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VA Linux Systems Leaving The Hardware Business

The subject pretty much says it. You can read the announcement over at Yahoo, but the short and long of it is that VA, the company that owns OSDN which owns Slashdot, Freshmeat, and assorted other Linux web sites, has announced that it is leaving the Hardware Business to focus on SourceForge OnSite, OSDN, and Linux development and consulting. Slashdot should be unaffected.Update: 06/27 08:43 PM by H :It's also relevant to point out this statement from Richard French, the General Manager of OSDN, which is a message to the Community.

281 comments

  1. Will there be a closeout sale? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Some of their hardware was sweet.

    1. Re:Will there be a closeout sale? by MCZapf · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing the closeout sale has already started. I'm seeing lots of VA Linux ads at the top of Slashdot (the past few page views, anyway). They don't actually have the words "closeout" though.

  2. Oh no. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This totally sucks. Midway, VA, who's next? Oldsmobile?

  3. When dealing in commodities... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...lowest cost provider will always win.

    All your base are belong to Dell

  4. Re:who next by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Not if you need an expensive mac to run it on.

  5. Re:Let's get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    They're leaving the business that made them rich, in favour of a business that nobody else has succeeded in getting rich in.

    Um, some VA employees may be well off by well-timed sale of their stock, but VA the company is hardly rich; they are losing money and have little prospect of changing that situation by selling largely undifferentiated hardware when they can't compete with Dell on margins.

    IBM is doing quite well with its service and support business, and other vendors are following suit in deemphasizing their hardware business.

  6. Re:Is it too late to post a question to IBM? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    Hello gmhowell,

    Did you beat up nerds in high school?

    Yes, we did. Routinely.

    Love,
    IBM

  7. You know you're in bad shape when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    You know your business is in bad shape when you have to switch to being a pure dot-com in order to improve matters.

  8. All your Linux Boxen Are Belong to Dell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    The large vendors will always be lowest-cost providers of commodity hardware. If you don't have the lowest cost, you have to add value. If Linux now runs on most commodity hardware, and the large vendors will ship with Linux installed, where can VA add value?

    Rule #1: You cannot outrun the entire PC industry. You can be smart, and you can be cheap, but you can't be consistently smarter and cheaper than all the guys in Taiwan. If you have a specialized niche, you have to keep inovating in that niche and hope it doesn't become part of the PC mainstream. This is what ate SGI. It almost killed Apple. It might eventually bring down Sun.

  9. Re:Let's get this straight... by Micah · · Score: 2

    Just because they're capable doesn't mean they don't have better things to do.

    Seems to me like this is a solid service that VA could make some money on. How much remains to be seen.

    ---

  10. Businesses thrive on charging $$$ for stupid thing by Micah · · Score: 2

    I used to work for a very legitimate consulting company that sold products for the AS/400.

    Sometimes people would need to get a new key for their software. That action took the administrative assistant a minute or two to do. Price to the customer? $100

    Businesses realize that people need things, even silly things, that they are in the best position to provide. If they can make a significant amount of revenue that way, why not? It can make their "main services" a bit less expensive.

    ---

  11. Re:SourceForge OnSite?? by Micah · · Score: 2

    I think I almost have to agree, even though I still own shares (the same @#$%# ones I got in the IPO and was too stupid to sell).

    I think SourceForge On-Site could be profitable, but only as a small business. VA should immediately get out of the Sillicon Valley area and take other measures to keep costs down. The revenue from it should be able to pay for a few people.

    The *best* thing they could do is get out of being a publicly traded company. I wonder if that's even possible (maybe only by declaring bankruptcy?). They few things it has left to sell do NOT justify having a stock on NASDAQ. If they could get out of that, and lay off the people that do everything the SEC requires, and return to being a SMALL business, I think they could make a decent living for themselves.


    ---

  12. This is a sound business decision. by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 4
    We've decided to exit the volatile hardware industry to concentrate our efforts on the more stable "internet banner ad-funded website" industry.

    --

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    1. Re:This is a sound business decision. by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      Hit the PayPal button and watch ESR dance around as a small piece of cheese drops out of a chute into his rice bowl.


      Wouldn't that then be a cheese bowl?

    2. Re:This is a sound business decision. by SpinyNorman · · Score: 5

      How long before we're hitting a PayPal button to pay ESR's salary?

      Maybe we could strip him naked and put him on a webcam like that guy on the Japanese TV show...

      Hit the PayPal button and watch ESR dance around as a small piece of cheese drops out of a chute into his rice bowl.

    3. Re:This is a sound business decision. by MicroBerto · · Score: 1

      VA Linux just turned into a dotcom! (Dotbomb?)

      Mike Roberto
      - GAIM: MicroBerto

      --
      Berto
    4. Re:This is a sound business decision. by Lish · · Score: 1
      Heh. Stable, in the sense of "unchanging," is actually pretty apt for the situation. The market might not go down, but it sure ain't goin up, either.


      ---

      --
      "This message is composed of 100% recycled electrons."
    5. Re:This is a sound business decision. by bellings · · Score: 2

      Maybe we could strip him naked and put him on a webcam like that guy on the Japanese TV show...

      Uhh... I don't know about you, but I'd pay good money to NOT see that. Ever.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
  13. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by rodgerd · · Score: 1

    The Blades and low-end Netras are PC hardware. Fantasise all you like but they're just a PC with OpenFirmware and an UltraSPARC.

  14. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by rodgerd · · Score: 1

    Oh, bullshit. But then I guess you've never actually looked inside low-end Sun gear. A Blade 100 is a PC. It uses a boring ATI graphics processor. A PC IDE controller. The case access is a bit sub-par compared to the better PC manufacturers (and Apple). The motherboard as a whole is no better or worse than a common or garden PC. Ditto the power supply.

    There is no real difference, which is why Sun's cheap hardware (Blades, low-end Netras and the like) only cost the same as a PC.

  15. Re:I can't understand. by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    How can OSDN earn money ?
    Web banners ? Ad banners on Slashdot and Freshmeat are all for other OSDN services (valinux, sourceforge, thinkgeek or free software) .

    Well to be fair, Thinkgeek does make money off things other than ad banners.

    TIME TO SELL LOTS AND LOTS OF PENGUIN MINTS !!

  16. Yep, that's an example by Eric+Green · · Score: 2
    This is an example of a niche Linux vendor, the kind where I said their business might support a dozen employees. If you bought a hundred machines from them they may be able to support a couple dozen employees (grin), but Dell definitely is not shuddering in their boots.

    -E

    --
    Send mail here if you want to reach me.
  17. The niche is still there by Eric+Green · · Score: 5
    Unfortunately, the custom Linux server niche won't support any company with more than a dozen or so employees. Custom Linux server hardware is always more expensive than mass-produced hardware. But there will always be a market for it, because there will always be tasks that can't be accomplished with off-the-shelf hardware. Unfortunately, as VA found out, it isn't that big a market.

    Frankly, this announcement was inevitable. There is a limited market for custom servers, and VA Linux was never interested in building enough volume to be the Dell of Linux (i.e., provide lots of cost-effective hardware for low prices), they wanted to be the Sun of Linux (i.e, sell high end server products for high prices). The problem is that Linux does not lend itself to a Sun approach. People who want to buy Sun buy Sun, not VA Linux Systems. People paid the premium for VA Linux servers when the dot.com money was flowing, but now that it's not, they buy Dell. Or, if it's a higher end server, IBM. VA Linux just did not have the volume to sell at a competitive price, and this move is a recognition of that fact. Unless you are buying parts in lots of 10,000 nowdays, you just can't make money in the hardware business -- and even at those volumes, Dell, HP, and IBM are all having to tighten their belt buckles to make any money selling PC's.

    The wonder is that it has taken this long. I predicted this would happen back in March of 1999 (the ill-will from that prediction, which was sent to several high-level VA executives expressing concern over their business model and where I thought it would lead in the future, is one reason why I did not go to work for VA after they bought "selected assets" of Linux Hardware Solutions). I guess it took that long to burn through all the VC capital plus the IPO capital.

    The interesting thing is that this basically leaves Sam Ockman's Penguin Computing as the "last man standing" of the Linux hardware business as of September 1998. I remember meeting Sam at the Atlanta Linux Showcase in September 1998, the last show before the Linux Movement died and the Linux Business was born. At that time he had started his business only a few months earlier, barely had enough money to meet payroll, and was wandering around poking his nose into our boxes and into VA's boxes to see what parts we were using so that he could think about what he could do to compete against us. He'd already been evicted from one apartment for running an assembly line in the back bedroom (or was it the living room?). He had nifty ads in all of the Linux magazines, but was out of cash for any further ads. I remember Kit Cosper of Linux Hardware Solutions saying that Penguin Computing was not long for this world. Sam certainly has the last laugh here!

    -E

    --
    Send mail here if you want to reach me.
    1. Re:The niche is still there by jeffsenter · · Score: 1

      Thanks jht and Eric Green for some insightful posts. I was originally thinking that getting rid of a successful hardware business in favor of making money of the OSDN and friends made little sense, but I can see how the hardware would be getting squeezed. On the highend VA Linux has to compete with a huge movement into linux from IBM on the lowend Dell and Compaq are going to be supporting linux as well and in the niche its really really linux market there is Penguin Computing. Given that the PC market and the market for hardware in general is looking weak, getting out of hardware makes sense. What I am still having trouble with is the idea of getting rich off of OSDN and friends. The sites are popular, but so many other companies have failed in trying to support themselves with bannerads.

    2. Re:The niche is still there by bernz · · Score: 1
      There is another small Boston based company called Angstrom Microsystems that's starting to get bigger now. We own about 100 machines from them (1RU) VERY reasonably priced, much better than VA. They do mass produced, but custom mass produced. They don't really have a "product line" but they build large amounts of custom designed machines. They do their own chassis with custom cooling and then burn them in 100 degree heat for 3 days straight before they sell...at least that's their policy. They've never, to this date at least, had a DOA product.

      They pack alot into those servers, too. 1/2 rack 1U sysems (2 systems per 1U) are what we have for our cluster. Takes up half the space of a regular 1U, so we can have more.

      Their website isn't much to look at but those servers keep chugging and chugging along beautifully.

      -----

  18. Re:How will this affect SGI? by The+Man · · Score: 1

    Well, SGI and VA are in a race to see who will go under first. In this case I hardly think it will matter. SGI has more cash but is losing it much faster. Both companies made products whose quality was too high for the market. Neither will be around in 2004.

  19. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by The+Man · · Score: 2
    Agreed. We've bought something like 14 1U and 2U systems from VA, and the prices were great. Out of 14 we had one failure, a power supply that was replaced in 24 hours. Better still, when some systems they sold us wouldn't run Solaris (don't ask) as the ones we'd been buying had, they gave use free *upgrades* to the next-better systems that would run it. By comparison, we have about a 10% DOA rate on Gateway boxes, and replacement parts (which I've needed for 8 of our 22 systems) take 4-8 days to arrive - if I can convince the tech support weenie that yes I tried rebooting.

    In short, VA's hardware and excellent service will be missed. If nothing else, the UPS-powered blinding blue LEDs helped illuiminate the machine room when the blackouts happened. Dammit, now I have to find another vendor...oh wait, no I don't; we don't have any money either...

  20. I assume that you'll have a tremendous debt... by emil · · Score: 2

    ...how long will it take to work it down with (measly) banner ad revenue?

    How many people will be let go?

    Is Raster and/or Mandrake still working for VA, by the way?

    Tremendous condolances, in any case. It's hard watch a dream die.

    1. Re:I assume that you'll have a tremendous debt... by sugarescent · · Score: 3

      Is Raster and/or Mandrake still working for VA, by the way?

      Mandrake is most definitely not, as you can find out by reading his web page at http://mandrake.net/. Raster appears (from his webpage, http://www.rasterman.com/) to still be working there, albeit it in Australia.

      -sugarescent
  21. Sounds like a suicide note. by heroine · · Score: 2

    Sounds like the kind of brain surgery you have when you're going to die
    anyway but don't want to throw away your insurance.

    "Cash burn" eh. Are these new economic theories patented or open source?

    There's no doubt that VA Linux will be going out of business within the year. The
    software business never made money to begin with and now they're just
    shooting for a gentle slide into the ocean instead of an abrupt crash.

    Must say that enough Linux sites exist to virtually obliviate the need for anything but sourceforget on their OSDN hodgepodge. Unfortunately, when sourceforget goes, it'll be the 10th hosting provider I've had to relocate off of since the internet began.

  22. question for the masses by Nate+Fox · · Score: 2

    So does anyone know where I can get a case similar to the ones that VA sold? Specifically, with the blue leds - thats really the only reason I want one. I dont want to get all fancy with it, but that one blue light shining into a dark room always made me smile.

    -----
    If Bill Gates had a nickel for every time Windows crashed...

    1. Re:question for the masses by David+D · · Score: 1

      Radio Shack.

    2. Re:question for the masses by istartedi · · Score: 2

      Too much "I'd buy X if Y" in the FS/OS communities. Not enough "I bought".

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    3. Re:question for the masses by iomud · · Score: 2

      I agree that the cases are stylish, I'd buy one if they sold them individually too.

    4. Re:question for the masses by iomud · · Score: 2

      I don't buy things that don't interest me, paying too much for less than average hardware dosent interest me. I build all of my own systems because it's cheaper and I know whats going into my boxes component by component. This isn't a co-op you know, I wouldn't buy from VA just because they're VA there must be something of value involved.

