Author: JT Smith
ICANN to face US Congress hearing over TLD selection
Transmeta to launch 1 GHz Crusoe this year
Author: JT Smith
Category:
- Unix
For Linux, it’s the desktop, stupid
Author: JT Smith
market as simply a competitive challenge. To many of us, the thought of Linux dominating the desktop truly is an
escape from tyranny. And we don’t care if we end up running one brand of Linux, several brands of Linux, or a
big mix of Linux and the various free BSDs.”
Category:
- Linux
Palmisano’s plan: Get on board for Linux
Author: JT Smith
“Palmisano’s message: Get on board with Linux and you will
find yourself selling more hardware, software, middleware and
services. The opportunity for solution providers is huge … “
Category:
- Linux
Friedman talks of plans for Ximian Gnome
Author: JT Smith
interviewing for the Internet Explorer team in Redmond. Friedman was — hold on to your hats — a Microsoft
employee at the time, working on the IIS (Microsoft’s Web server) project. It boggles the mind. They also met
online in a network set up by and for Linux developers.”
Category:
- Linux
Linus wants revision to kernel naming scheme
Author: JT Smith
the old way of naming kernel releases in favor of a new, more Microsoft-like approach.
Beginning with the new 2.4.2 kernel, the new naming scheme will go into effect. Kernel 2.4.2, for
example, will be known as Linux 3005. Linus’ vision for moving forward, in keeping with the new 3005
designator, would be (for 2.4.3) Linux NextMillenium, (for 2.4.4) Linux MilleniumAfterThat, (for 2.4.5)
Linux NextMilleniumAfterThat.”
Category:
- Management
Unicenter TNG wins system integration award at LinuxWorld
Author: JT Smith
International, Inc. announced today that Unicenter TNG, its flagship
eBusiness management solution, was awarded “Best System Integration Solution”
at The LinuxWorld Conference and Expo.
Reporter’s notebook: Linux meets Unix at LinuxWorld
Author: JT Smith
Hewlett-Packard, and Sun Microsystems had four of
the most prominent booths on an otherwise
unremarkable show floor was the now-defunct Unix
Expo in 1994. With so many mainstream Unix
vendors, and even one major-league corporate
software name, Computer Associates, on the show
floor, Linux World Expo (www.linuxworldexpo.com)
barely mustered the traditional, rebellious,
open-source spirit. Add Compaq (owner of Tru64
Unix) and Caldera Systems (which recently acquired
Unixware and some of the SCO Unix product line) to
those companies, throw in Linux operating-system
vendors such as Red Hat, Mandrakesoft, and SuSe,
add a dash of BSD Unix flavor from vendor BSDI,
and you’ve got an operating-system stew that was
as much Unix as it was Linux.”
Category:
- Linux
Free money: Linux companies plan profits
Author: JT Smith
applications built from free, open-source parts. Three of the most prominent, Eazel,
Sun and Corel, have different strategies: one is going with support and services,
one is using free software to drive purchases of costly hardware, and the third
says, hey, time to pay for your application software.”
Category:
- Linux
Tech firms at LinuxWorld Expo, but end-users shy
Author: JT Smith
Graham, chief technology officer of CodeWeavers, pined
as he compared last year’s Linux World Conference and
Expo with the one this week.
‘There’s kind of a lack of a community,’ said the
executive … The lords of Linux are no longer Don Quixotes living in the
counterculture of the operating systems world. Fewer pony-tails and
beards, which proliferated at earlier conferences that promoted open
source, were in evidence this year.”
Category:
- Linux