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Ask LinuxPPC Co-Founder Jason Haas

Jason Haas is co-founder, marketing director, and Web manager for LinuxPPC and an all-around good Linux guy. He's also majorly anti-drunk driving these days, because last March a drunk driver ran into his car and left it looking like this. Jason was left in only slightly better shape himself, but unlike his Honda, he eventually recovered (with major help and support from his wife, Cassie) and went back to work. Ask Jason what you will; about out-of-control SUVs (I don't think he likes them), Linux on PowerPCs (something he likes a lot) or anything else. Post your questions below. Tomorrow we'll forward 10 of the highest-moderated ones to him, and we'll expect his answers back in a week or so.

16 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. descisions? by garcia · · Score: 4

    what made you decide to want to do LinuxPPC development and do you think that the Macintosh hardware platform is going to remain a major player in years to come?

  2. Drunk Driving Penalties by verbatim · · Score: 3

    Since you were in what appears to be a very serious accident with a very serious idoit, do you feel that the drunk driving laws are good/bad and what do you think could/should be done to prevent accidents like the one you were involved with (if anything)? Also, what do you feel are the effects of alchohol on the average geek mind?

    Blah.

    --
    Price, Quality, Time. Pick none. What, you thought you had a choice?
  3. Our friends at Apple... by Soko · · Score: 3

    With the imminent launch of OS/X, one would think that Apple has been a rather prickly bedfellow as of late.

    Have they been open, honest and co-operative, or do they seem to view you and your group as something of a compeditor?

    --
    "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  4. Math intensive server stuff by drenehtsral · · Score: 4

    I'm working on (or more accurately about to start) a very math intensive client server system, where the server has to do a metric ass-load of calculations mostly on 64-bit signed integers on behalf of client machines. The data are all going to be in ram, and multi-cpu support is a good thing.
    Would you recommend a PPC machine over a x86 machine for a task like this? I guess this is mainly a chipset/etc... question, but i have been unable to find that sort of information elsewhere, and i figure who better to ask, 'cause you probably have a decent gut-feeling for how the architecture works in practice on real-world data =:-)

    --

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    Play Six Pack Man. I
    1. Re:Math intensive server stuff by Smitty825 · · Score: 5

      One other important thing to ask is the state of the GCC complier for the PowerPC Platform. IIRC, it isn't as efficient as the ones available for the x86 and Alpha platforms. How much would LinuxPPC benefit from an optimized compiler and what sort of performance could be expected from LinuxPPC compared to Linux86/Alpha/others?

      --

      Doh!
  5. Platform Issues by IanCarlson · · Score: 5
    A question:
    • Is LinuxPPC a viable alternative to x86 Linux? Can I run my department on a LinuxPPC-based server with the same peace-of-mind that I get on an i386-based box running Linux? Will I still enjoy the almost surrealistic uptimes I get with my current Linux server? Does the LinuxPPC code still suffer from chronic flakey-ness?

    I'm currently looking into obtaining a PowerPC box to test out the current state of Linux on the PPC platform. Hopefully your answers will point me down the path of RISC utopia.
    --
    aÍÍ©ÍÌÍ£Ì'̽ͩÌÍzÍYÌÍÌY
  6. OS X by Auckerman · · Score: 3

    How do you think a possible Feb OS X release date will affect acceptance of LinuxPCC among owners G3/G4's?

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
  7. ATX motherboard availability? by glrotate · · Score: 4

    I think one thing that would foster Linux PPC adoption, and PPC in general would be a relatively cheap PPC motherboard. I remember IBM released their reference design some tine ago and there was some noise from 3rd parties about product anouncements, but nothing materialized. Does anyone know when we might see something?

  8. merge with RedHat? by A+moron · · Score: 5

    I've tried LinuxPPC several times over the years and have actually been disappointed. It just hasn't seemed polished and LinuxPPC, the company, has had some serious customer service problems.

    Have you ever thought about or actually talked to RedHat as making LinuxPPC the RedHat Distro for PPC?

    This would provide you with extra resources to keep LinuxPPC up to date and cleaner.