    5. Re:question for the masses by Tech187 · · Score: 1

      I bought ApplixWare (Red Hat labeled version), SWiM Motif, and Wabi (Caldera labeled version) to celebrate the release of Windows 98.

      Last weekend I bought Office XP.

  23. ummm by Nate+Fox · · Score: 4

    Slashdot should be unaffected.

    Riiiiiight. Now is this what you think, or what they're telling you? Cause I had the CEO of the company stand in front of the entire Corporate office and say that we had enough money to last us till at least June (this was in March). Then this happened. In March. March is a bit before June.

    The PHBs always tell you that the company will be fine. Could you imagine if they said otherwise? ;)

    -----
    If Bill Gates had a nickel for every time Windows crashed...

    1. Re:ummm by ethereal · · Score: 1

      Should I be worried that f*ckedcompany is blocked as an "inappropriate use of resources" from my job? I wonder if there's something up there about my company that we aren't supposed to know about :)

      Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    2. Re:ummm by kindbud · · Score: 1
      ...that we had enough money to last us till at least June ...

      The wildfires should not reach us for a few days, we have plenty of time to evac.... YEOWWW!!! My ass is on fire!!

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    3. Re:ummm by PaxTech · · Score: 1

      You should use http://www.f---edcompany.com then.
      --
      PaxTech

      --
      All movements for social change begin as missions, evolve into businesses, and end up as rackets.
    4. Re:ummm by Galvatron · · Score: 1

      Where do you work? I'll check for you :)

      The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    5. Re:ummm by 11223 · · Score: 2

      Hah. Same here too. Guessing it's just the URL.

    6. Re:ummm by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1
      This happened to us except were not a linux company. I mentioned it to fuckedcompany.com, but it never made the news :(.

      A lot of people were really pissed off that like one week before our ceo stood in front of the entire company and said everything was just fine.

    7. Re:ummm by Thatman311 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you mis-interperted what your ex-CEO said. Maybe he actually said, "I hope you guys have enough money to last till June" cause under his breath he was thinking, "Cause its gonna take you that long to find a new job".

      --
      Silly Rabbit...Sig's are for kids.
  24. Re:Wow. by sql*kitten · · Score: 2
    American Airlines has announced it will cease operation of it's fleet, and, instead, spend it's time and money working on an online set of websites

    Interesting you should mention this, even as a joke. At one point, AA really were making more profit off SABRE than they were off flying planes around.

  25. Re:Today.... by ptomblin · · Score: 3

    the TiVO -> VA commute (8 miles approx.) used to take 45 minutes to an hour during rush hour.

    Yeah, it takes me a while to get off my butt from in front of the TV when there's good stuff recorded on the TiVo as well.
    :-)
    --

    --
    The next Cmdr Taco duplicate will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and see it early!
  26. How can I give back to VA Linux now? by Omega · · Score: 2
    As an open source developer, I've made extensive use of the services offered by sourceforge in building and releasing my open source project.

    When I graduate from college (assuming I get hired somewhere) I wanted to give back to VA Linux for all they've given to me by purchasing a VA Linux workstation. This seemed like one of the best ways I could say thanks, but now that they're leaving the hardware business, what can I do?

    1. Re:How can I give back to VA Linux now? by istartedi · · Score: 2

      Well, you can still buy that video card and those fancy aluminum cases from ThinkGeek. That's about half a system right there.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    2. Re:How can I give back to VA Linux now? by sulli · · Score: 1

      Buy ads on Slashdot for your project!

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
  27. Let's get this straight... by jd · · Score: 4
    They're leaving the business that made them rich, in favour of a business that nobody else has succeeded in getting rich in.

    Does anyone else spot the teensy little flaw in the logic?

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:Let's get this straight... by pivo · · Score: 1

      Don't forget they had one of the biggest, if not the biggest, IPOs ever.

    2. Re:Let's get this straight... by spoon00 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Hell in a handbasket, here we come :P This, of course, is just natural selection occuring that was bound to happen in the post tech boom era. Now that it's touching closer to home for the slashdot/open-source community, maybe some common sense will take over. I don't like that it's happening to the good people of VA, but maybe some others will have to get down off their horses.

    3. Re:Let's get this straight... by alext · · Score: 1

      It *does* sound like a neat idea, particularly if you work for large distributed organizations such as banks.

      I got an OSDN proposal to the European CTO of a large US investment bank just a few months ago - facilitating 'collaborative development' is a strong message, look at companies like WebGain diving into this space.

      cheers
      alex

    4. Re:Let's get this straight... by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      The word is "release".
      ------

    5. Re:Let's get this straight... by Dwonis · · Score: 2
      Guess we should expect the VALinux Distro next week...

      I hope it's Debian-based...


      ------
    6. Re:Let's get this straight... by rkent · · Score: 5
      Yeah, no sh*t...

      The financial impact of the new VA Linux strategy will be significant. Historically, VA Linux has generated a significant majority of its revenues from the sale of its hardware products. VA expects its revenue to significantly decline with the elimination of the hardware segment.

      Here's the gun, here's the bullet, now where's my foot again?

      But one of the "new revenue streams" they're pursuing is this OSDN OnSite thing, which I guess gives people OSDN-like functionality on their own networks. Has anyone out there used this? Not just posted a project on OSDN, but actually paid for the OnSite product/service? Does it actually make your development more "efficient"? Do you use it to coordinate with development outside your corporate walls? Sounds like a neat idea, but are they really gonna make any money with it?

      ---

    7. Re:Let's get this straight... by Electrum · · Score: 1

      But if it costs you more money to write it than it does to buy it, then it can make more sense to buy it.

    8. Re:Let's get this straight... by VAXman · · Score: 2

      You are definitely very confused. VA Linux was nowhere even within spitting distance of the biggest IPO ever. The five biggest IPO's ever are: (1) AT&T Wireless (just a couple of months ago), (2) UPS, (3) Conoco, (4) Goldman Sachs, and (5) Agere Systems.

    9. Re:Let's get this straight... by arunkv · · Score: 2
      The five biggest IPO's ever are: (1) AT&T Wireless (just a couple of months ago), (2) UPS, (3) Conoco, (4) Goldman Sachs, and (5) Agere Systems.

      Offtopic, but had to add that that would be the USA-centric view of the world. The largest IPO ever was that of ENEL in Italy at $19 billion.

    10. Re:Let's get this straight... by bellings · · Score: 2

      They're leaving the business that made them rich, in favour of a business that nobody else has succeeded in getting rich in.

      Well, they really had no choice. Nasdaq is going to delist them soon.

      I'm assuming, of course, that you understand that "the business that made them rich" was selling stock. They've never made a dime selling hardware or software, and this announcement is an admission that they can't possibly see any way to make a dime selling the hardware.

      There's a pretty good chance that they're not going to make much money selling software, either. But, as they say in the announcement, they'll lose less money doing it.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    11. Re:Let's get this straight... by mikers · · Score: 1

      The hardware business for VA is a large source of REVENUE not PROFIT.

      You can have as much revenue as you want and still operate at a net loss (as opposed to net profit).

      I suppose the shareholders of VA want to finally make more money than they currently are.

    12. Re:Let's get this straight... by cactopus · · Score: 1

      Yep... the same business CornPack wants to up to a third of their business and sold the only thing that made them special for... Oh and Acer too... wants to go entirely services based.... ahhh today is the major cleaning up of the PC market... consolidation... look out for falling PC vendors! AJ

    13. Re:Let's get this straight... by Yanna · · Score: 1

      Surprised by wealth.

      I wonder when we will get to read the second part of the saga "Surprised by sudden poverty".

      "A few hours ago, I learned that I am now (at least in theory) absurdly broken.

      I was at my machine, hacking, when I got email making fun of me on the situation of the VA Linux Systems IPO. I was working on my latest small project -- a compiler for a special-purpose language I've designed called Scriptable Network Graphics, or SNG. SNG is an editable representation of the chunk data in a PNG. What I'm writing is a compiler/decompiler pair, so you can dump PNGs in SNG, edit the SNG, then recompile to a PNG image".

      Ah the irony, I guess you can imagine the rest.

    14. Re:Let's get this straight... by kireK · · Score: 1

      If they got so rich from hardware... why did the hardware unit loose so much money?

    15. Re:Let's get this straight... by ByTor-2112 · · Score: 1

      Made them rich? You forget that they still lose money hand over fist. Anyone who didn't see this coming long ago was kidding themselves.

      Overpriced hardware doesn't build an empire. Their sagging stock price has lead to drastic cuts. And the easiest way to cut is slash the whole hardware division...

      Did anyone actually think of VA as anything other than a hardware company? I know they have bought some 'Net real estate, but I certainly don't think of VAL when I think software. Guess we should expect the VALinux Distro next week...

      Best of luck...

    16. Re:Let's get this straight... by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      Is OnSite open source? If it is, they will have no chance surviving on that either.

    17. Re:Let's get this straight... by gnurd · · Score: 1

      yeah, if your company has a bunch of developers incapable of setting up OSDN or OSDN like stuff, i think you have more problems then dev environment.
      ---

      --
      "i was saying gnu-rd"
    18. Re:Let's get this straight... by gnurd · · Score: 1

      its free. thats the kicker.
      ---

      --
      "i was saying gnu-rd"
  28. Collect the whole series while you still can! by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
    http://images.slashdot.org/banner/vali0034en.gif?

    I'm gonna put my collection up on eBay, Real Soon Now(tm)!

    Oughta fetch a pretty penny...

    t_t_b
    --
    I think not; therefore I ain't®

    --
    I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
  29. The plot thickens.. by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
    Would you pay for "Premium Slashdot"?
    Your vote (2) has been registered.

    Sure, I'd love no banner ads for a few bucks a month 260 / 24%

    No way, Slashdot is crap 786 / 75%

    So, "premium /." huh?

    Gotta figure out how to make a few extra bucks, do we?

    And, no banner ads, huh?

    Does that mean that /. "lite" is going away?"

    t_t_b
    --
    I think not; therefore I ain't®

    --
    I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
  30. Re:and the stock goes... by Adnans · · Score: 2

    Never buy stock based on your religious believes.

    -adnans

    --
    "In short: just say NO TO DRUGS, and maybe you won't end up like the Hurd people." --Linus Torvalds
  31. It turns out... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    There was one person qualified to make the hardware and she quit.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:It turns out... by jchristopher · · Score: 1

      how did this not get modded up - sorry everyone missed it! Try posting it again closer to the top of another article :)

  32. Re:New Income Stream by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

    Actually they are going to make money from configuring Cisco equipment for Exodus...

    Well, they'd probably do better than half the TAMs at Exodus.. At least the ones in NJ.. ://


    Your Working Boy,
    - Otis (GAIM: OtisWild)

  33. This actually makes sense now by jht · · Score: 5

    When VA (and Penguin, and a few other companies) got into the hardware business, there was a small market niche for boxes that were optimized for Linux, and preconfigured/tested appropriately. Once the bigger vendors (with drastically lower costs) stepped into the marketplace and Linux itself became a product that could be sold and installed straight from the box, the niche companies were doomed. When Linux servers become a commodity, then only the vendors with economies of scale will thrive. VA can't play that game.

    If there's any market to be had, it's in selling software and services (though probably not enough to justify the insane valuations that were taking place last year). In essence, Andover was onto the right idea for long-term sustained profitability, but VA wasn't. However, since Andover had much shallower pockets at the time, VA bought Andover instead of the other way around. Stock was cheap then. In the long term, VA was fated to be Just Another Box Company, and there's no money in that anymore (maybe a small shop can make money selling custom boxes, but big companies won't buy from a tiny boutique shop - just from the Dells, Compaqs, IBMs, and HPs of the world, cutting off the air supply of a small public company like VA).

    As a software/services/portal company they should have a lower cost basis (building, selling, and supporting boxes is expensive) and, more importantly, lower their cash burn a whole lot. After all, there are portals that make money, software vendors that make money (including Open Source software vendors), and services companies that make money. And there is some synergy between all of them (except for maybe ThinkGeek, but ThinkGeek probably doesn't cost a lot to operate and earns them enough street cred to be worth it). So even though VA's insane valuation was based on their being a hardware company, dumping hardware was probably the right move at the right time. Of course, in another year or so we should know for sure.

    - -Josh Turiel

    --
    -- Josh Turiel
    "2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
  34. Re:Big deal by dw · · Score: 1

    Since much of the hardware was designed in house (as far as rack mounts go), I doubt it... as least not until all the engineers pop up somewhere else.

    I'm thinking all this is in preparation for a buyout anyway. IBM? DELL?

  35. Re:Getting squeezed... by acroyear · · Score: 2
    Dell has far vaster resources than VA and has an established corporate name and eventually would have stomped them into the dust

    I agree. When the largest hardware vendor in the united states enters your market (in this case, Dell selling Linux pre-installed and semi-supported (support through linuxcare or redhat)) the effect is the same as when the largest software maker (M$) in the world enters your market for software you were selling.
    --
    You know, you gotta get up real early if you want to get outta bed... (Groucho Marx)

    --
    "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
    -- Joe
  36. VA Linux Distribution? by Basset · · Score: 1

    There seems to be a lot of discussion about how Red Hat can survive but VA Linux is dying. So how long before VA Linux has their own distribution to compete with Red Hat? They said they are focusing on software. Also, who knows more about setting up and maintaining servers Red Hat or VA Linux?

