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IBM’s embrace of Linux a little too tight, says analyst

Author: JT Smith

Network World Fusion warns that “IBM’s strategy to beef up Linux for the enterprise could increase the tension between the computer giant and the open-source community, according to an analyst.”

Category:

  • Linux

Leaky Windows, higher rates

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet has a short item saying one insurance company is charging Windows NT users $500 more a year for “hacking insurance” than Linux users. It’s basically the same story as has been written on other ZD sites previously.

Category:

  • Linux

Professor to delve into anti-copying flaws

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports that Security Digital Music Initiative hacker and Princeton Professor Edward Felten will present his findings Wednesday, “a presentation that the entertainment industry once warned
could violate federal copyright laws.”

Linux game maker Loki runs out of cash

Author: JT Smith

Eurogamer.net (via The Register) follows up on the Loki bankruptcy filing. The story wonders why someone would pay for a game ported to Linux months after the Windows release.

IBM: Open standards important for ‘dynamic e-business’

Author: JT Smith

eWeek reports on a couple of speeches by IBM people at its solutions conference, with IBM execs saying open standards are important to its dynamic e-business initiative, and Linux is important to the company’s future.

Category:

  • Open Source

IBM unleashes supercomputing champ

Author: JT Smith

CNet has a story saying IBM and the U.S. federal government will unveil the world’s most powerful supercomputer, called ASCI White, Wednesday.

Category:

  • Unix

OpenBSD loadable kernel modules

Author: JT Smith

The OpenBSD Journal (at Deadly.org) has an article on loadable kernel modules in OpenBSD. The tutorial explains system call modules and explains loadable device drivers and virtual file system modules, among other things.

Mob Software: The Erotic Life of Code

Author: JT Smith

The first-person essay is at DreamSongs.com. “Over the years I’ve despaired that the ways we’ve created to build software matches less and less well
the ways that people work effectively. More so, I’ve grown saddened that we’re not building the range of
software that we could be, that the full expanse of what computing could do-to enhance human life, to
foster our creativity and mental and physical comfort, to liberate us from isolation from knowledge, art,
literature, and human contact-is left out of our vision. It seems that high-octane capitalism has acted like
an acid or a high heat to curdle and coagulate our ways of building software into islands that limit us.”

Category:

  • Migration

Redmond Linux: Stripped-down Linux business aims at desktop newbies

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

A small Linux distribution with big goals and a catchy name is celebrating a milestone this month, as Redmond Linux plans to release a new build by the end of August.

Redmond Linux, aimed at desktop users new to Linux, hit its code complete stage a couple of weeks ago and will go into UI freeze in a couple of weeks, says project founder and company CTO Joseph Cheek. (Editor: The Redmond Linux site was having some ISP problems Tuesday evening.)

For months, technology commentators have been wondering if Linux can survive on the desktop, especially since GUI startup Eazel closed its doors in May. This month, Dell’s U.S. operations announced it would stop bundling Linux on PCs, and just this week, Linux gaming company Loki Software filed for bankruptcy.

But the small group of coders mostly working on Redmond Linux in their off hours believe they can improve on the Linux desktop experience, despite all the bad news.

“Our goal, simply put, is the ever-elusive Linux desktop,” says Rick Collette, v.p. of marketing and coder for Redmond Linux, and founder of the embedded deepLinux project, now merged with Redmond Linux. “How are we going to reach that goal? We have all the time in the world, something many other companies don’t have. See, we have no infusion, seed, venture, or other funding, and no one to answer to for it. I pump what
little money I have into keeping the infrastructure going, and saving here
and there so that we can produce CDs.”

This bare-bones approach to building a Linux business seems to be working for Redmond Linux, named after the city Cheek and closed-source software giant Microsoft both call home. (He gives a couple of other reasons for the name, too: “I expect this software product to cater to, and learn from the experiences of Windows users,” and “I wanted a name that people could remember, and that would be
distinct.”)

The project, started in June 2000 when Cheek just “started coding,” now has five core people and a handful of volunteers through the Internet. In April, Redmond Linux shipped its beta 3 version. The distro’s installer is based on Caldera’s Lizard, but the rest of Redmond Linux is built pretty much from the kernel up, Collette says.

“The bottom line on Redmond Linux is that we’re focusing on the product itself before we focus on the finance,” Collette says. “We’re all working for free because we love what we’re doing.”

The distribution has several goals, including, of course, “ease of use for people used to Windows,” Collette says. The Redmond Linux coders also want seamless filesystem integration with other operating systems on a network, and a full suite of working applications.

Collette calls a lack of applications “the stopping point for most
everyone” who’s used Linux in the past. “We’ve made sure that you can import documents from the popular office suite(s), that you can read PDFs, that if you go to a Web site that has Real Audio, you don’t need to download anything to play the media
stream, and that other little things like Flash work right after installation of the OS,” he says.

Redmond Linux also will include an application update tool similar to Windows Update, and a Game Pack of the most popular games for Linux, Collette says.

“Games are a major shortcoming for Linux,” he adds. “Although, with companies like
Loki, and the thousands of free games available, I think that Linux cannot be ignored for long as a gaming platform. In preparation for the inevitable turn towards Linux for the game producers, we’ve begun creation of the Game Pack for Redmond Linux. This pack will come with several of the more popular games, a slick installer, and merge itself
with with RL Update program to insure delivery of the latest games and their
libraries.”

He adds, “I keep harping on the fact that we’re updating libraries because for
most people, they see this game … think to themselves, ‘I
have GOT to play that,’ then start the long trek of finding all of the
libraries the developer used, discover a few that were not listed in
the INSTALL file, get fed up, and quit trying. We want people to have fun with Linux. We don’t want people saying, ‘well, Linux sucks because it took three hours to download all this stuff, and I don’t know how to compile it, and I’m frustrated.’ “

Collette says a server OS is on the horizon for Redmond Linux, as well as a professional-looking package for the distro. “What’s next? We dip deeper into our own pockets to get a box and manual made,” he says. “Then we go into production. Once that happens we’ll have a LITTLE extra time to start looking for financial help.”

Category:

  • Linux

IBM unveils developer tool for Linux

Author: JT Smith

eWeek reports that IBM will release a free tool development kit, WebSphere Studio Workbench, for Linux developers

Category:

  • Linux