Home Blog Page 9542

Icepack — how cool is this?

Author: JT Smith

Avatar writes: “Evil3d has been hard at work on another Linux distro review. Under inspection is Icepack Linux. A small snip:
“Flashing a new image of Tux is one thing, but what does the new Linux distro, Icepack, actually bring to the table besides the cute new hat? Can it support your latest hardware? Does it have up-to-date software and packages? Is the installation ripped off from someone else, or did they do something unique? In this review, we plan to find all this out and more. And, just because this is Icepack’s first time out doesn’t mean we’ll go easy on them either.”

All the gory details can be found here.

But, we didn’t stop there. We also have a matching HOWTO for setting up NVIDIA cards under Icepack. (For 3D support of course!)”

Category:

  • Linux

Wireless Agenda 2001: What was left unspoken

Author: JT Smith

by Jack Bryar
Open Source Business

One of the most difficult things to teach
journalists to look for is the thing that didn’t happen. Any
writer can sit in a conference or a meeting a faithfully record all the
discussion. Quotes are easy to come by. It’s easy to describe. Such a story can
write itself. But what did happen at an event may not be nearly as important
as what didn’t happen. Things that were said at a meeting or conference
may be dwarfed in importance compared to what was left unspoken.This week features a story full of who hasn’t been at a conference
and what wasn’t being said there.

The venue is Wireless
Agenda 2001
this week in Dallas, Texas. This is the
big policy and planning conference of all the movers and shakers of the Cellular
Telecommunications and Internet Association
(CTIA). The CTIA is the
business face of wireless. Virtually every corporate entity involved
with cellular telecom, wireless Internet and PDA development
is connected to the CTIA, whether it is a maker of handheld phone
equipment, a designer of communication satellites or a designer of PDA software.

Like any other trade group, the CTIA spends a lot of time lobbying
and occasionally defending the indefensible. The group fights to persuade
regulators to understand why we need less radio spectrum for TV and radio and more spectrum for
wireless devices. Its people testify before the Senate panel trying to
explain away all those statistics about car crashes and cell phone use. They
defend their membership.

However, the CTIA is more than a lobby. It also tries to alert
its members about important trends and policies. More than most trade
groups, it attempts to be a repository of market research and technical
information. Its annual conference, called Wireless Agenda, is the
place where that kind of information gets presented.
It’s where market leaders in the wireless arena will gather the
information they need to make decisions about what technologies,
partners and markets to bet their companies on. White papers presented there
about business and technical issues will actually get read.

For months, the CTIA had been looking for papers on operating platforms and system architecture,
on XML, on platform interoperability, application development, devices
and business models — all issues that ought to be dear to the hearts of
Open Source developers. Because the focus of this years conference was
alliances, and because many of the attendees were looking for developers to partner
with, Linux and open platform integrators might have sought out some exposure
here. But Wireless Agenda is more of a talking shop than a show. There
were relatively
few exhibitors
. So it appears that most Open Source evangelists
didn’t understand the significance of the conference … and passed on it.

At least one Open Source company made a presentation. Lutris
Technologies showed up
and attempted to spread the gospel of Open
Source and XML, but there weren’t many others.

G.mate was missing, although its Yopy product represents the type of
integrated voice and data systems that most attendees wanted to hear
about.

PointBase may not be everyone’s definition of an Open Source
company, but it is “open to Open Source partners.” And, although the company is among the
most enthusiastic developers of J2ME, the Java platform for mobile devices, PointBase wasn’t presenting. Too bad, because the company had a compelling
story to tell this audience.

DevelopOnline is less
ambiguous in its commitment to Open Source. Its business model is to be a remote
development platform for PDA and wireless equipment and other
telecommunications applications. The firm must want to reach out to
would-be partners in the wireless space.

All of these companies, and many other Open Source developers could
have made compelling presentations to wireless corporate executives and opinion
leaders that assembled in Dallas had they been there.

Instead, presentations were dominated by companies like Broadbeam
— a very good but very proprietary systems developer committed to Windows
and Palm. The few mentions of Linux to be found were on developer line
cards, which mentioned upcoming support for the operating system along with Palm, Windows CE, and any other operating system ever considered appropriate for wireless
or handheld devices. My favorite among these was CIBER, the makers of
“.com in a box” one of the very few companies I am aware of who could characterize their product as “built using Cisco, Linux, Microsoft, Verio” and “bundled
with reliable products and services from … Microsoft Corp.”

Were Open Source developer right to pass on this conference? Was
this the wrong program/wrong audience, or was was this a missed opportunity? Was
this a blown chance to evangelize Open Source before a community looking
for common development platforms? Was this a lost exposure opportunity
for Open Source integrators looking to get before an audience composed
of people looking for development partners?

Admittedly, no company can go to every show or conference that
someone decides to put on. Small, financially strapped companies (and that
would include nearly all Linux companies) have to think carefully before
committing resources to programs such as Wireless Agenda, or any other conference,
for that matter.

Nevertheless, marketing an idea is different than showing up a trade
show and showing off a box or piece of code. The wireless community is
ready to hear some straight talk about how to get third-party
development into overdrive and how to get dozens of underdeveloped niche
technologies to work together. It’s a natural applications area for the Open Source
development model.

But somebody has to show up to spread the word.

Sony chooses Transmeta, again

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports that Sony is choosing the Transmeta Crusoe processor for a second line of Vaios, after using it in their earlier Vaio models last year.

Category:

  • Unix

TUXIA releases toolkit for its embedded Linux software

Author: JT Smith

Yahoo! has a press release from TUXIA announcing the launch of a professional development toolkit: TUXIA Synthesis Envioronment v3.0, to enable easy, full-scale customization of TUXIA’s TASTE (TUXIA Appliance Synthesis TEchnology).

A book for KDE enthusiasts

Author: JT Smith

Linux Journal reports on the book “Programming KDE 2.0: Creating Linux Desktop Applications”.

NCSA to host ‘Linux Revolution’

Author: JT Smith

Linux Journal reports that the NCSA (National Computational Science Alliance) will be holding a Linux users’ and system administrator’s conference from June 25th to June 27th in Urbana, Ill. (US).

Category:

  • Linux

How does the capitalist view Open Source?

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes, “Open Source advocates are often embarrassed at the suggestion that their favorite type of software may be a socialistic phenomenon.

Though they protest, many secretly fear it may be true. The sharing aspect of Open Source, its emphasis on community and its availability free of charge certainly sound like some form of Socialism. And Open Source doesn’t lend itself easily to commercial exploitation. Is it anti-capitalist, then?” The column is at osOpinion.

Category:

  • Open Source

TV encoder for Intel platform eyes gateway use

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes “http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20010515S0049:

This chip will end up driving the TV-out for the Nokia MT.”

Category:

  • Unix

Linux pioneer Eazel closes shop

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Linux GUI startup Eazel has closed its doors, confirming earlier rumours.

Category:

  • Open Source

CrossOver Plugin puts any Windows-based plug-in into hands of Linux developers

Author: JT Smith

NewsForge had the story last week, but PR Newswire now has a press release: CodeWeavers, Inc., the leading
Windows-to-Linux software developer, has announced the availability of
CrossOver Plugin, the first in a family of products that extend the reach and
power of the Linux operating system running on portable and handheld devices.
The Plugin lets anyone create a complete Web browsing experience for users by
accessing Windows plug-ins, such as Quicktime and Shockwave Director, on small
footprint computing devices that run Linux or other Unix-like operating
systems.