    Just a thought.

  37. Re:Big deal by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2

    What box of theirs was unique? I just bought a 1221, one of VA's latest. It has 2 CPUs, a ServerWorks chipset, two hot-swap SCSI bays, and two full-length 64/66 PCI slots in a 1U chassis. Just from a quick Google, I found three other vendors selling very nearly the same gear. The only thing I was unable to determine was whether the other vendors have a front-panel serial port. That isn't a feature that would sway my decision.

  38. Re:Their dual Athlon 1U was unique by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2
    To my knowledge their Athlon was never for sale. They carried it around to a few trade shows, but you couldn't have bought one.

    What's sick is that a machine I just bought for $6500 is going for $2200 at VA's fire sale.

  39. Big deal by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 3
    It isn't as if VA made the hardware in the first place. Someone else made it for them and slapped their label on the front. I've bought six machines from VA, but I'll have no problem buying the same hardware at the same price from someone else.

    Their sales staff were dumb as stumps. Troy T., I'm talking to you.

  40. Re:I can't understand. by h2odragon · · Score: 1
    "easy to distinguish with their blue leds"

    Them little bastards are expensive. That's probably the whole problem. :)

  41. Re:Damn. by elflord · · Score: 1
    Forget about Dell for Linux. Recently, our dept ordered from two vendors: a Linux vendor, aslab.com, and Dell. The boxes from aslab worked OOTB, and came with a well-patched 2.2.19 kernel, (which meant we had ReiserFS on the RAIDS and the server was configured as we wanted it in very little time) the Dell machines which cost a fortune arrived in a non-functional state, with what looks like a default RH 7.0 install. And their tech people don't know how to get the PowerVault (fiber channel RAID) to work..

    If Dell replaces people who actually know Linux, it will be a tragedy indeed.

  42. great plan! by banky · · Score: 1

    Rather than continuing to compete against the likes of Sun, Compaq, and IBM, VA Linux has decided to compete against the likes of... Microsoft, Yahoo!, and other properties. WONDERFUL plan.

    Actually, all saracasm aside, I think its a decent plan. Really. Microsoft is doing the services thing; IBM does the services thing; why not focus on the services thing? Shure, why not.

    --
    ZOMG I WOULD LOVE TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR FEELINGS ON MACINTOSH VERSUS WINDOWS, VI VERSUS EMACS, AND HOW YOU'RE NOT A DORK
  43. Re:huh? by deeny · · Score: 2
    What? They are going to fire 140 of their most profitible employees? Is there some PHB type who can make sense of this for me?

    No. They're going to lay off 150(ish) of their *least* profitable employees.

    Note that revenue != profit. While they received the bulk of their revenue from hardware, that was also a disproportionately large share of their loss.

    Ergo, they expect, ultimately, to make more money as a software company. Worked for NeXT.

    _Deirdre

  44. Re:From NASDAQ by deeny · · Score: 2
    Why was trading suspended. Is it such bad news that they think investors may freak out?

    Actually, ALL trading is suspended (for a few minutes) when there's company news. That's why companies typically wait until after close-of-market for news -- so as not to interrupt trading.

    _Deirdre

  45. Re:huh? by deeny · · Score: 2
    Who the fuck is NeXT? I buy lots of software, but have never used or even seen anything by this NeXT outfit...

    Don't worry dear, that was before you were born. Clearly. NeXT made some of the best hardware and software for its time, ceased making hardware, then sold itself to Apple for $300M.

    MacOS X is mostly NeXT stuff with a fresh coat of paint and a lot of stuff for compatibility.

    _Deirdre

  46. Today.... by deeny · · Score: 4

    Today, between the time when I know that there will be an impact but I don't know how many of my friends will be jobless, I hope that any who need to find a new job will be able to. The valley is pretty scary right now.

    For example, the TiVO -> VA commute (8 miles approx.) used to take 45 minutes to an hour during rush hour. Yesterday, it took 23 minutes from two miles further.

    If there are layoffs, some of the VA guys came from other places (like Linuxcare) and may have the pain (as I did) of having been downsized in more than one Linux company.

    Hang in there guys.

    _Deirdre

    1. Re:Today.... by VAXman · · Score: 2

      If there are layoffs, some of the VA guys came from other places (like Linuxcare) and may have the pain (as I did) of having been downsized in more than one Linux company.

      Moral of the story: walk out of the interview if you find out that the company sells products which depend on Linux, contains Linux anywhere in its business plan, or in any way contains the word Linux in its ticker symbol.

    2. Re:Today.... by gsarwar · · Score: 1

      Well, we're a linux company, use linux everywhere from servers, workstations and the product we'd be shipping and guess what we've recently gotton more than 25 million funding.

    3. Re:Today.... by CargoCult · · Score: 1

      School holidays not layoffs........

      --
      **Vanuatu or bust**
  47. Re:I can't understand. by T-Ranger · · Score: 1
    VALinux sold mid range server gear. If you can get by with a cheep solution, then go to your local computer store and choose your parts carefully and you get as good a box as one stamped VA. If you need a box to provide 5 9 uptime, and the back end support that goes with it, then you need something from Dell or IBM or Compaq (in i386 land) or Sun.

    What did a VA box give me that I couldnt get from carefully chosen parts with an expensive rack case? Nothing. Why would I buy a VA box? I have no idea.

  48. Re:Try f---edcompany.com by Sheridan · · Score: 1

    ours blocks that too... (websense, I think)
    --

  49. What was the point of VA Linux? by Detritus · · Score: 2

    I never understood the rationale behind VA Linux. I can get better prices at the local screwdriver shop. If I want support and better engineered hardware, I can buy a server from IBM. In fact, that is what I did when I bought a low-end server last year.

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  50. Here 'ya go... by pivo · · Score: 1

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=01%2F06%2F27%2 F1710244&cid=&pid=0&startat=&threshold=1&mode=nest ed&commentsort=0&op=Change

  51. Re:Ooops, here's my research by pivo · · Score: 1

    Sorry for not being painfully explicit

  52. Ooops, here's my research by pivo · · Score: 2
    1. Re:Ooops, here's my research by child_of_mercy · · Score: 1
      Try and think of it as the difference between acceleration and speed.

      --
      'There is a Light that never goes out.'
    2. Re:Ooops, here's my research by child_of_mercy · · Score: 1
      point is you were downright wrong as to what constitutes "biggest"

      --
      'There is a Light that never goes out.'
    3. Re:Ooops, here's my research by child_of_mercy · · Score: 2
      biggest percentage increase.

      not the biggest in terms of money raised (which is what people mean when they say biggest).

      --
      'There is a Light that never goes out.'
  53. Re:Who bought who? by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2

    Before Andover bought Slashdot and Freshmeat, they were really a piddling little company. I think their premier site was the broken link-haven of "Dave's Shareware". They did have Roblimo working there, I think, and obviously some netop and banner network experience.

    The key bit is that Andover had some access to capital, bought up some Linux community sites, and IIRC *almost immedately* sold out to VA.

    VA dumped tons of additional capital into the web business. The rest of OSDN, including linux.com, NewsForge, and SourceForge were all created solely by VA, and Andover was really just the middleman for slashdot and freshmeat. Tough to give them too much credit for VA's business move towards Linux web community sites.
    --

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  54. isn't that sort of backwards? by ethereal · · Score: 1

    It seems like you'd be a lot more likely to make it in the hardware market, rather than selling ads on /. and SourceForge Onsite. At least you can charge money for hardware.

    Is this because Penguin Computing drove VA under, or are traditional PC manufacturers like Dell turning the screws? I was planning to buy a nice VA workstation/light server sometime in the next couple months, so I'm disappointed to see that I won't be able to.

    I'm amazed that any company would voluntarily leave the market that made it the most money. There's got to be more to the story...isn't there?

    Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!

    --

    Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    1. Re:isn't that sort of backwards? by KilljoyAZ · · Score: 1

      I think it's because Dell is turning the screws. Dell recently announced they were going to slash prices to gain market share. Presumably when the PC market rebounds, the high market share will lead to higher future profits. I'd expect other major PC manufacturers to follow suit.

      Dell, Compaq, and Gateway have the cash to burn for a period of aggressive pricing. VA Linux doesn't. I think the higher-ups at VA saw the writing on the wall and saw that the hardware won't bring in the revenue it once did.

      --
      This .sig is currently on hiatus for retooling.
  55. Re:No more Hardware by ethereal · · Score: 1

    Yup, writing software and delivering pizzas will be what we're all about. And considering the car that Hiro Protagonist gets, I think I'd rather deliver pizza.

    Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!

    --

    Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

  56. it's funny, so mod away: by ethereal · · Score: 1

    As seen on the NewsForge article:
    OSDN: Our Staff Destroys Networks

    Well, I thought it was funny at least...

    Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!

    --

    Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

  57. Re:What I find Strange.... by Zico · · Score: 1

    And why are there Intel Ads in Flash?

    Easy -- Flash ads use more of your CPU than GIFs do. So when people are tired of having their web browser behaving more sluggishly because of all the Flash ads (scrolling slowed down, Flash artifacts remaining on the screen for half a second after you switched windows, etc.), they might think about upgrading their CPUs or even a new computer, quite likely with a brand new Intel chip inside. Intel absolutely loves when newer, more CPU-intensive formats start getting popular with people.


    Cheers,

  58. I've never understood VA Linux as a hardware biz by doom · · Score: 2
    I've never really understood how VA Linux was supposed to work as a hardware business. Why buy from VA when you can get supercheap generic PCs? Even if you didn't have linux pre-installed by the generic vendors, it isn't that hard to crunch through an installation yourself, and the folks setting up server farms are certainly capable of doing this. Out in my corner of the real world, people would buy one or two VA Linux boxes to see what they were like, realize they weren't getting much for their money, and go back to the cheap boxes.

    And why should VA have a geek-cool buzz about them in some place like slash? I went up to a VA Linux booth at linuxworld once. First question "Do you have any alpha boxes?"; Second question "Uh, any AMDs?". Hm, just Intel processors, huh? See you...

    And if they can't make money in the web biz, oh well, those are the breaks. The open source movement doesn't *really* need corporate success to survive.

    Remember: free software will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no free software.

  59. Re:I've never understood VA Linux as a hardware bi by doom · · Score: 2

    You need fancy server hardware on the stuff that
    can't fail, e.g. if you've got your database
    running on one box (and the odds that that one
    box is going to be Intel based is pretty low).

    Using (relatively) cheap boxes as front-end webservers is an entirely reasonable thing to
    do. If one dies, oh well, you lose a few hits,
    but the next box in line takes over.

  60. What would be interesting... by sterno · · Score: 2
    What I'd be curious to see is what would happen if VA tried to sell slashdot. You can't deny that Slashdot has a strong recognition amongst the geek community so it has value. I'm just trying to imagine IBM owning Slashdot... Actually RedHat would be a far more likely choice but it seems unlikely that Slashdot would go down with the ship.

    ---

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:What would be interesting... by duffbeer703 · · Score: 2

      Why would you buy Slashdot?

      It produces nothing but hot air.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    2. Re:What would be interesting... by OpCode42 · · Score: 1

      Why would you buy Slashdot? It produces nothing but hot air.

      Richard Branson might be interested then... his next balloon trip might have a better chance of staying in the air :)

    3. Re:What would be interesting... by Tech187 · · Score: 2

      I'm just looking forward to Malda asking me the famous 'fries with that?' question.

  61. Re:Let's start a Slashdot deadpool! by sharkey · · Score: 4

    June 23, 2001.

    --

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  62. Who bought who? by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 5

    Wait... I thought VA bought Andover.net...
    Looks like the other way around

    Wow, those guys at Andover are a sneaky bunch

    --
    Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
  63. I bet! by shri · · Score: 2

    That slashdot will soon stop advocating the usage of banner redux software like junkbusters :) Imagine having to rely on banner ads and sponsorships for make payroll!

  64. Re:I can't understand. by trcooper · · Score: 2

    I can't understand their decision. They just can't *loose* money. VA Linux hardware is expensive compared to the same hardware built by your own. And it's selling. And well, according to what I saw in racks.

    You won't see an VA boxes in our shop. Why pay twice the price of a local company that gives better turnaround and service? There's not a compelling reason. Things are tight for everyone out there, and if you can save some bucks by not buying overpriced (but prettily cased) equipment, that's a bonus. I think I'd have to punch anyone who bought a VA linux box in the face, right about now, because it just doesn't make sense.

    Obviously they're not selling enough hardware right now to cover their overhead. The future doesn't look too good either... Staff, Advertising, space, all these cost money. Unless you're selling A LOT of hardware, or have a very low overhead, you can't make money, and VA met none of these.


  65. What about service contracts? by Evro · · Score: 1
    What about people who bought VA servers and service contracts? Will they still be getting support?

    ______________________________

    --
    rooooar
  66. Re:Maybe They'll Make SourceForge Not Suck by Arandir · · Score: 2

    Yeah, I hear you. I was going to put one of my projects on SourceForge. Their info sheet and FAQ made it sound like the next best thing since cheese-whiz. Then I started looking at all the projects hosted on SourceForge, and got really cold feet...

