Home Blog Page 9565

Web review: Linux Island and what looks credible

Author: JT Smith

By Tina Gasperson
We did some checking on Linux Island a couple of months ago when the Linuxgruven deal was going down. The SAIR rep we talked to was completely positive about LinuxIsland’s good standing as an Accredited Center of Education (ACE). Anyone who visits the Linux Island Web site might come away with a different impression.Remember the Web back in the mid ’90’s? No one expected much then, and all you had to know was a few HTML tags to get by. Animated GIFs were state-of-the-art technology. This site looks like a throwback to those days. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, except 1) this is a business, 2) this is a tech business, 3) this is a tech business with a huge prejudice to overcome.

In case you’re not familiar with the whole she-bang, Linux Island arose from the ashes of training company Linuxgruven’s crash and burn; the company is headed up by a former Linuxgruven instructor. For many who had their wings scorched by the shenanigans of Hibbits and Lebb (the duo who ran Linuxgruven and by most accounts didn’t deliver on promises made), the business strategy is way too close to Linuxgruven’s: Place ads looking for inexperienced IT workers who want to make $45,000 a year; get them to take (and pay for) the training and certification; and send those workers out on a contract basis to companies who want to set up their intranets on Linux servers.

Starting out with that strike against it, and having had to field many, many questions and accusations already, common sense would seem to cry out for a professional-looking Web site (among other things). And by professional we don’t mean crazy flash-splash pages or misty-edged jpegs of satisfied business people. No, all we ask for is clean, simple layout and clear navigation.

What we found frightened us:

A bright royal blue background with a big, cheesy setting sun and a silhouetted penguin floating in the center of it, with its wings spread as though it were trying to fly up and snag a coconut off the equally cheesy silhouetted palm tree that does double-duty as the “L” in Linux Island. This logo looks amateurish at best — like something pieced together from Microsoft Office clip art. An animated “under construction” GIF would be perfect on this page.

Linux Island could redeem itself by providing well-crafted and useful content — but sadly it doesn’t. A look at the “What Is Linux?” page turned up text rife with grammatical and punctuation errors; while mistakes can and do happen to the best of us, a company that concerns itself with education should take time to make sure that its content is correct. The “Our Education Island” page didn’t make us any happier. There’s a big, silly graphic right in the middle of the page, and no usable content. Same for “Our Service Island,” and “Our Support Island.” If we were looking for Linux IT management, support, OR education, we’d turn tail and run in the opposite direction after looking at this.

And that’s sad, not only for Linux Island, but for Linux as a whole. We need to be able to show a good face to a world that is used to the slickness of Microsoft. We don’t want to give Redmond any ideas, but they could use the Linux Island site as an advertisement for their cause.

Category:

  • Linux

Programmers: Otters with rocks?

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet’s Stephan Somogyi: “Reading Unreal developer Tim Sweeney’s exegesis on programming languages
about a year ago brought back many memories. Having recently re-read it, it started
me thinking about what the next step in programming language evolution is going to
be.”Reading Unreal developer Tim Sweeney’s exegesis on programming languages
about a year ago brought back many memories. Having recently re-read it, it started
me thinking about what the next step in programming language evolution is going to
be.”

Ximian Setup Tools 0.4.0 released

Author: JT Smith

Linux Weekly News posts an announcement: The Ximian Setup Tools (aka “Perris Valley”) 0.4.0 are now available. “The Ximian Setup Tools are a set of cross-platform configuration utilities
for Linux and other Unices. Internally they are divided in a frontend and
backend, the frontends knows nothing about the underlying system and provides
the same user interface across the different types of systems. The backend
knows how to read and write configuration information. The Ximian Setup Tools
do not impose a new database on the system, they work with the default
configuration files so that configuration can still be done by hand or by
other tools.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Transmeta sees Japan as backdoor to US market

Author: JT Smith

The fastest route to the American portable computer market may be by way of Japan. Transmeta is concentrating on getting its low-powered chips into the notebook computers made by Japanese companies, and gaining a “backdoor” into the U.S. computer market. The latest Japanese design win for the California firm will place its Crusoe processor in Toshiba’s Libretto “sub-notebook” computer. Toshiba joins Hitachi, NEC, Fujitsu, Casio, Sony, and Sharp in the list of Japanese companies supporting Transmeta’s design. Full story at IDG.

Category:

  • Unix

HP selects Debian as its “design center”

Author: JT Smith

Linux Weekly News posts a message from Bruce Perens: HP has announced that Debian is their “design center”. In other words,
Debian is the selected development platform for Linux work at HP. The
target of HP’s development is all LSB-compliant distributions, including
Debian, Red Hat, Turbo, etc. But because of its status as the development
platform, Debian works out to be “first among equals.””

Category:

  • Linux

Why OpenBSD will never be as secure as Linux

Author: JT Smith

SecurityPortal: “I’m not here to bash OpenBSD specifically. Security is an extremely
complex subject with a variety of definitions. This article is an attempt to
educate people about the need to specifically evaluate their security needs when choosing and configuring an
operating system.”

Category:

  • Linux

Embedded Linux Newsletter

Author: JT Smith

LinuxDevices.com has the latest edition of the Embedded Linux Newsletter. In this issue: a recap of last week’s Microsoft “Open Source is evil” speech (and the response it generated), DevelopOnline’s new Java stack, word of new IPv6 routers from Edge, and an update on the Real-time and Embedded Systems Forum. Also: new conferences, seminars, and courses for embedded Linux.

Category:

  • Linux

Red Hat to go solely with Mozilla browser

Author: JT Smith

When Mozilla reaches 1.0 status, Red Hat plans to drop Netscape from the bundle of programs included with its Linux distribution. The company says that Mozilla’s Open Source is better suited to its Linux offering. Also in this report from ZDNet: new service and support products for Red Hat enterprise customers.

Category:

  • Open Source

Go extreme, programmatically speaking

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot : “The O’Reilly Network is featuring An Introduction to Extreme Programming, by
Chromatic (of Slashdot and PerlMonks fame). ‘The central tenet is, “Find the essential
elements of creating good software, do them all of the time, and discard everything else.”
Programmers should program and make schedule estimates. Managers should make business decisions.
Customers should choose the features they want and rank them by importance.'”

In their own words: MPAA vs. 2600 court transcript

Author: JT Smith

Find out who said what in the recent MPAA vs. 2600 appeal hearing. Cryptome has the full transcript.