,250,000 fine. As a corporation, Elcomsoft faces a
potential US $2,500,000 fine.

“Dmitry has programmed a format converter which has many
legitimate uses including enabling the blind to hear
eBooks,” explained Cindy Cohn, Electronic Frontier
Foundation Legal Director. “The idea that he faces prison
for this is outrageous. The EFF will support Dmitry through
the end of this ordeal.”

“We were hoping that the government would see the wisdom
and justice in not pursuing a case against Sklyarov,”
said his attorney, Joseph M. Burton of Duane Morris in
San Francisco. “Even if one were to ignore the serious
legal questions involving the DMCA, this case hardly
cries out for criminal prosecution. Sklyarov’s and
Elcomsoft’s actions are not conduct that Congress
intended to criminalize. We will vigorously contest these
charges.”

Sklyarov and his attorneys appeared at the arraignment
with US Magistrate Judge Richard Seeborg presiding.
The next court appearance scheduled in the case is
9:00 AM Pacific on September 4 before Judge Ronald
Whyte in the San Jose Federal Court building.

Well-dressed observers attended the arraignment
and nonviolent protests occurred in Moscow (Russia),
London (England), Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles,
Reno, and Black Rock City, Nevada.

Hundreds of protestors are expected to march today
from the LinuxWorld Conference in San Francisco to the
Federal Court building.

Background on the Sklyarov case:
http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Sklyarov/.

Calendar of protests related to the Sklyarov case:
http://freesklyarov.org/calendar/.

About EFF:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading civil
liberties organization working to protect rights in the
digital world. Founded in 1990, EFF actively encourages and
challenges industry and government to support free
expression, privacy, and openness in the information
society. EFF is a member-supported organization and
maintains one of the most linked-to websites in the world:
http://www.eff.org/.

Copyright office: No big changes to DMCA needed, yet

Author: JT Smith

Reuters on CNet reports on a study by the U.S. Copyright Office. “A study released on Wednesday on how revised U.S. copyright law is
working in the digital age recommends some legislative changes to clarify ‘fair use’ by
purchasers of legal copies.

But the U.S. Copyright Office study did not find sufficient evidence for a digital provision in that
part of traditional copyright law that allows the owner of a legal copy of a work to sell or give it
away.”

Happy birthday to us (or, looking to the future of NewsForge)

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

One year ago, during the LinuxWorld Expo, NewsForge quietly launched as the “Web site of record for the Open Source community.” It doesn’t feel as if a year has passed.

A small group of people, headed by OSDN editor in chief Robin “roblimo” Miller and NewsForge chief programmer Jamie McCarthy, had spent most of the summer of 2000 planning and building NewsForge, and I remember nervously watching the page-view stats that first week as a few hundred readers would show up each day. A year later, those hundreds of readers show up by the hour, sometimes by the minute, when there’s a hot story on the front page.

A database of Open Source news

NewsForge seems to mean a lot of different things to different people (later in this article, a couple of NewsForge staffers comment). I first heard of the NewsForge idea from Robin in the spring of 2000, when he announced to a Web-worker email list, during a discussion on how Web sites could make money, that he was looking for freelancers and some staffers for a new project being launched by what was then called Andover.net. I knew Robin through his common-sense posts on the email list and through his writing and posting on Slashdot, which I read regularly when I was news editor of an online employment site called techies.com.

If I remember right, Robin explained NewsForge as this place where all the news about the Open Source and Free Software communities would reside. In some ways, it would be a database of Open Source happenings as much as it’d be a traditional news site. So, two years from now, someone could go back and find a story about Red Hat’s Q2 2000 financial report. But if NewsForge posted all this news from other sources, Robin thought it only fair that we’d also contribute some news. With a handful of staffers and freelancers, he believed we could eventually build a solid news reporting operation.

What we found is that while the linked stories were often well read, our original reporting usually received many more page views. While there seemed to be a lot of feature- and howto-type writing in publications focused on the Open Source community, there wasn’t a lot of hard news reporting being done, and readers quickly responded to our efforts. As those of us just starting to report for NewsForge began building our source lists and building relationships, we started slow, but it was clear from early on that well-reported original stories would bring us readers.

More feedback than we were used to

Not all readers were immediate fans, of course. Early on, most any article we did that wasn’t entirely positive received its share of criticism. We were accused of being anti-Linux, although we were using Linux to browse and write and do most everything. I remember one poster on another site accusing us of trying to rip off SourceForge’s good name, until someone pointed out that NewsForge and SourceForge are owned by the same company. Early on, Robin told a couple of us who were getting way more feedback than we were used to that we needed to develop much thicker skins.