    --
    A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  67. Re:Revenue != Profit by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    YEs, but didn't you read? Revenue is != Profit.
    The burn rate for hardware is higher than that for their other operations... they will LOSE less money by NOT doing hardware business.

    I can have a rock solid revenue stream, as the previous poster said, by selling dollars for 99c, but I'll *never* be profitable.

  68. Re:Support? by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    It leaves VA in the same place they always were. They must provide warrantee and support as specified in the contract of sale.
    VA is not dissolving; they are just ceasing to sell hardware.

  69. Wow. by mindstrm · · Score: 3

    Delta Hotels International announced today it will be leaving the hotel business and instead concentrating on it's online 'global hotel reservation' website, as well as it's accommodation forums.

    American Airlines has announced it will cease operation of it's fleet, and, instead, spend it's time and money working on an online set of websites where peopel can discuss issues related to travel.

    Microsoft has announced it will be leaving the software business (yay) and solely making it's living off MSN(tm)Messenger(tm)

    Sheesh. Bye VA.

  70. Just look at the ads on /. by toofast · · Score: 2

    I like the add that sais "Want a VA Linux Server"...

    Kind of appropriate to have that banner ad displayed on a day like today...

  71. This goes from pain in the lowerback to nightmare. by Cedric+C.+Girouard · · Score: 1

    We purchased a couple of server from these guys earlier this year.

    The whole enchilada, fully loaded, with all the support gravy our budget can afford.

    Well. We got screwed. Had we bought Compaq, Dell or IBM, at least, our support would have been guaranteed for at least our initial contract. Now what prevents them from just bailing out on all those expensive contracts ? (We've replaced more parts on these servers then on all our Compaq & IBM's combined.)

    This is really sad to say, but it goes to show that sometimes the little guys can't play in the adult's yard. When you need reliability, you better buy from established companies.

    --

    Marriage is considered capital punishment for the theft of a goat in some third world countries...

  72. Re:huh? by flimflam · · Score: 2

    Just because they brought in the most revenue doesn't mean they were the most profitable. In fact, they never made a profit at all, which means that cutting the division will cut expenditures even more than it cuts revenue, therefor benefiting the bottom line.

    --
    -- It only takes 20 minutes for a liberal to become a conservative thanks to our new outpatient surgical procedure!
  73. Re:I'm puzzled too by faster · · Score: 1
    So, they're pulling out of the area that was making the profits, to concentrate on the loss leaders? Someone explain this, it looks totally insane to me.

    I'm sure IBM's investors thought giving up the punch card business to focus on making hardware was foolish, when most of their profits came from punch cards. Not that VA is creating a new market like IBM did, but these decisions don't always make sense, even when they're right.

  74. March 16,2001 by Benjamin+Shniper · · Score: 2
  75. What can't you understand by bteeter · · Score: 1

    So long as Linux and *BSD run on cheap Intel PC's I don't see that we will ever have a bad time for UNIX and free software.

    What more could you ask for?

    Take care,

    Brian

    Learn why AssortedInternet.com has the best Linux Web Hosting Services available:
    http://www.assortedinternet.com/hosting/our-advant ages.shtml

  76. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by Brento · · Score: 3

    I don't know about the servers, but their workstations were really overpriced. Same goes for Penguin Computing.

    Wow, it was definitely the other way around for the servers - they were incredibly reasonable. We just decided to pick up about 40 1u servers from them, and then today's announcement hits. So much for that plan. Nobody could even come close to touching their 1u prices, and the hardware was phenomenal. Single-CPU 1u units could be had for about $1,000, and you sure can't find that at Dell (except with the crappy Celeron units).

    --
    What's your damage, Heather?
  77. Is it too late to post a question to IBM? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

    So, how stoked are you guys that you frightened VA out of the hardware market? Did you beat up nerds in high school?

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  78. Re:I guess I shouldn't be surprised. by msaavedra · · Score: 1
    Redhat bought companies (like cygnus)that make money.

    And VA Linux bought companies (like Andover) that don't. ;-) That's why I thought it was extravagant.

    Seriously though, does anyone know how much of Redhat's revenues are owed to Cygnus? There were lots of jokes about flash-in-the-pan internet companies becoming profitable by spending their IPO money on real businesses. Has Redhat actually done this? I would like to think that Redhat's business model (charge for support) has proven itself successful, but does anyone have any numbers?


    --------------------------
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --Henry David Thoreau
  79. Re:I guess I shouldn't be surprised. by msaavedra · · Score: 2
    Alas I just can't see how they can make it just selling banners.
    They don't aim to just sell banners. They will be selling/customizing/configuring/supporting the Sourceforge code for companies to set up internally for use on large software projects. I imagine that most companies that need this sort of thing already have in-house solutions for it, but I can imagine that outsourcing something like this would be more cost-effective. This seems to be what VA is banking on.
    --------------------------
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --Henry David Thoreau
  80. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. by msaavedra · · Score: 4

    Anyone remember when, during the big IPO craze, that lots of people were saying that VA was the Linux company most likely to succeed in the marketplace? The rationale was that VA actually sold real, physical products. Unlike, for instance, Redhat, who was spending a bunch of money on software development and then giving it away for free in the hopes that people would sign up for support.

    Now, VA's hardware business is gone, and Redhat is on its way to becoming a profitable company. What happened?

    I guess that, strangely enough, VA has become a victim of the success of Linux. As industry giants like IBM and Dell have jumped into the Linux business, VA has seen its market share erode, apparently to the point where it is no longer reasonable for them to continue.

    It's a good thing they didn't have all their eggs in one basket. All of their purchases and investments after the IPO seemed a bit extravagant to me, but now they may be the only thing to keep the company alive. Sourceforge is a great product, and hopefully it is enough to alow VA to eke out a modest existence.

    One thing is certain: that 300 dollar share price on LNUX stock a while back sure seems pretty silly now. I suppose it seemed silly even then.


    --------------------------
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --
    "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
    --Henry David Thoreau
    1. Re:I guess I shouldn't be surprised. by Khalid · · Score: 2

      Alas I just can't see how they can make it just selling banners. Maybe, by developing new business and consulting, but it will be very tough.

      Anyway I wish them all the best, as it will be really sad if Redhat is the only open source compagny to stay alive.

      These are sad days ! for linux and open source

    2. Re:I guess I shouldn't be surprised. by fat_mike · · Score: 1

      It seemed even sillier when I purchased shares that day for $237 and they are now at $3.26. At least I learned my lesson

    3. Re:I guess I shouldn't be surprised. by chez69 · · Score: 1

      Redhat bought companies (like cygnus)that make money.

      --
      PHP is the solution of choice for relaying mysql errors to web users.
  81. Re:What I find Strange.... by ryanr · · Score: 2

    Heh. Yeah, they just popped this one while I was reading this story:

    http://images.slashdot.org/banner/vali0034en.gif?9 93677539710

  82. This is unfortunate... by gbr · · Score: 3

    I purchased several VA systems when I was at Videon here in Winnipeg. The systems have proven to be stable and reliable.

    I'm sorry to see this hardware resource go, and wish them the best of luck in the software world.

  83. Ironic by D3 · · Score: 2

    That when I refreshed Slashdot and got this story the banner ad was for VA.

    --
    Do really dense people warp space more than others?
  84. VA Linux entering the "new new" economy by evin · · Score: 1

    Like so many other companies, VA Linux Systems has found that in order to remain competitive, it must dump its revenue sources (hardware sales) in attempts to reduce expenditures. In the short run, this means VA Linux will lose much more money per year, but in the long run, they're hoping to keep their losses to a minimum by replacing all of their functions with Cowboy Neal (as various scientific polls have demonstrated possible).

  85. Re:The Dell of the Linux World by Skynet · · Score: 1

    A while back someone (I forget who now) said "VA Linux is trying to be the Dell of the Linux world. Unfortunately there will only be one Dell of the Linux world and that will be Dell." Wish I could remember who it was who said that. Damn...

    Michael Dell? ;-)

    --
    Execute? [Y/N] _
  86. With Solaris (licenses, anyway) by Sun+Tzu · · Score: 2

    With Solaris licenses. I'm not sure you get a media kit though -- it'll probably cost you another $us60 or so, if you need the actual CD's. Sun traditionally includes an unlimited-user license for Solaris with every box they sell. The price is $us995.

  87. I can't understand. by chrysalis · · Score: 5

    How can OSDN earn money ? Web banners ? Ad banners on Slashdot and Freshmeat are all for other OSDN services (valinux, sourceforge, thinkgeek or free software) .
    And OSDN needs a lot of bandwidth. I guess all that bandwidth isn't provided for free.
    On the other hand, when I walk through alleys of server farms, I always see a lot of VA Linux racks. They are easy to distinguish with their blue leds. So I thought that VA Linux was selling a lot of hardware. And selling hardware bring money. SGI is also selling VA Linux hardware (they just add their sticker) .
    I can't understand their decision. They just can't *loose* money. VA Linux hardware is expensive compared to the same hardware built by your own. And it's selling. And well, according to what I saw in racks.
    Compaq drops Alpha processors, Mandrake runs out of money, Netscape focuses on a stupid web portal, VA Linux stops hardware... That's bad. Really bad times for the world of Unix and free software.

    -- Pure FTP server - Upgrade your FTP server to something simple and secure.

    --
    {{.sig}}
    1. Re:I can't understand. by god_of_the_machine · · Score: 5

      And OSDN needs a lot of bandwidth. I guess all that bandwidth isn't provided for free.

      Well... if they can't pay for bandwidth they could always shut down for a weekend and blame it on an incompetant female Cisco tech. I hear that works....

      -rt-

      --

      -rt-
      ** Evil Canadians are taking over the world. Learn about the conspiracy
    2. Re:I can't understand. by MicroBerto · · Score: 1

      It is definitely time to give slashdot and the other sites some banner click-throughs, everyone. Pitch in a couple a day, it won't bite!

      Mike Roberto
      - GAIM: MicroBerto

      --
      Berto
    3. Re:I can't understand. by MicroBerto · · Score: 1

      Want to know what's funny about this? I clicked on an ad for NewsForge.. a site I've never really given a chance - and I really like it! it's now in my bookmarks at work, cool!

      Mike Roberto
      - GAIM: MicroBerto

      --
      Berto
    4. Re:I can't understand. by cnkeller · · Score: 1
      I'm assuming by 'local' shop, you do indeed mean local shop. :-)

      I don't consider VA that high. They beat Dell's best quote for a simiarly configured 1U box. I don't know of any local vendors that will build a 1U box with similar configurations and guarantee it will run linux out of the box without me tweaking anything. For about 2K, I feel that the VA box was well worth it. If someone can give me a better price for the same system (a 1221), I'd love to hear about it

      --

      there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

    5. Re:I can't understand. by kalleanka2 · · Score: 1

      That is just pathetic!

      If you try to charge money for this software a bunch of open source developers will develop a free alternative and you will have major problems sell this.

    6. Re:I can't understand. by OSDNBoss · · Score: 5
      There seems to be some confusion regarding the business we are moving into. The press release clearly spells out the details. In summary, Sourceforge OnSite represents a major opportunity in the software business for VA. We have tremendous customer interest and feel we will be successful.

      As far as OSDN is concerned VA Linux plans to continue to operate OSDN with no significant changes anticipated as the result of the restructuring. By the way, OSDN uses more than just web banners to support itself. Revenue comes from ad banners, sponsorships, events, and Thinkgeek. ;)

    7. Re:I can't understand. by Hagabard · · Score: 3
      Even if the product is as successful as Apache I can't see them making enough $$ for the payroll of supporting all these sites w/o significantly slashing across-the-board. They even state on the osdn.com about page that banner ads & VALinux kept them afloat: here (bottom of page) or for an excerpt: And please don't forget our advertisers, business partners or the kind people at our parent company, VA Linux; they're the ones who pay our salaries and buy the bandwidth for 100 million pageviews a month. Without their support, we wouldn't be able to supply OSDN services free, and give away free OSDN memberships.

      If VA-Linux was keeping OSDN afloat then how the hell is OSDN going to keep VA-Linux going? By swapping banner ads with partners? If support of SourceForge software was such good business then what could be a better sell than to bundle it pre-configured on VA-Linux servers? But wait, "who'd want to pay 4k for free software on a development server that would never see incredibly high traffic to justify the cost", you ask? Well, then, who the hell is going to pay 10k for VA/OSDN to set it up? Or do you VA/OSDN could fly consultants around the country for two-week projects at a lower cost than that?

      Any VA-Linux stockholder should feel they've just fell victim to the ol' bait-n-switch. "We're a hardware company, no...a publishing company, no, wait...a software company..." Next you'll hear that they're going into B2B which, as everyone knows, is the death-rattle of any "new-economy" company.

  88. ...it will be okay by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    We'll pick up the slack for 'em. ;-)

  89. dont worry about a thing by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    We'll pick up the slack for them :-)

  90. VA Banner ad.. by mjh · · Score: 4

    Does anyone else find it funny to see the very first /. article talking about how VA is going to give up their HW biz, and then right above that is a banner ad extoling the virtues of a VA 1RU or 2RU server?

    Ooh... now it says, "Need a VA Linux server? GREAT DEALS on VA Linux servers - CHECK 'EM OUT!". Well, yeah, I'd think if you're getting outta the biz, that you should be offering tremendous deals!
    --

    --
    Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
  91. In related news... by rwg · · Score: 1
    ...Akamai Technologies figured out they can build their own rack-mounted computers a lot cheaper than they can buy them from VA Linux.

