Author: JT Smith
Category:
- Unix
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Yesterday, I met a couple of people from the NYLug who were there because they wanted to be. Since they had no corporate sponsors, or anything along those lines, the only reason they were there was because they were in the area. They were two in a crowd of many who think that Open Source is the future, and something that they want to be a part of. I say this because in the face of big money and corporate goals and ideals, these people manage to “keep the faith,” and not be tainted by corporate strategies and other things that many people believe have no place in Open Source. While convergence of Open Source and business is the obvious end to the Open Source movement, while this happens we stand to lose a lot, too. I remember installing Slackware from a box of 3.5″ floppies on my 386SX machine. I remember thinking over what I great idea Open Source was, and how I wanted to be a part of it. This is why I made my eventual move to write about Linux hardware, because the community did not really have anyone covering hardware under Linux, and I thought maybe in my small way I could help out. In the end, that is what it should be all about — helping out.
The most amazing thing is that I am starting to see evidence of small non-profit organizations of volunteers start to cooperate in positive ways with big companies in various projects. The companies even contribute workers to the projects, and full-time programmers can seriously help smaller projects. This is positive, because these companies are learning to work with these projects without swallowing them whole. This gives me hope that while some say the Open Source movement has lost out in this movement towards corporate acceptance, it may acctually be gaining quite a bit.
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Stardock Corp. has complied with part of the request.
Author: JT Smith
However, some companies, even at a Linux event, still don’t quite get that many Linux users simply don’t like Microsoft, and certainly do not want to see their products being used to demonstrate the “Linux strategy” of a company. A few companies are perpetrators of such crimes, and I saw a few getting flak for this, such as one company who had Powerpoint running in Windowed-mode in their booth.
From the horse’s mouth
I talked to several companies to get first-hand information from their on what exactly their companies are doing with Open Source software, and what plans they have. 3Com discussed the support available for most of their desktop and some of their PCMCIA line of NICs. When asked about their PCMCIA 802.11 cards which are not supported under Linux, the 3Com people said that they couldn’t give a date but they were “sure” it would be worked on.
A company with a large presence for a company of its type was Adaptec. Adaptec had a booth demonstrating the video-decompression/compression equipment of one of its customers that uses an 11-channel custom-built product from Adaptec to deliver HDTV content. This system runs on FreeBSD and is used by major content providers, such as HBO, to run HDTV transmissions. The display was quite impressive, and the fact that it was an Open Source implentation was even more impressive.
Adaptec was also one of several companies to announce a site devoted to supporting people who run their products on Linux and other Open Source operating systems. The Adaptec folks said they wanted to “provide products the community can rely on,” which seems to be truly important to Adaptec because the company has quite a reputation to uphold.
Compaq also had a large presence at the show. At its booth the company was demonstrating servers and laptops running on Linux, as well as one very special device that can run on Linux, the iPaq handheld. With a distribution of Linux provided in cooperation with Handhelds.org, the iPaq can run applications designed for Linux with just a small amount of recompiling and in some cases minor recoding. The Handhelds.org representative present at the Compaq booth said Compaq was extremely cooperative, providing the technical documentation for the iPaq device, an action some hardware companies could definately learn from. Compaq was also another company that debuted an Open Source Web site to feature its products.
Taking Linux seriously
The number of hardware companies at this event clearly demonstrates that, to the business world, Linux has come of age. No longer can people say that Linux is simply a hobbyist operating system created by a group of rag-tag programmers. Now it is a professional, scalable business operating system, created by a group of rag-tag programmers.
For those Microsofties who had hoped to brush Linux under the carpet, this is unfortunate, but for everyone else the advancement of Linux in business is definately a positive move, allowing companies a reliable alternative to Microsoft-based solutions.
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Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith