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Review: Panasonic SV-SD75 mp3 player disappoints

Author: JT Smith

Daily Radar reviews the Panasonic SV-SD75 mp3 player, and calls it “nearly worthless” thanks to serious flaws and slow transfer times. It uses Real JukeBox for music transfer, which converts mp3s to a proprietary format and takes a long time to transfer to its memory card, not to say it doesn’t have points going for it…

Category:

  • Unix

Thousands download Midori Linux, Linus watches from sidelines

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

Linus Torvalds’ involvement in the just-released Midori Linux project from Transmeta is more as an advisor than as a hands-on coder, but a half dozen other programmers are already working on several improvements to the flavor of Linux designed to run on small devices.

Linux godfather Torvalds’ employer released the 1.0.0-beta1 version of Midori Linux, formerly called Mobile Linux, on March 13 and developers are already working on a new init and boot system using Richard Gooch’s simpleinit; on improving the configuration programs for the kernel and Xfree86; and on adding Suspend-to-RAM to ACPI.

Daniel Quinlan, the Midori project manager at Transmeta, said the stripped-down Linux software bundle, which includes a build system, a Linux kernel with memory- and storage-conserving features, and system-level support for normal Linux software on embedded platforms, started as a customized version of Debian Potato. “We quickly discovered that customizing a distribution was not the way to go,” he said. “In short, distributions are designed for a system with lots of memory and a hard drive, at least when compared to an internet appliance or a Web pad.”

The project has generated a lot of press although a couple of other mobile Linux projects already existed, in part because Linux creator Torvalds works at Transmeta. Torvalds created cramfs and ramfs, which are part of the project, “and, of course, he helps us out with kernel-related stuff,” Quinlan said. “Right now, Linus is more focused on Linux 2.4 development and other projects within Transmeta.”

Quinlan said the interest level hasn’t come just from the media. “A lot of people have joined the mailing lists on SourceForge and several projects have indicated their interest in using Midori,” he said.

Within two days of Midori’s release Tuesday, about 1500 developers had downloaded the major pieces of Midori, and about half of that number downloaded what Quinlan calls “all” of Midori — about 150MB of software. About 4200 people downloaded the 37KB top-level package, which includes the documentation and the top-level Makefile.

“If you’re trying to put Linux on a small device, such as an internet appliance, an MP3 player, a router box, or whatever, Midori Linux might be the base software for getting your project going,” Quinlan said, in sales pitch mode. “It’s also well done, of course.”

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Category:

  • Linux

Zero-Knowledge slashes staff

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that yet another company is slashing jobs. Zero-Knowledge is slashing as many as 70 of its 250 positions in an effort to restructure.

Category:

  • Open Source

E-mail for life

Author: JT Smith

The Washington Post analyses the problem of changing email addresses and how people who change their email addresses lose their ’email identity’ behind. The solution? E-mail for life.

The future of cell (or mobile) phones

Author: JT Smith

Tech Review documents the history of cell phones and their future progress, predicting that by 2003, nearly all cell phones will have some form of Internet access, and by 2005, there will have been some 1.7 billion cell phones sold.

Router failure causes email problem in 30 US states

Author: JT Smith

Computer World reports that a failed Verizon router affected email service to customers in 30 states. The problem was described as a flapping problem, where email could only be read when the ‘flap was open’.

Compaq joins job-cut frenzy, slashes 5,000 jobs

Author: JT Smith

Computer World reports that Compaq has added its name to the list of corporations cutting staff, with the announcement on Thursday that it will cut 5,000 positiions and consolidate.

Category:

  • Open Source

Open Group announces open-source Manageability Services Broker

Author: JT Smith

Internet Wire reports that the Open Group announced “Open Source Manageability Services Broker,” in what they are hoping will contribute to the growth of open source management structure.

Category:

  • Open Source

Apple to pull out of Sears

Author: JT Smith

CNET News.com report that Apple and Sears have decided to “mutually part ways,” citing slow sales and a shift in retail strategey that sees the Cupertino computer maker opening its own line of stores across North America later this year. This will be the second time in less than five years that Apple has severed its relationship with Sears — and both times citing disappointing revenues as the cause.

Category:

  • Linux

Linux standardization efforts move ahead

Author: JT Smith

“The effort to standardize the way Linux works has moved several steps closer to reality in the last two weeks. The effort, through Linux Standard Base (LSB) and several other projects, is Linux’s answer to avoiding some of the fragmentation that split Unix–the operating system upon which Linux is modeled–into several incompatible versions. That fragmentation is one of the reasons Microsoft was able to make such progress with its more unified Windows products.” More at CNET News.com.

Category:

  • Linux