    "Doh! What the hell were we thinking?" an anonymous Akamai executive told reporters.

  92. True by clump · · Score: 1

    I was fortunate enough to have one as a toy when I was employed by a telco. It was a dual PIII Katmai 500 with 1G of ram and a raid1 array. I was lucky enough to use this 2U rackmount machine as my desktop and later as a Quake3 and Half-Life server ;)

    I later resigned and the CCNP guy took over the mahine. Those were the days...

  93. Re:Workstations by cetan · · Score: 1

    Not to nit-pick but I will (all in good fun) :)

    Apple makes Personal Computers.

    Personal Computers = PC

    Apple makes PC's.

    --
    In Soviet Russia...michael would be rotting in Siberia!
  94. Re:Ouch... by norton_I · · Score: 2

    Interestingly, I suspect that one reason they pulled out of the direct server market is that they can't really compete with IBM. Originally, VA filled a market demand for servers designed, tested, and supported to run Linux. Even (perhaps especially) for a startup getting computers that will be supported with the software you need or want to run is important.

    Now, IBM, and to a lesser extent Dell and HP, are getting into that market, and companies migrating to Linux, or a dual environment that have large investments in servers made by one or the other are much more likely to stay with that vendor for all their hardware needs across NT and Linux platforms.

  95. Re:Surprising... by norton_I · · Score: 2

    Not any more. IBM, Dell, and HP are all starting to sell servers with Linux preinstalled and supported. That was VAs ace. It used to be that if you were a startup with limited resources and you wanted to use Linux for whatever reason (cost, flexibility, etc), but either didn't have the expertise, or didn't want to waste you expertise on system administration VA was a good choice to sell you a well designed server that had been tested under linux and supported with Linux on it. Now you can just go to Dell.

  96. Well now! by Inoshiro · · Score: 2

    Better get your aluminium hat on, conspiracy boy.
    --

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
  97. Re:Revenue != Profit by rkent · · Score: 1
    Yeah, K, but the next paragraph describes how they expect this to put them solidly in the red (or keep them there) for the next entire fiscal year. Of course "Revenue != profit," but it seems a strange move indeed to abandon what you acknowledge to be your strongest revenue stream. If they were selling some of the hardware as a loss leader, why not bring the prices up some instead of leaving the business altogether? Anyway, I'm not an insider at VA, I don't know what they're thinking, but this seems to indicate that there's major trouble within.

    ---

  98. Revenues != Profits by KenSeymour · · Score: 1

    Subject says it all.

    Check out their public filings for yourself. I would be suprised if they were making a profit on
    selling hardware.

    --
    "We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." -- Albert Einstein
  99. Job Hunting Tips for you by goingware · · Score: 2
    I have some job hunting tips at:

    Best of luck to everyone. I have a lot of respect for a company that would use a program like Cerberus to stress-test its systems.

    where else can you buy hardware that you can count on not being crappy?


    Mike

    --
    -- Could you use my software consulting serv
    1. Re:Job Hunting Tips for you by bernz · · Score: 1
      "where else can you buy hardware that you can count on not being crappy?"

      From a slew of other companies that use CTCS for things..and add cool features like email alerts and ethernet testing...

      which i should give back to the project, eh?

      -----

  100. How can you NOT make money?? by RAZOR · · Score: 1


    How hard is it to make money of the servers they sell??
    All of the VA Linux computers/server are generally $200 more expensive then the offerings from Penguin Computers or Dell, and they still lose money??? How is it possible?

    Then how are Penguin Computers surviving then? Or any other of 100 hardware providers that are featured in Linux Magazine every month???

    That's really bad, just think off all the 22,000 projects on SourceForge! Even apache is using it. It's going to be really really sad to see it go :(

    --
    ------------ Internet? Is that thing still around? H.J. Simpson
    1. Re:How can you NOT make money?? by Tech187 · · Score: 1

      The world just won't be the same without those 19,000 GTK-based MP3 players, now, will it?

  101. Re:The Dell of the Linux World by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    No, it was a Linux guy at one of the Colorado Linux Info Quests, but I forget who. One of the keynote speakers IIRC.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  102. The Dell of the Linux World by Greyfox · · Score: 3

    A while back someone (I forget who now) said "VA Linux is trying to be the Dell of the Linux world. Unfortunately there will only be one Dell of the Linux world and that will be Dell." Wish I could remember who it was who said that. Damn...

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  103. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by carlhirsch · · Score: 2

    Well, Sun sells a UltraSPARCIII 1U server for $999...

    -carl

    --
    . We've got computers, we're tapping phone lines, you know that ain't allowed - Talking Heads, "Life During Wartime"
  104. oops by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 1

    I bet VA's founder wishes he'd stayed with his buddies when they were starting Yahoo.


    ========
    Stephen C. VanDahm

  105. Re:How will this affect SGI? by kindbud · · Score: 1
    ...they (SGI)resemble a (poor) attempt at being a VA Linux wannabe.

    That's funny, I thought VA was an SGI wannabe.

    Looks like they are making tremendous progress in that area now.

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
  106. I'm puzzled too by Arker · · Score: 2

    From the article:

    The financial impact of the new VA Linux strategy will be significant. Historically, VA Linux has generated a significant majority of its revenues from the sale of its hardware products. VA expects its revenue to significantly decline with the elimination of the hardware segment.

    So, they're pulling out of the area that was making the profits, to concentrate on the loss leaders? Someone explain this, it looks totally insane to me.


    "That old saw about the early bird just goes to show that the worm should have stayed in bed."
    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    1. Re:I'm puzzled too by Galvatron · · Score: 2

      Revenue != profit. Hardware may have the highest revenues, but it also presumably has the highest expenses, and probably has an enormous net loss if they're deciding to can it.

      The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
  107. Re:Rich? Say what? by Courier · · Score: 1

    Yeah we all know that intel sells us hardware at high price so the reseller all have to make isty bitsy bits because intel takes a big chunk.

    The real problem isn't that. IF you look at dell site they sell you ram for your servers at a few times the market price. All for "brand" and "support".

    So dell has the brand and support what does VA have? They sell intel boxes that I can put together myself.

    Look at sub cobalt. They sell U1 units with really interesting extras. Like their webmin software. They package it in nice interesting colors and give it good support plus this extra software.

    VA could have made a business of hardware if they only made something different. I for one think that there isn't really anyone offering enterprise solutions for linux. IF VA is taht good with software they could have easily made Say applience firewall (cobalt and firebox). OR massive multiway server.

    But most of their offerings were bread and butter rack mounts not very interesting..

  108. Re:Getting squeezed... by Courier · · Score: 1

    Only the differences here is that people can't really be zealots about generic intel boxes. Unliike linux the OS.

    When MS enters a market people groan and bitch. When dell offers you cheap rates everyone cheers.

  109. Remembering The Hype by quakeaddict · · Score: 2

    ...it was supposed to be the next Dell.

    Flame out.

    It always seemed odd to me that adding a free OS to a box seemed to make it cost more than a Windows box.

    --
    I'm still working on a clever footer.
  110. not a big suprise... or deal by cheezus · · Score: 1
    Its not like VA is like Sun or even Apple, who make their earnings through selling propreitary hardware which is backed up by their software and services. There is just too much competition in hardware for the decreasing amount of it that people are buying. The compelling reason to buy hardware from VA? Linux support. Since that's what they were really selling anyway, why not just focus on that as a core business. I know the people that only read slashdot because they hate it are going to gloat about this being the end of VA, and OSDN, and oh look their stock is going to be worth half a penny instead of a whole one now, but lets face it - all PC makers are feeling this slump. So yeah, this is news for nerds, but it doesn't really matter. Its nice to see that VA isn't using their media outlet for spin control, too.

    ---

    --
    /bin/fortune | slashdotsig.sh
  111. Well, its a sign of things to come! by bigfluffybunny · · Score: 1

    As The Register would put it is this a sign of going titsup.com? What future does this spell for the OSDN and Slashdot for that matter?

  112. Re:Rich? Say what? by VAXman · · Score: 2

    Hardware is a notoriously low-margin business. Only a few big companies can hope to compete on price. Anybody else who wants people to buy their iron had better add some serious value. "We'll install Linux for you" doesn't even come close.

    That's interesting. Intel made over $10 billion in profit last year (which FYI is more than any other tech company has ever made in one year), and had gross margins over 50% (which is absolutely unprecedented for a company of that size). All of the profit was from selling pure hardware, and they didn't do any "value added" crap either.

    There is certainly no other pure service company with either profits or margins anywhere in that ballpark. IBM makes a lot of profits (not as much as Intel), but their margins are considerably lower (they just have a lot of revenues).

  113. Re:Does this mean outsourcing? by DeePCedure · · Score: 1

    My bad. Here's the fixed link.

  114. No longer a niche market by Shagg · · Score: 3
    When VA first started, there was basically no one else that was offering an "out of the box" linux installed hardware system for business use. The fact that they offered support and pre-installs, taking care of hardware integration and drivers, for linux was a pretty cool thing. Their uniqueness is what brought them alot of business.

    However, with the popularity of linux as a server system rising, we are starting to see the big boys such as Compaq and Dell get into the act. I'm guessing that VA has seen that they will not be able to compete with the larger hardware vendors, and are opting to stick with linux consulting/development roles. In one sense it's a shame to see VA driven out of the hardware role by the larger corps, but on the other hand it's a strong indication of linux's success.

    --

    --
    Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
  115. huh? by twitter · · Score: 2

    Yahoo sez:

    Historically, VA Linux has generated a significant majority of its revenues from the sale of its hardware products. VA expects its revenue to significantly decline with the elimination of the hardware segment.

    What? They are going to fire 140 of their most profitible employees? Is there some PHB type who can make sense of this for me?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  116. and the stock goes... by esoteric0 · · Score: 1

    um, yay, now my LNUX stock can lose even more value. hurray for linux.

    1. Re:and the stock goes... by Thatman311 · · Score: 1

      That's funny. I think that the "Church of Scientology" is going to IPO soon. Want some?

      --
      Silly Rabbit...Sig's are for kids.
  117. Weird and kind of scary ... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

    ... to contrast this story with the one immediately preceding it, an announcement of a Q&A with IBM's director of Linux marketing. Once again, the revolution gets hijacked.

    Even weirder and scarier is that I generally think of IBM being in the Linux business as a good thing. Wintel, Inc. may no longer be the monolith it once was, but it's still so big and dangerous that companies like IBM (and Sun, and Oracle, and Apple, and AOL) seem like allies to the little guy by comparison.

    --
    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  118. Where is the Microsoft Bashing? by KingAdrock · · Score: 1

    Taco- The only reason I read anything you write is to enjoy some good ol' Microsoft bashing.. Where was it this time? I don't know what to do with myself... This calls for a 3 part series on why Microsoft is the antichrist! Arrggghh...

    1. Re:Where is the Microsoft Bashing? by Indes · · Score: 1

      I wanna see some MS bashing too. Although we do enough of that on IRC.. :-) Wait a sec.. can never have too much MS bashing..

  119. Re:Revenue != Profit by sigwinch · · Score: 3
    Yeah, K, but the next paragraph describes how they expect this to put them solidly in the red (or keep them there) for the next entire fiscal year.
    True, but their burn rate will be lower. They'll be spending money from cash accounts, but it will be at a much lower rate than the hardware business which is currently hemorraghing red ink.
    Of course "Revenue != profit," but it seems a strange move indeed to abandon what you acknowledge to be your strongest revenue stream.
    Profit is god, revenue is nothing. If a business is losing money and has no prospects of ever becoming profitable -- as their hardware business was -- you have to kill it.
    Anyway, I'm not an insider at VA, I don't know what they're thinking, but this seems to indicate that there's major trouble within.
    I know exactly what they're thinking: hardware is not profitable, and has no prospects of becoming profitable. Once you reach a consensus on that fact, the only logical path is eliminating that business. It doesn't matter how much revenue there is if it's being collected at a net loss. This allows resources to be concentrated on business areas that have a chance of becoming profitable. It also gives them more burn time to develop the businesses that have a chance of becoming profitable.

    A move like this takes guts. Plenty of companies would keep pissing away money on the failing business area out of habit, or out of fear of change. It's a good sign that they are willing to face the facts and make cold, calculating decisions. If they succeed in turning themselves into a profitable open source powerhouse, today will be remembered like Microsoft's famous Internet reorientation.

    --

    --
    Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

  120. Collectables? by vrmlguy · · Score: 1

    I note that the VA Linux 1000 is being sold for as little as $800 right now. The most similar system from Dell is $1099. I'm going to buy one to replace the server in my basement and who knows? Maybe some day it'll be worth more as a collectable.

    One should pause before making well-armed paranoids feel foolish, no matter how foolish they seem.

    --
    Nothing for 6-digit uids?
    1. Re:Collectables? by WirelessFreak · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking about snagging a brand-new 1221 with a dual PIII-866, 512Mb of RAM and an 18.2Gb SCSI drive for about $1,300 from their website. I think the same unit was going for close to $2k a few months ago.

  121. The revenue model problem by Animats · · Score: 2

    The big problem with VA Linux is that all the things they're good at are free. Slashdot, SourceForge, etc. are good, but generate no revenue. VA Linux hardware and support don't seem to be notably better than anybody else's, but those were the revenue generators. It just doesn't work as a business.