  9. Your Perception Before and After the Accident by TheNecromancer · · Score: 5
    Jason,

    First of all, I'd like to commend you and your wife for your courage and determination through your ordeal! I also hope they throw the book at the jerk who caused the accident!

    My question is this: Do you find that your perception of the world and what your interests, passions and abilities are, different than before your accident? Has the accident changed your interests towards the computing industry?

    Thanks,
    TheNecromancer

    --
    Attention all planets of the Solar Federation! We have assumed control! - Neil Peart
  10. Your accident lessons by Spackler · · Score: 4

    About a year and a half ago, my fiancée and I were in a horrible car crash as well. We were also in a small car (Nissan Sentra), and were hit head-on by an SUV. I crushed my femur, broke my hip, and 4 ribs (I walk pretty good now after 2 reconstruction surgeries). My fiancée (now my wife thank God) lost her spleen, 1/3 of her liver, compound fracture of her heel, crushed lungs, and on a respirator for 4 weeks in ICU before she started to come out of it. We are both still recovering (Someday, I'd like to stand up and have it not hurt!).

    Things like this can teach you lessons, or destroy you. From that perspective, my question is: What were the biggest lessons you learned from it? (I ask that as someone who has gone through it, and learned a lot about what is important, and what is not.)
    This is more of a life question than a geek one.

    -Spackler

    PS: Yes, we drive big trucks now (F-150), and I'd never own a small car, even if it were given to me!

  11. Linux and Accessibility by FourG · · Score: 5
    Jason,

    During your recovery period, did you find the need to use any accessibility tools to accomplish tasks? If so, what were your impressions? Does Linux have the tools people with alternative interface needs (like text-to-speech) need to access their information?

    Congrats on your recovery progress. I'm glad to see the world hasn't lost another good person to a drunk driver's carelessness.

    --
    -- "I have a great faith in fools. Self-confidence, some call it..."
  12. Linux PPC & MacOS X by maggard · · Score: 3
    Jason -

    What's your take on MacOS X? As the main point-person on the biggest other Mac-based *nix I'm sure you've been keeping track of it. How do you consider what's coming out of Apple as an OS, specifically as a *nix implementation?

    Next, has Apple's open-sourcing Darwin been of any advantage to Linux PPC? Has someone ever popped into their code & looked up how they handled an point or what their solution was to a Mac-specific issue?

    Back to your own stuff, where do you see Linux PPC going as regards to the other linuxen? Any stuff you see as being unique strengths of Linux PPC (aside from it's hardware)?

    Finally, what issues do you regularly run into being on a non-X86 platform? What could developers do to improve portability for you? What's your "I-wish-they'd" list look like?

    -- Michael

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  13. iBook and LinuxPPC by X · · Score: 3

    I got my SO an iBook (with wireless LAN) for Christmas. She's pretty happy with it, but I've been considering putting Linux on it. She's used Linux on my computer without much difficulty, so I'm not so concerned about usability issues, but I am concerned about hardware issues, and of course the ability to dual boot. I checked out LinuxPPC's site, and dual boot seems like a manageable issue, but I was wondering if you could comment on iBook hardware support.

    --
    sigs are a waste of space
  14. Altivec and MP G4's? by esome · · Score: 4
    ok, newbie questions but:

    1)How much can a PPC linux distro can benefit from Altivec optimization?

    2)Does LinuxPPC enjoy the same degree of improved performance from additional processors that OS-X does?

    flame away...

  15. Why should my next purchase be a PowerPC? by rjh · · Score: 5

    Intel hardware is a commodity; it's cheap, there are lots of peripherals for it, you can buy individual components and build your own box easily, and prices are very low.

    AFAIK (which isn't far), PowerPC hardware is mostly proprietary, controlled by Apple, is more expensive, has less variety in peripherals, and you're more or less stuck buying a Macintosh just to get your PC. Not just that, but many components of many PowerPC-based computers have marginal to no support under Linux (USB is marginal, Firewire is nonexistent right now, etc).

    Given all this, where is the major win in the PowerPC? Why ought my next purchase for a PC be a PowerPC running LinuxPPC/Yellow Dog/MkLinux?

    I'm not trolling here; I'm just uneducated. :) Educate me.