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Independence Linux wants to rise like a Phoenix

Author: JT Smith

– by Tina Gasperson
Independence Linux, or Indy, as is it affectionately known by the developers, is billed as the distribution that belongs to “all of us.” The coders who are working on this project liken themselves to the revolutionaries who broke free from the aristocracy of Great Britain, saying, “It is built by volunteers who no longer accept having an aristocracy of distribution designers providing solutions who have little relation to the problems faced by us, Linux users. It is built by people who don’t accept that present distributions time and again neglect two areas who are vital for Linux future: the desktop and the personal computer.”

Indeed, the distro’s logo enhances the revolution theme, showing a classic liberty figure raising a banner emblazoned with Tux. Project originator Jean Francois Martinez has recently resurrected the team’s efforts. “At one point I became disheartened and Indy has been frozen for
months. However it happens I think something like Indy is needed so I
just cannot let it die,” he says with renewed passion.

It is important that Linux is not restricted only to use by computer royalty — programmers and others who truly understand the guts of an operating system, he says. “It is because RMS, Linus and their likes were willing to share with mere mortals like us that we are able to use — for free — the software jewels created. That is why I will never be able to endure those who say they don’t want to share Linux with those people they call the ‘unwashed masses’ and why I precisely want that: bring Linux to everyone.”

But Martinez also seems to realize that distros are becoming a “seen Red Hat, seen ’em all” phenomenon. He wants to make sure that Independence is truly … independent enough to warrant its existence. He wants to examine other distributions, find out where they are going wrong, and make Indy right.

“I think there is a need for a not-for-profit distribution,” says Martinez, “made by people who are strongly militant about spreading Linux and about helping other users with their problems (perhaps because they were bitten by these problems in the past), people who live the same reality than the users and thus will provide them the right answers.”

Martinez says that most developers are “out of touch with reality,” that they live in “another world” as compared to users and they assume that the people who will be using Linux distributions are as knowledgeable as they are. Martinez plans to change all that.

Right now, he is debating with other interested potential developers about which existing distribution to base Indy on. “The problem with Red Hat is that it basically sucks for desktop and home computers, plus its installer is no longer really state of the art. Mandrake has a wonderful installation and a very good softare selection. But many software vendors still don’t take it seriously
and thus they get no ports (i.e. software will run but could require
tweaking and it will not be supported by vendor). Also at times they
do things I consider dangerous or having a negative effect.” Red Hat had no immediate comment on Martinez’s criticisms.

Other would-be team members have different opinions about the wisdom of creating a new distribution, saying that users would be better served by having patches and applications available to enhance existing distributions, especially focusing on Red Hat, and convincing them to look at Independence as a collaborator instead of a competitor.

And the debate continues. Martinez has one coder committed to working with him so far, and admits the task of creating a new distribution will be difficult to accomplish with so little help. “I cannot set ambitious goals and for now there are far more immediate tasks at hand like putting the web site in working order, explaining what Indy’s goals are,” and perhaps most important right now, “clean up the recruitment page” in order to explain the project and attract more team members.

The project site is located at independence.seul.org, and you can reach Jean Francois Martinez at jfm2@club-internet.fr.

NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.

Category:

  • Linux

Dialtone Internet responds to hosting victims’ needs

Author: JT Smith

From InternetWire.com: Dialtone Internet, a leading provider of Linux dedicated hosting and
colocation solutions, announced today a unique promotion to help sufferers
of natural and hosting disasters. This special offer provides a 50% discount
on the first month fees for all dedicated servers and managed security
services. The promotion is not limited to blackout victims, but extends to all server, weather, and provider
casualties.

IBM’S Linux-compatible AIX 5L to ship in May

Author: JT Smith

Linuxgram reports that IBM to make avialable for general release its AIX 5L operating system May 4. “Blue has had an early issue out since, oh, maybe October, but the widgetry that went to limited non-production
distribution didn’t have all the bells and whistles that the general release is supposed to carry. It didn’t, for instance,
have the precedent-breaking Linux Affinity capability that gives AIX 5L its name. Well, at least the ‘L.’

AIX 5L … is
supposed to run Linux applications after they’re recompiled. “

Category:

  • Linux

Egenera lifts veil on new server architecture

Author: JT Smith

From a Linuxgram story: “Start-up server house Egenera has appropriated the name PAN for the new kind of architecture it’s designed for its
so-called BladeFrame box. The fledgling says PAN means Processing Area Network architecture. The design is supposed to integrate the
processing, networking, management and high-availability functionality currently dispersed across server
hardware, operating systems and data networks and create a new approach to deploying and managing processing
capacity.”

Category:

  • Unix

Security advisory for HylaFAX

Author: JT Smith

From LWN.net: The HylaFax program hfaxd(8c) implements the server part of the
HylaFax package. It is started either by inetd(8) or runs in
standalone mode. hfaxd(8c) offers three different protocols to
process fax jobs.
When hfaxd(8c) tries to change to it’s queue directory and fails,
it prints an error message via syslog by directly passing user
supplied data as format string. As long as hfaxd(8c) is installed
setuid root, this behavior could be exploited to gain root access
locally.

Category:

  • Linux

Hail to the Open Source movement

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet’s AnchorDesk reviews two recent ZD stories, one on Samba and the other on Gnome and KDE. Says the dudes at AnchorDesk: “Linux is shaping up, day by day, as the best hope yet in challenging Microsoft’s hegemony.” The growth of Linux also “underscores the growing effectiveness and validity of the open-source movement …”

Category:

  • Open Source

Deploying Web applications to Tomcat

Author: JT Smith

From the people at O’Reilly: “Apache’s Jakarta-Tomcat server is an open source Java-based Web
Application container that was created to run Servlet and JavaServer
Page (JSP) web applications. In O’Reilly Network’s ‘Using Tomcat’
series, author James Goodwill previously has explained how to install
and configure Tomcat. His latest article provides in-depth information
about how to deploy it, and I thought you might be interested.” The story’s at OnJava.com.

TuxBox project has new Web site

Author: JT Smith

Aaron Rogers, the webmaster for the TuxBox project, writes to tell us: “I just wanted to let you know that we launched a new website for the
TuxBox
Project: http://www.tuxboxproject.com/.”

Security update to sendfile

Author: JT Smith

Posted at LWN.net: Colin Phipps and Daniel Kobras discovered and fixed several serious
bugs in the saft daemon `sendfiled’ which caused it to drop privileges
incorrectly. Exploiting this a local user can easily make it execute
arbitrary code under root privileges.

Category:

  • Linux

Transmeta beats analysts by a penny in first quarter

Author: JT Smith

InfoWorld has more information about Transmeta’s quarterly report.The chip-maker reported a first-quarter loss of $13.2 million, but beat Wall Street earnings estimates by a penny a share. If you want the news straight from Transmeta, here’s a press release on Businesswire.

Category:

  • Open Source