  122. not suprising by ibm1130 · · Score: 1

    Did i imagine it or did another moderately large commodity h/w supplier ( oh say, Compaq ) announce something similar just the other day

  123. Try f---edcompany.com by yerricde · · Score: 1

    f*ckedcompany is blocked as an "inappropriate use of resources" from my job

    I presume you're falling victim to URI-based content filtering. It probably won't block www.f, three dashes, edcompany.com. @nonymouse works even better (unless it's blocked too).

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  124. Re:Didja know? by istartedi · · Score: 2

    You forgot, ...That building a brand then tossing it away doesn't make any sense.

    If VA doesn't want to build the servers themselves, they should license the design to some other box maker. It would be kind of like what GM did to Chevy and all the other car makers.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  125. short time by aozilla · · Score: 1

    OK, my short position is in. Slashdot is worth about $2 Million, the whole company, $10-20 Million, being generous. Certainly not the $178 Million it's currently valued at. Hopefully you'll get lucky, and Yahoo will buy you out for $50 Million. Sourceforge would certainly be a good fit.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  126. Tuxtops ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 2
    Hey maybe that company that bought tuxtops when they were going to "focus on other projects" will buy va ...

    you never know

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
  127. Re:Surprising... by chez69 · · Score: 1

    when Redhat's stock price was high they bought a couple of companies (cygnus) that would actually make them money.

    VA bought a whole bunch of websites.

    --
    PHP is the solution of choice for relaying mysql errors to web users.
  128. Re:Ouch... by bapink01 · · Score: 1
    The article explains how they expect to stay afloat. The post was modded down because the "discussion" was shorter than the sig. If the question was accompanied by some guesses to the viablilty of what was proposed in the article. If I didn't post I could have modded your guesses up.

    Personally, I do believe that their strength has been their software expertise that sets them apart from the crowd. I would rather see another strong software company that is sheilded from the razor thin margins in the personal computer hardware industry. Remember IBM has pulled out of the retail PC. That market is tough.

    Their hardware installation has been a problem domain where their designers have created interesting solutions.

  129. Deja vu by Tassach · · Score: 2
    Didn't we get a similar anouncement from Compaq recently? When a hardware giant like Compaq wants to de-emphesize selling hardware in favor of software and services, that should be a big flashing neon sign that times are changing.

    Selling (low-end) systems is a dog-eat-dog business with razor-thin profit margins, which means that only the largest 2 or 3 players can crank the volumne necessary to make a decent amount of money. Plus, demand for new desktop manchines is down - people and companies are keeping their old machines longer because they don't need to upgrade. A 500MHz machine is already overkill as a desktop for most people. There really isn't any benefit in upgrading from a 500MHz box to (say) a 1.2+ GHz box if all you are running is an office suite, mail, and a browser -- there is no noticeable difference between the two unless you are doing somthing processor-intensive like CAD or rendering.

    --
    Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
  130. Their dual Athlon 1U was unique by mill5ja · · Score: 1

    Their dual Athlon 1U was unique and a very cool setup. Two palos, 2gb ddr ram, a scsi raid and a few scsi hard drives... in a 1U case. And it was very well layed out.

    I'm sorry to see them go.

    -jason m

  131. No more Hardware by ritlane · · Score: 1

    First Compaq, now these guys.

    Maybe one day the industry will evolve to the point that all companies only make software.
    What a golden utopia that would bring.


    ---Lane



    ---Lane

  132. Slashdot Unnaffected??? by CakerX · · Score: 1

    Don't you know what this means??, since VA is leaving the hardware buisness to focus on the websites like /. and freshmeat, don't you think that /. is going to have to be pulling MORE money weight?? And how would they do this?? probably start by letting coperate sponsors do editorials, covering non-geek stuff to attract more people, and starting a pay service??? is this what /. is about...NO!!!!, I don't know what should be done here, as I am just a reader, and no one EVER listens to the guy with the mohawk and the DKs shirt!

  133. Should've seen it coming by danpbrowning · · Score: 2

    When they had the ads for the "used VA servers", I should've known it would lead to this.

    --
    Daniel
    1. Re:Should've seen it coming by Tech187 · · Score: 1

      One doesn't find very much used Northgate hardware anymore. Will VA hardware be the new Northgate at the surplus shops? It'll certainly be more than the Atari 600XL that I bought cheap about a year after that entire line was orphaned, as one can run just about any x86 software on a VA box. (what do their Windows 2000 benchmarks look like?)

      I do owe a bit of gratitude to Northgate. I got my first 386DX processor cheap because it was socketed on a defective Northgate motherboard when I purchased it. What a rush it was finally running Windows 3 with 'multitasking' on a 386 machine after years on 8088 and '286 boards. (most of that time on 8088 with Hercules graphics)

  134. Re:In related news by Traxton1 · · Score: 1

    Uh-oh, the moderators found the crack again. As I read this post, it is +4, Interesting, now yes, it is interesting in a way, but that's because it's a funny troll. Please mod it as one of the more appropriate.

    Oooh, VA should change their business plan to "get bought by M$", that always works. You know BG just wants to "experiment" with Linux.

  135. This means two things... by green+pizza · · Score: 2

    First of all, it proves how big business (big scared businesses) can drive the little guy out of his own business.

    It also shows that the future of hardware is -not- from commerical organizations, but rather from truly open, not-for-profit vendors. The only way we can continue to grow is to abandon the old idea that somone has to get rich by selling things at an inflated price. VA has proven that a vendor need not make a profit to better the world. Expect the concept of free, open hardware (and not just open software) to grow over the next few years.

    1. Re:This means two things... by Tech187 · · Score: 1

      Goodwill Industries does a pretty good job of it.

      Of course, their merchandise is all donated.

      heh

  136. How will this affect SGI? by green+pizza · · Score: 3

    How will this affect SGI?

    That may sound like an odd question, but if you look at SGI's Linux offerings over the past 12 month, you'll see that they resemble a (poor) attempt at being a VA Linux wannabe.

    Also note that some of SGI's Linux servers were OEMed from VA.

    It will be interesting to see how this affects SGI over the next 6 months... will SGI's Linux offerings be better or worse as a result?

    1. Re:How will this affect SGI? by duffbeer703 · · Score: 2

      SGI is through. Their mainstay MIPS servers are so behind the curve it's not even funny.

      They'll be featured on www.fuckedcompany.com

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
  137. Re:Terminator - There's a storm coming. by Twiddle · · Score: 1

    It not the end of the world bub. Things will improve in the fall. Summer is always a slow time of year. The web market will never be as strong as it was last year. Last year was a killer year! Glad I was there. No more fancy corporate parties oh well:(. No more perks and bonuses for a while. But what goes up must go down. It is not like an elastic band snapping back. More like a balloon deflating a little. Recessions are a reality of capitalism. capatalism sucks but it is the only thing we got. Cheer up, stop reading fuckedcompany , it will only make u depressed.

    --
    It's a new kind of Hytsteria
  138. Intel Intel Uber Alles by fm6 · · Score: 2
    You're arguing with a statement I didn't make. I did not say it was impossible to make money selling hardware. I said it was a low-margin business. That favors big companies (like Intel) that can achieve the necessary economies of scale. Furthermore, Intel is primarily a component manufacturer. That's the other side of the squeeze that system manufacturers like VA Linux are in: one the one side customers who expect low hardware prices, on the other, chip makers like Intel with a captive market.

    I don't want to start a flame war, but dismissing the megabucks Intel spends on R&D and plant as "crap" is childish. Or are you offended by my use of the capitalist jargon like "add value"? Hey, we live in a market economy. Deal with it.

    __

  139. Newbie pointers by fm6 · · Score: 2
    If I were a moderator, and if it weren't against the rules to moderate and post in the same topic, I'd be torn between "funny" and "insightful" for this one.

    Hint: If you're saying something clever, use the Subject line to pique people's interest. Like, "What's Intel do that I can't?"

    And post more. Please.

    __

  140. Rich? Say what? by fm6 · · Score: 4
    What makes you think VA Linux is rich? They lost roughly $90 million in 2000 and 2001 looks just as bad.

    Hardware is a notoriously low-margin business. Only a few big companies can hope to compete on price. Anybody else who wants people to buy their iron had better add some serious value. "We'll install Linux for you" doesn't even come close.

    __

    1. Re:Rich? Say what? by xtheunknown · · Score: 1

      It's not fair to compare chips to systems. Intel is in the chip business, VA is in the systems business. In this case, when people say "hardware" they mean systems. Lots of people make money on "hardware" such as storage subsystems, printers, networking devices, etc. Just not systems.

      --

      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
    2. Re:Rich? Say what? by Aragorn379 · · Score: 1

      That's interesting. Intel made over $10 billion in profit last year (which FYI is more than any other tech company has ever made in one year), and had gross margins over 50% (which is absolutely unprecedented for a company of that size). All of the profit was from selling pure hardware, and they didn't do any "value added" crap either.

      Let's see, Intel took silicon and some metal and made it into reasonably fast processors. Nope, no added value there. After all, you do the same thing by throwing some wire on the ground and, err, mushing it around and, err, like stuff...

  141. Crap... by cat5 · · Score: 1

    And I just received 3 VA Machines..
    1* 2251 - Dual Proc 1Ghz/1G Ram, with attached 9008 storage (for /home :))
    and 2x 1221 for other assorted tasks, same procs/memory.
    I home support won't be affected.

  142. Re:Ouch... by sethgecko · · Score: 1
    The post was modded down because the "discussion" was shorter than the sig

    Interesting reasoning. However, I must disagree. A comment can be brief and insightful. For proof look at Rochefoucauld's Maximes

    ...razor thin margins in the personal computer hardware industry. Remember IBM has pulled out of the retail PC.

    Last I checked, VA was aiming for a server market where the margins are *not* razor thin. In fact, if you go here you'll see that they only sell servers and NAS devices. Also, IBM did not pull out of the personal computer hardware industry. They pulled out of the *retail* market. They still sell personal computers direct. I fail to see how you can cite IBM pulling out of the retail PC market, but remaining in the direct only PC market as justification for VA pulling out of the direct only server market.

    --
    Be ot or bot ne ot, taht is the nestquoi.
  143. Cash preservation by ZoneGray · · Score: 2

    This is probably also a cash-preservation measure. Think about it.... there's a certain inventory ($8 million and rising as of 4/28), and now it can be sold without being replaced. By liquidating their hardware inventory, they generate enough cash to keep the doors open for a few more months.

    A quick look at the financials suggests that VA is quickly running out of cash.

  144. Needed to happen. by Spazmania · · Score: 2

    My company has purchased boxes from VA since back when they were VA Research. Rock solid boxes. Generally well engineered. Most of them, even the Pentiums, are still in service.

    The sales/business side was the death of VA Linux.

    I bought what I needed to buy from VA Research before they became VA Linux. They built it to order. It was great.

    Have you tried to buy something from VA Linux that didn't precisely match what they thought you should buy? If you succeeded, I'd like to know which of the folks on their staff is your drinking buddy.

    I tried to buy some hard disk brackets for my FullOn servers. They had the chutzpah to _require_ me to buy drives if I wanted the brackets. And if I want 9 gig seagates instead of 9 gig quantums? Hoo boy am I talking to the wrong people. Bad enough I have to take that attitude from Microsoft. I won't accept it from a Linux company.

    I'll miss the hardware but I won't miss the company. Good riddance.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  145. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by duffbeer703 · · Score: 2

    Solaris is free for machines with less than 8 processors. Has been for some time.

    You can even download ISOs there.

    --
    Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
  146. Re:Didja know? by duffbeer703 · · Score: 2

    Hey *asshole*. Putting brand-x computers together is *not* a viable business plan.

    PC shipments are *down* 45% this quarter.

    VA Linux *never* should have been given *VC* and *IPO* cash.

    --
    Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
  147. Let's start a Slashdot deadpool! by duffbeer703 · · Score: 3

    What date will Slashdot disappear?

    My guess: February 16, 2002

    --
    Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    1. Re:Let's start a Slashdot deadpool! by mkelley · · Score: 1

      November 27, 2001

      m.kelley
      www.mkelley.net

      --

      m.kelley
      life is like a freeway, if you don't look you could miss it.
  148. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  149. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  150. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  151. This may not be dumb at all by wytcld · · Score: 3
    VA puts the "co" in lab oration.

    The ideal situation in business is when you can do some particular thing so much better than nobody else comes close. That's just not going to happen for hardware built from standard parts.

    But VA, in doing the right thing with Source Forge, in terms of providing an environment to foster software initially to make their hardware look better, may have stumbled into an area where they can build a large business and keep the lead for some years.

    The stupid thing about the dot com bubble was the notion that a group of computer jocks would be so much smarter about just everything that they could do retailing better than, say, outfits that are run by families that have decades, sometimes centuries, of retailing culture under their belts. As if ability to work with computers assured you of having 50 bonus intelligence points that could be applied anywhere in life.

    Well, it's not that the nerds took over from the corporations. It's just the inverse: every traditional business of any size is becoming in significant part a software development house. And it's mostly a matter of working up from small projects that work for some particular location or department to a broader integration. The way to do this well, when you're not starting out with the computer system and trying to make the business fit it (the nerd model), is to start with the business intelligence in each of those locations and departments, and find a way to bring that all together.