I’m not trying to say, however, that all criticism of NewsForge is undeserved. I’m proud of NewsForge and the progress it’s made in one year, but we have plenty of room to improve. A few days ago, Robin asked readers what NewsForge should change, and we received several wonderful ideas, both in the article discussion and by email. I want to thank all those readers who cared enough to share their thoughts, and I want to encourage readers to continue to let us know what we’re doing well and what we should do better. Email us at editors@newsforge.com any time you have a comment.

A fun place to work

Back, briefly, to my joining NewsForge, if only because it mirrors the experiences of others here. After I emailed Robin saying I’d be interested in freelancing and perhaps in a staff job if the situation was right, he wrote back quickly asking if I’d be interested in being the managing editor of this thing. The next thing I knew, I was being interviewed and offered the job, and I fell comfortably into this OSDN band of misfits and free thinkers, spread out all over North America, who probably wouldn’t fit in most other corporate environments.

I can’t speak objectively for my performance, but what first appears to be a “hiring-by-feel” standard that Robin uses works pretty well because we’ve gotten good employees from it. Night editor David “cdlu” Graham describes talking to Robin on IRC a couple of times about the NewsForge project before he was hired. News editor Tina Gasperson, who came over from an old Andover.net site, TechSightings, says she got the TechSightings gig as a “just a fluke or maybe destiny” after Robin’s first choice didn’t want her picture taken for the column mug shot. Tina had responded to a note Robin had put on freelance writing email list, and Robin first said he liked her but had hired someone “geekier.”

When Robin wrote back about the picture problem, Tina took the job. “Never one to value privacy over cold hard cash, I immediately accepted and the rest is history,” she says.

What’s my point in this lengthy aside? I still don’t know the process Robin uses to hire people, but I suspect it’s more complicated and researched than “hiring by feel.” There’s a bit of a mystique to it that adds to the environment that makes NewsForge and OSDN a fun and interesting place to work.

Of course, fun and interesting are good and all, but there probably should be a larger purpose for a Web site than to entertain its employees. News editor Dan Berkes emailed me some comments about working at NewsForge that hit both on the fun aspect and on something larger, the connection to the community of readers. A connection with readers is something most every news writer lusts after, even if it sometimes requires a thick skin. One of the loneliest feelings in the world is writing what you think is a compelling article, and then hearing nothing from the readers, positive or negative.

Dan, who came over from Andover.net’s DaveCentral in November 2000, says his feature-writing background made him nervous when he was joining the more hard-news oriented NewsForge. But his nervousness was gone in “about 10 seconds” after joining the NewsForge IRC channel and meeting the veterans. Sounds like he’s sucking up, doesn’t it?

Dan says his most memorable experience was wandering the LinuxWorld New York floor in February with other staffers wearing their NewsForge fedoras. “That fedora attracted quite a few stares from fellow convention-goers, but what surprised me the most was the reaction it received away from the convention,” Dan remembers. “I
went to London right after my time at LinuxWorld, so the hat had to go with me. At least half a dozen people at London’s Gatwick airport stopped to ask me if I worked for NewsForge, and [it got] the attention of an irate raven at the Tower of London. I’m not sure why the raven didn’t like the hat, maybe he was a Microsoft employee.”

Dan continues: “It’s hard — impossible, really — to pick out one thing and say, ‘This is what I really like about NewsForge.’ But if I had to, I would say that for me,
it’s the community response that I love the most. Positive or negative, it is extremely gratifying to hear from the people who read what I’ve written.”

‘Wild ride, but fascinating’

Business columnist Jack Bryar, who came over from the old AndoverNews, notes that NewsForge has chronicled an interesting year to watch Open Source software and businesses.

“NewsForge became the best place to watch Linux go mainstream,” Jack says. “We saw
the major vendors try to take over the marketplace, and largely succeed!
It’s been a stressful year for commercial Linux pioneers, yet stress breeds
creativity. The Open Source community continues to generate more
interesting business concepts than any sector in high tech. I see a new idea every
week. This coming year I hope we’ll see some good business plans to match.
It’s been a wild ride, but fascinating.”

Jack’s last sentence could just as easily been describing NewsForge’s first year as well. In many ways, I hope this process we call NewsForge continues to be a bit of a wild ride, because as noted philosopher Linus Torvalds says, our chosen work should be entertaining.

But I’ll make a promise amid the ups and downs and the successes and failures of this wide-ranging community of people interested in Open Source and Free Software: I promise that NewsForge will continue to cover those news stories as they unfold, to break stories and write thought-provoking commentary you won’t find anywhere else, to continue to be the Web site of record for the Open Source community by linking to every appropriate news story we can find, and to work hard to improve our coverage and the site as a whole. We’ve got some changes on the way, and we always welcome your thoughts on what we can do better.

Category:

  • Linux

Report: IBM, Intel come to aid of struggling SuSE

Author: JT Smith

IDG News Service quotes a newspaper report, which quotes unnamed sources, saying a new round of funding. raising more than U.S. $45 million, has saved the German Linux distribution from insolvancy.

Category:

  • Open Source