    But that's been very hard to coordinate. Which is why way too many large businesses bring in SAP or the big consulting firms to try to do it top down - basically, the nerd's mistake again. For generic enough businesses, where the people really don't need to do more than run a widget assembly line and sell to established markets, this can work. But for a business with more specialized intelligence innate to its operations, this can really f*ck you up.

    Source Forge gives an organic way for a major corporation that's found that SAPiness saps their lifeblood, but that also has had prior trouble getting efficient, effective company-wide development worked up into higher-level integration, to pull niche-specific, wisdom-preserving integration off. Which puts VA into a position to get into the really serious money that currently mostly goes to stuffed suits who know nothing but how to walk the MBA walk - and who are hated by anyone in the firms being consulted who actually knows his or her shit, and sees how the "daddy knows best, he went to business school" attitude of the top-down fixers will destroy much of the real wisdom that older, successful corporations have accumulated in their staff.

    Business likes to give lip service to the 'new,' but business is profoundly conservative. Source Forge is the conservative way to embrace and develop the newest technology without nullifying the intelligence embedded in your current business culture. It's revenge on the nerds' premise that we were smarter than everyone in every way. But it also allows the nerds, as we go to payroll or contract work for old-line firms, a degree of freedom and collaboration that we wouldn't have if the only model was SAP-like. If we've got to serf the web, at least we can whistle while we work.

    (And this may be why Microsoft will essentially go out of business within a decade. Internal development based around open source models will leave no reason to license anything from Mickey G. He'll end up like Corel, with a slice of the home market from people who want to still use the software they used to know.)

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    1. Re:This may not be dumb at all by Tech187 · · Score: 1

      Is that two words, or is it one trademark?

      There have been predecessors with the word 'Open' in their name. I alluded to one in the earlier comment.

    2. Re:This may not be dumb at all by Tech187 · · Score: 2

      (And this may be why Microsoft will essentially go out of business within a decade. Internal development based around open source models will leave no reason to license anything from Mickey G. He'll end up like Corel, with a slice of the home market from people who want to still use the software they used to know.)

      Or, this may be what drives people to greater devotion to companies like Microsoft (not necessarily the big M itself, of course). People don't thrive on difference. Businesses don't want to have to train every new hire in their totally non-standard methods of working with IT. A thousand hackers out there fiddling with code, all under the direction of different managers, don't converge on anything.

      The lack of central direction is what killed Unix in the 70's and 80's. Nothing fundamental has changed to prevent that from happening again.

  152. Apple originally coined the term Personal Computer by PyRoNeRd · · Score: 1

    Also Apple originally coined the term Personal Computer in ads for their Apple II in the late '70s, before the IBM PC was released.

  153. ha by Capt.+Beyond · · Score: 1

    So, you have a little router trouble and VA decides that's it's all too much to handle, so they get out. ha.. figgers.

    --
    -- "Perceptions create reality. By changing your perceptions you change your reality."
  154. Other companies selling linux boxes... by bernz · · Score: 1
    There is another small Boston based company called Angstrom Microsystems that's starting to get bigger now. We own about 100 machines from them (1RU) VERY reasonably priced, much better than VA. They do their own chassis with custom cooling and then burn them in 100 degree heat for 3 days straight before they sell...at least that's their policy. They've never, to this date at least, had a DOA product.

    They pack alot into those servers, too. 1/2 rack 1U sysems (2 systems per 1U) are what we have for our cluster. Takes up half the space of a regular 1U, so we can have more.

    Their website isn't much to look at but those servers keep chugging and chugging along beautifully.

    -----

  155. Not the best Linux hardware vendor by a long shot by mooboy · · Score: 1
    VA wasn't all that great of a hardware provider compared to the likes of Compaq or Dell. I've used several VA rackmount servers, from Multi CPUs with external RAID to cheap n' dirty 1U IDE servers. The rackmount kits are cheap and shoddy compared to Compaq's hearty bearing rackmounts. And Compaq's Linux support is excellent. Response time is wonderful, the techs actually know the OS, and their proprietary config tools (like SmartStart) and system BIOS have full Linux support. All in all Compaq has beaten VA at their own game. And the hardware is just plain better. I think VA is making the right move here. They've thrown a few rocks at Goliath, but now its time to run back to the hills of Andover...

    --
    There's no place like 127.0.0.1
  156. Won't affect Slashdot.. by scott1853 · · Score: 1

    I hope NOT. I'm hoping you guys can get some leftovers so the /. servers don't rank up there with personal webpage in China as the slowest sites on the planet.

  157. Revenue != Profit by sulli · · Score: 4
    Read carefully:

    VA Linux has generated a significant majority of its revenues...

    They need to maximize profits, which were not forthcoming from the hardware business, as you can tell from the discussion of "cash burn." OSDN can be made (maybe is already?) profitable, so it's worth keeping.

    After all, I can sell dollars for 99 cents and make lots of revenue. Stockholders a couple of years ago were willing to fund such behavior. No more.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  158. Cerberus and VA's Hardware Legacy by Moby-One+GNUbie · · Score: 3
    >Best of luck to everyone. I have a lot of
    > respect for a company that would use a program
    > like Cerberus to stress-test its systems.
    >where else can you buy hardware that you can
    >count on not being crappy?

    As the author and (still VA-employed) maintainer of Cerberus/VA-CTCS, this comment really made me feel better on a day of reckoning -- most of the SW group was hanging around a little depressed after the announcement and when I and my coworkers saw this post, I felt that maybe a FEW people understood why it was that VA's systems always seemed "overpriced".

    We tried to change how PC hardware was manufactured. I developed automated factory quality control systems that enforced QA policies under Cerberus... while they were sometimes overridden for 'business reasons', the restrictions raised the bar for our products and made them more reliable per capita than anything else out there. A while back, I wrote an essay on "Microsoft Quality Hardware" published in the Linux Journal that described how I hoped Linux and Cerberus-like initiatives would save PCs from the scourge of the industry in quality.

    And we punched some holes in the status quo. Beating the odds, we discovered problems in products from every big name in PCs (Intel, Adaptec, Tyan, Mylex, etc) before anyone else, and it is certainly no small thanks to VA's dedicated SW and HW engineering groups that modern server hardware works as well as it does under Linux.

    I hope other HW vendors pick up the slack. With Linux and Open-Source drivers, it is _possible_ to prove conclusively if a piece of hardware is broken, and we can break the chain of component vendors pointing at Microsoft pointing at integrators, etc. Meaning that the PC industry can achieve the reliability of Sun at the price of Dell.

    Some things are changing at VA, but Larry was right when he said in the press release that our software component really has always been our differentiator. I just wish that we would have figured that out sooner, sold that aspect to our customers, and avoided our current predicament.

    Don't count VA out yet. There are a lot of smart people still here, and I think if VA can come out of this with morale intact and a concrete vision for the future, things will turn around.

    --
    "Wherever you go, there you are."
  159. Hrmph. by 11223 · · Score: 2
    I'm still waiting for the announcement that this is somebody's idea of a practical joke. Just the other day I got an email from them saying there were dual Athlon systems coming from them, and I still see old VA hardware ads on the site. Oh, well. Best of luck to y'all.

    (On a side note - does this mean that ThinkGeek start selling software too? :-P)

  160. Ironic... by VivianC · · Score: 1

    I found it ironic that when I went to read the letter on NewsForge, there was a random big ad for IBM in the sidebar.

    With the big guys getting into Linux boxes, I figured it was only a matter of time before the smaller brands fell by the wayside.

    Best of luck to everyone at VA. If there is a layoff, you at least have a chance of getting in the Linux group at IBM or Compaq!


    Viv
    -----------

    --
    Viv

    Gmail invites for ip
  161. VA Linux is trying to get purchased themselves.. by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

    Just like Andover.net was purchased, VA is cutting back its excess and preparing itself for a buyout of NewsForge, /., etc. blah, blah, blah.

    If it isn't already obvious, I'd suggest heading to fsckedcompany.com, which predicted the VA Linux hardware drop last week.

  162. prices by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 1

    when i was pricing out linux systems for a voip cluster early last year - I wanted a system that was by a company taht would also support it etc... I didnt want to have to do a build-my-own-clone, so I looked at VA and penguin.

    I was actually really surprised at their prices they were REALLY high.

    I would expect those prices from compaq - as you know that they design and test their machines really well - plus the add certain amounts of proprietary design into it which jacks the prices, but from VA and penguin?

    now we see much more realistic prices from penguin, and va dropping all together.

    so - does this mean they are havinga blowout sale on all in stock items?

  163. Old Stock = Life Saver by deXela · · Score: 1

    I've said it before, and I'll say it again. If they have old stock they need to get rid of, please send to a country were the world bank has dictated that the exchange rates be soo bad that such hardware costs several years salary.

  164. Pogo dual athlon better anyway by 2ms · · Score: 1

    VA seems to have thought that the way to be the next Dell was to only sell Intel systems. Too bad the last 1-2 years have been Intel's worst years ever. Who wants way overpriced PIII systems when they can get rippin' Dual AthlonMP systems (Vorticon )from Pogo for less than $2000?

  165. Ouch... by Swift+Kick · · Score: 1

    Someone care to explain how does VA expect to stay afloat?

    --
    "We'll need 2000 crickets, 4 cans of Easy Cheese, and the fluid from 18 glowsticks for this plan to work...." - ph0n1c
  166. What I find Strange.... by V50 · · Score: 1
    What I find Strange is that right now, as I post this there is a VA Banner suggesting I buy 2GB or RAM or something (it doesn't say). If they have quit the HardWare business then why are there still VA ads?

    OT: And why are there Intel Ads in Flash? .GIF wasn't good enought for Intel?

    --Volrath50

  167. That is to say.... by jsse · · Score: 1

    The only thing left in VA that can generate revenue is Slashdot?

    Ok, I get it. I'll click reload more frequent.
    &nbsp_
    /. / &nbsp&nbsp |\/| |\/| |\/| / Run, Bill!

  168. Workstations by AdamInParadise · · Score: 1

    I don't know about the servers, but their workstations were really overpriced. Same goes for Penguin Computing. You cannot sell a $1000 PC for $2000 unless you're called IBM or Apple (I know, Apple doesn't make PC, but don't tell me that they don't have very fat margins).

    --
    Nobox: Only simple products.
  169. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by AdamInParadise · · Score: 1

    That's cool, but it didn't seem enough. Last week a customer wanted to buy a 1U server from Dell and he showed me the ad: Ouch, $1200 for a Celeron 733 with Redhat. Oh yes, with 'Dell Web Management System', ie Webmin not even in disguise.

    BTW, what are VA gonna do now?

    --
    Nobox: Only simple products.
  170. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by blair1q · · Score: 2

    With or without their "real UNIX"?

    --Blair

  171. From NASDAQ by MSBob · · Score: 2
    It will reduce its work force by about 35% from the fiscal third quarter level of 436 employees. The majority of the layoffs will occur during the current fiscal quarter, with the remainder over the next several months.

    Trading in VA Linux was halted for news. The issue last changed hands at $3.26

    Why was trading suspended. Is it such bad news that they think investors may freak out?

    --
    Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
  172. This means one thing... by MSBob · · Score: 3

    That slashdot and other OSDN sites bear the main responsibility for generating revenue. Slashdot in particular as it's frequented by so many people daily. One way to do it may be to insert some extra data (such as tags) into comments and help boost revenue and creating some subtle albeit effective advertising. Something akin to SmartTags should go a long way towards compensating for the cut revenue from hardware sales. How big a job would it be to implement that in slashcode?

    --
    Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
  173. Um... did that router fell on their head? by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 1

    What is the *point* in leaving their main revenue steam? You can make money out of hardware, out of ads?
    Hardly.
    Especially when most of those ads are from *other* OSDN sites.
    SourceForge pays SlashDot that pays NewsForge that pay themez.org that pays SourceForge, ed infintium.

    Hello? Can anyone find bussiness logic here?

    --
    Two witches watch two watches.

    --

    --
    Two witches watched two watches.
    Which witch watched which watch?
  174. Didja know? by Ayende+Rahien · · Score: 5

    That Microsoft can buy VA Linux for about 1% of its avertising campaign for XBox?

    That throwing away the part that *makes* moeny is no way to run a compnay?

    That a negative share price is *not* something desireable?

    That money is actually *needed* on the real world? You can't eat GPL. Okay, you can, but it's a sorry state of events, and isn't very nurtitent.

    That circular advertising is *not* a way to make money?

    --
    Two witches watch two watches.

    --

    --
    Two witches watched two watches.
    Which witch watched which watch?
    1. Re:Didja know? by GPLwhore · · Score: 3

      "That Microsoft can buy VA Linux for about 1% of its avertising campaign for XBox? "

      That says something about legitimacy of "new OS economy" evangelists like ERS ...

      --
      ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  175. SourceForge OnSite?? by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 3

    I don't see how the sale of one product(namely SourceForge OnSite) is going to keep VA Linux afloat. This is not to rip on them, but I just don't see it happening. Slashdot probably should start making contigency plans when(notice not if) VA goes under. Hmm... at least I will be able to get a pretty decent tax write off on the few shares that I own.

  176. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by fors · · Score: 1

    Buy them anyway. If you look at their server sale page you'll see prices that nobody is going to match. What's that? What about a warranty? Who cares, at those prices you should be able to buy some spare parts and take care of it yourself.

    --
    "If there is nothing you are willing to die for, then you are not really alive." Myself
  177. Re:Surprising... by ByTor-2112 · · Score: 1

    Hi,

    Red Hat didn't actually turn a profit. The same funny accounting rules that let Microsoft report enormous profits by excluding certain things (stock options etc) let Redhat report a profit. There was an article on it somewhere. The 'pro forma' numbers are not actually the official SEC numbers. According to the SEC they lost their pants!

  178. Re:In related news by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5
    Also, slashcode will soon be released under a shared-source licensing.

    Actually, the new release of slashcode is being delayed pending the port from Perl on MySQL to VisualBasic.NET on IIS.

    One notable change will be that all users will log in to slashdot using their Passport accounts. This will allow everyone to surf seamlessly between slashdot, hotmail and the MSDN site without needing to retype their passwords.

    Unfortunately, slashcode 2001 will only allow users to post via a special ActiveX rich text edit control. However, this new control will enable users to embed great streaming multimedia content in their flames and trolls. The port of this control to non-IE6 platforms may be done by a third party at a to-be-determined date. In the meantime, Windows XP will now be the /. user's platform of choice.

  179. Damn. by HisMother · · Score: 2
    So I'm typing this on an orphaned box.

    This is really quite sad, but maybe my emotional response is tied up in historical beliefs that no longer hold. We've been buying VA boxes where I work for some years, now (y'all know they used to be "VA Research") because there historically wasn't any other place to get preassembled boxes made with bleeding-edge SMP mo-boards, certainly not with Linux already installed.

    But these days, you can buy SMP from Dell, and with Linux installed to boot. Was VA's hardware business, then, a victim of Linux's success?

    --
    Cantankerous old coot since 1957.
  180. In related news by Magumbo · · Score: 1

    OSDN is switching to win2k due to it's superior reliability and Microsoft's strong market share. "Meltdowns" and other network sluggishness on all OSDN sites should disappear. Also, slashcode will soon be released under a shared-source licensing.

    --

  181. Relax by Liquidsorcery · · Score: 1

    Linux and VA in particular about a revolution. I know that's preaching to the converted a little, however every revolution suffers set backs. The economy is in the shits accross the board! Not just IT companys are hurting right now. Everybody from supermarkets to pharmatuticals and defense are all in the same boat. When non-tech companys are not buying computers what are the tech companys supposed to do? Sell to each other? I don't think Scott McNealy is going to place and order at Apple for a thousand G4s. This is the first recession that the Information age has weathered, and being relativly new to the buissness world it is not supprising that a few well liked companys are going to sink. A analogy I like to use when thinking about buissness is each company is a boat permantly out at sea. When the economy is great (circa 1999) everybody is floating along, making money doing thier own thing with consumers buying lots of products. A recession is like a storm. Sometimes it's not so bad and the waters get a little rough. Othertimes it's a hurricane, and some of the smaller boats get lost among the waves. I think this is a not perfect, but decent paradigm of thinking about the state of IT today. The reason why we don't hear about auto manufacters, and other business going out of bussiness so much is they have been around for a while and weathered a few storms in thier history, in other words they know when to batten down the hatches or if that dosen't work use thier large size and cash reserves to hold out for clearer skys. VA doesn't seem to have the latter to fall back to, and so they must try the best they can. Cutting the hardware section might prove to be a fatal mistake or a lifesaver. After all they could be counting on cutting the slow server sales now, and reentering the market in a year or so. All companys no matter the ideology behind them want to survive and no descision is made unless it is thought to help the company in the long run. Relax, everybody is hurting. Things will get better after all this isn't the great depression we're dealing with. Hang in there when everything clears up and those jackasses get there shit together at the nasdaq, people will want new toys, servers voice controlled cars, Robby Robots, and lots of crazy shit and we know of a certain open source operating system that seems to be able to do it all.

    --
    Marge it takes two to lie. One to lie and one to listen. - Homer Simpson
  182. Re:uh-oh by Tech187 · · Score: 1

    That's one of the things that pisses me off the most about the 'Linux boom' of the past several years. When I search for the homepage of a project I haven't updated my version of, it's become a page on SourceForge. Now if and when SourceForge turns into smoke, lots of those projects will just disappear.

    The one good thing that seems to remain stable is that Slackware hasn't ever been bought by 'the suits.'

  183. Re:What about support by Tech187 · · Score: 1

    Specifically what IP does VA own?

    Lists of compatible hardware? Combinations that have proven reliability?

    I don't understand what they have beyond a somewhat HOWTO-aware staff and purchasing group.

  184. Re:I've never understood VA Linux as a hardware bi by Tech187 · · Score: 1

    Server hardware is not in the same class with 'super cheap generic PC' hardware. It's built to different, higher, reliability standards because a lot more depends on a server than on the PC that the receptionist uses. But this is obvious to anybody in the biz.

    Why does anybody even need to say this on Slashdot???

  185. Re:I've never understood VA Linux as a hardware bi by Tech187 · · Score: 1

    I thought everybody knew that 'web serving' is a throw away application.

    I mean, let's be real here. Server hardware runs factories, large data centers, etc.

    Web servers are geek toys for the unemployed.

  186. Re:VA Linux is trying to get purchased themselves. by Tech187 · · Score: 2

    The name 'NewsForge' is actually kind of disturbing.

    Any journalism major, even in the first year of school, knows that journalists and/or news sites don't 'forge' the 'news' whole from raw materials. Their job is to remain outside of the 'news creating' process, and instead to report on the news objectively as it happens. It's very Katz-like to wander around 'creating' news.

    'NewsForge' is a shockingly illiterate title for a 'News' web page.

  187. New Income Stream by SaturnTim · · Score: 3


    Actually they are going to make money from configuring Cisco equipment for Exodus...

    oops.

    --T

    --
    http://www.theMediaBunker.com
  188. I love press releases. by qon · · Score: 1
    ``Our differentiating strength has always been our software expertise,'' said VA Linux CEO, Dr. Larry M. Augustin.

    Uh huh. Nice spin doctoring. ;)

    Q

  189. Plans for VA Linux Distro? Debian Based? by idonotexist · · Score: 1

    VA Linux once had a debian distro --- I think. Based on this change in strategy with a non-hardware focus, any rumor to VA getting (back) into the linux distro business?

    --
    "There ought to be limits to freedom"
  190. Agreed by kraf · · Score: 3

    They should definately concentrate on their core business, which is buying websites to raise awareness which in turn helps them to raise more VC which helps them to buy more websites...and so forth.

  191. uh-oh by gnurd · · Score: 1

    time to start moving the ol' project offa sourceforge. perhaps i can buy a discounted VALinux system of my own to host it on...
    ---

    --
    "i was saying gnu-rd"
  192. hardware alone! by gnurd · · Score: 1

    and how much money will sf and /. make when they have to pay *market* prices for their hardware?
    ---

    --
    "i was saying gnu-rd"
  193. I can't do it Capt'in by TrollMaster3000 · · Score: 1

    I just can't do it captain... I don't have the power!


    1. Chinese food. No soul food here.
    1. I'm no punk bitch !!!
    2. I'm no punk bitch neither !!!

    --


    I'm no punk bitch !!!
  194. There sure is! by jrp2 · · Score: 1

    There certainly is a sale going on, see http://www.valinux.com/systems/serversale.html . I saw the "Model 1000" on sale for US$800! That is a 1U, dual P3-750, 512M RAM, 18Gig SCSI powerhouse. I had bought 3 about 9 months ago at US$3500 each (only difference was they had 2Gig RAM) and was more than pleased at that price. Most of their other products, though not marked as "closeouts", are definitely discounted also. It is really dissapointing to see them go, I loved their products and service.

    --
    The only athletic sport I ever mastered was backgammon - Douglas William Jerrold
  195. Surprising... by A+Commentor · · Score: 3

    I had thought that the value-added hardware sales, which VA had focused on, would have the best chance at generating a positive cash flow.

    I thought that selling a 'free' OS like Red Hat would be more difficult, but these announcements(this and RedHat's quarterly results) seem to show just the opposite..

    Oh, well, What I'd really like to know is if there will be any really good sales on VA Equipment?

    --

    Looking for any old 8-bit Heathkit/Zenith software/hardware - http://heathkit.garlanger.com

  196. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    The Sun Netra X1 is an excellent uniprocessor sub-$1000 1u unit. It runs a real Unix, on reliable non-PC hardware, and the vendor will be around for decades to come.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  197. Re:Workstations - server prices were great, though by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    UltraSPARC III? The Netra X1 specs page says it uses a 64-bit UltraSPARC IIe...is there another server I don't know of? I'd be delighted to order US-III servers for $999...

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  198. VA Linux System's Warp Core Breached. by USS+Enterprise · · Score: 1

    VA Linux Systems: "Sir, Im giving her all shes got, if i give her any more, shes gonna blow sir!"

    --
    -------------------- "Only two things are certain, the universe and human stupidity, and im not sure about the latter"
  199. Thanks for the by sph34r · · Score: 1

    sweet use of the blue leds. Late at night at the colo they keep me happy. Oh yeah maybe you'd better whack those VA banner adds that keep popping up.

  200. Does this mean... by LyNXeD · · Score: 1

    ...that we can no longer obtain Akamai servers with LEDs on the front that are bright enough to light the server room? Heaven forbid that people have to resort back to flourescent lighting!

    (Seriously, Akamai uses VA for their distributed content servers - at least they did when we got ours a year or so ago. Those things have lights on the front that WILL light up the room if you don't have the Akamai faceplate on them, or at least a piece of tape...)

    Wonder who Akamai will use now?

  201. VA model - what a joke - eLinux thrives! by eLinux+growth · · Score: 1

    eLinux has built in my mind the strongest strategy for growth and profitability. VA ships $120million losing $80+ - great model. Additionally, management of inventory and product purchasing with limited returns privelages through Synnex kills $$$. eLinux has solid relationships with IBM and Compaq. Unlike a VA and Penguin, eLinux is able to offer scalable solutions in addition to custom configured servers, desktops and laptops. Their model has built the relationships and partnerships with the vendor community and all indicators from previous financial results show the company will be profitable for the year. eLinux has rolled out a custom built to order brand of servers under the "OpenServe" line (http://www.elinux.com/showcase/OpenServe/). 3-5 day order to delivery on these and the pricing is squashing VA, Dell and Penguin. Point of email - why all are looking at Penguin to remain standing - eLinux is scooping up Dell, VA and Penguin customers through IBM field organization, IBM direct leads, Compaq sponsored target marketing, outbound sales organization, referrals from other vendors - ie. storage/NAS, Cisco etc... eLinux utilizes the buying power of a billion dollar parent company to compete against other integrators and suppliers. eLinux physically ships from IBM's warehouse and is one of only 19 vendors to order and ship servers and other Compaq product directly from Compaq. Add enhanced product offering - custom built servers with co-branded Immunix OS - Dell and Penguin and VA Linux customers are already calling. See you in the land of profitability eLinux!! Thanks for the business VA - email your client list to eLinux!

  202. eLinux continues to win by eLinux+growth · · Score: 1

    eLinux has built in my mind the strongest strategy for growth and profitability.

    VA ships $120million losing $80+ - great model. Additionally, management of inventory and product purchasing with limited returns privelages through Synnex kills $$$.

    eLinux has solid relationships with IBM and Compaq. Unlike a VA and Penguin, eLinux is able to offer scalable solutions in addition to custom configured servers, desktops and laptops. Their model has built the relationships and partnerships with the vendor community and all indicators from previous financial results show the company will be profitable for the year. eLinux has rolled out a custom built to order brand of servers under the "OpenServe" line (http://www.elinux.com/showcase/OpenServe/). 3-5 day order to delivery on these and the pricing is squashing VA, Dell and Penguin.

    Point of email - why all are looking at Penguin to remain standing - eLinux is scooping up Dell, VA and Penguin customers through IBM field organization, IBM direct leads, Compaq sponsored target marketing, outbound sales organization, referrals from other vendors - ie. storage/NAS, Cisco etc... eLinux utilizes the buying power of a billion dollar parent company to compete against other integrators and suppliers. eLinux physically ships from IBM's warehouse and is one of only 19 vendors to order and ship servers and other Compaq product directly from Compaq.

    Add enhanced product offering - custom built servers with co-branded Immunix OS - Dell and Penguin and VA Linux customers are already calling.

    See you in the land of profitability eLinux!! Thanks for the business VA - email your client list to eLinux!

  203. What about support by alazar · · Score: 1

    My biggest and probably only concern is support for my existing system, and even more so for my VACM hardware.

    Anybody heard what they plan to do about that?

    I wonder if anyone would be purchasing the IP etc from VA. I haven't worked w/ them much but it is impressive when compared w/ Penguin and Network Engines.

    Well. Back to Dell I go....

    alazar

    --
    True friends are hard to come by... I need more money. - Calvin
  204. and the stock goes up by gqchina · · Score: 1

    I am an international investor,I am interested in VA Linux company,LNUX stock price,LNUX news,i think it is a very good news for LNUX,VA Linux is a small tech company,and now it is a pure software company,it is good.Many big companies are leaving manufacturing,VA did the right thing.LNUX stock price is too cheap,it is very good time for long term investors to buy LNUX,i wish it will be a new peoplesoft in the future.