LWCE Reports Continue
wo1verin3 writes: "Trivia for geeks... and nerds. Or rather geeks vs nerds. Read about the contest of the people with oddly and randomly shaped heads here." This site also links to MoC chrisd's page of questions and answers.
abel wisman submitted news that GNU Bayonne and PreViking have merged into a single project, which will keep the name GNU Bayonne. Not familiar with either? Bayonne is a telephony application server, and PreViking is a telephony-switching daemon, both of which are open source. David Sugar of the Bayonne project also demonstrated an automated web-based callback system used to provide callbacks to form-based online queries. The newly combined Bayonne / PreViking teams will also be working on www.phonestreamer.com, built on top of GStreamer. The Bayonne booth at LinuxWorld offered booth visitors today free calls to anywhere in the world using these technologies.
red_gnom writes: "Linux is in the running to power the world's biggest computer, we learned this week at LinuxWorld Expo. A bid is being prepared to provide the computing power behind the US government sponsored Project Purple, which will pool a vast server farm to the three leading U.S. research labs, which is scheduled to come on stream by the end of 2004."
terrywin writes: "Apparently, the company that licensed Corel's Linux has indicated that the beta is now available. http://www.xandros.com/news.html, their home page has a link to the beta form. The last report I saw on this was back in September."
Finally, cnmill points to this story on CNET about today's announcement of version 1.1 of the Linux Standard Base. Congratulations!
Well, they are completely out of the linux biz, or so says their CEO, so no wonder they blew it off!
Link to the Slashdot booth? Wanting to see pictures of Glorious leader Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda and Jeff "Hemos" Bates I am! Where is the important Slashdot booth pictures! My enquiring mind knows to want!
If guns kill people, then CmdrTaco's keyboard misspells words.
Wonder if we are going to see the new Purple Hat Linux :)
As the VC money dries up and projects that aim for the stars get blown up on the launching pad, the true beneficiaries of all the free programming labor become obvious. It isn't those companies that hold to some ideal of Freedom of Software or other tripe like that. The ones who are making it are the closed source shops who have a product to sell. IBM, Oracle, et al.
Linux to them is simply another market to tap. It isn't about the love of coding, but the love of money. So much the better for them that people are willing to give away their work for free.
When the dust finally clears a year or two from now, you'll likely see a single company responsible for Linux development and multiple software houses offering server software for the platform. "Linux on the desktop" is dead if these big-iron companies are the ones left supporting the platform. So much the better, I'd say.
Linux is in the running to power the world's biggest computer, we learned this week at LinuxWorld Expo.
This is clearly really exciting news. If Linux ends up being used on the world's largest (or fastest, or sexiest, etc...) computer, it's reputation for being both A)A valid solution for high-load calculations and B)A superior solution, worthy of being used on expensive hardware.
If Linux is used on this largest computer, imagine what this will mean for managers choosing it for mere 'large' computers. The future looks good for 'Big' Linux.
"We have not released Xandros Linux yet. However, for Linux enthusiasts who would like to try the Open Circulation version of Corel LINUX OS Second Edition, we are now providing it as a no charge download from the Xandros FTP site.
I loved playing with corel linux when it first came out. It was really easy to setup and gave my little brother a computer that would surf the web and do simple things for him since he didnt have enough money to purchase a copy of windows. Though I hope they include alien or a package converter. One of the small problems my brother ran into with Corel Linux was since its Debian based and not off the RPM it was tough trying to teach him how to convert the packages and get them to run.
-THIS SPACE FOR RENT!
I couldn't make it to LWCE (still waiting for one in Seattle), but the rest of the Open Source Web Design crew is out there. I don't know what exactly we're showing off, except our really cool site. I hear we're across from an IBM booth and on a corner, somewhere in the .org pavillion. And the booth number is less than 10 ... like .. 4. We have some pictures of the setting up on Skatters homepage. Anyway, check it out!
I suspect this is only a temporary lull as times are tough right now for much of the tech scene. Perhaps next year and beyond will be a bigger event as OSS projects gain more mass appeal and more new users get introduced to linux.
How bad is VA and OSDN hurting to not represent at such a big event?? -- I guess 1 look at themes.org is a good example of how fast something can go downhill. (Saw the article on the Loki timeline -- will we see a VA/OSDN timeline?)
(+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
This was the first computer conference I've ever attended. Most of it was what I expected it would be -- a bunch of bullshit: the big companies and the little companies were hawking their wares, acting slick and SELLING SELLING SELLING.
There were a ton of proprietary software vendors, wholely clueless that Linux users may prefer Linux because of the Freedom. NuSphere, for example, was showing off their Linux port of the Windows PHP IDE product...acting like Linux was just another platform, like a port to a Mac. (The port was incomplete.) Compaq held an expensive-looking gameshow contest with questions like "Why is Compaq considered a leading expert in Linux?" and where all the answers were "all of the above." Ximian came accross as a slick, funded, bullshit corporation, selling their MS Exchange connector. I fear the future of GNOME in their hands. Best propritary software was the guy from Taiwan, selling a program that grabs all relevent Windows config files and translates them to the correct Linux equivs (Sendmail, Appache, SAMBA, etc.). He said his product was big in China.
The Hardware vendors seemed less bad -- at least they're selling a THING, not IP. Of particular note was the Sharp Linux PDA -- much better than I imagined, more like a little laptop than a PDA.
Best, though, was the small "ORG" section of the convention. The enthusiasm and lack of bullshit was palpable, and it put the salesmen to shame. It made the whole thing seem like two events, one of salesmen, and one of artists. In particular, the Linux Terminal Server guys were cool as shit. (http://www.ltsp.org/) The KDE guys (especially Ian) were also amazing. I was pleased that they all had fresh ideas, but were dedicated to the old-fashioned, core hacker concepts (client/server, language neutrality, extensibility). These guys had a VISION and were advocating, teaching, and arguing for it with great gusto and humor. The sales people, on the other hand, seemed insincere, ass-kissing, and downright dumb.
All-in-all, just what you'd expect...
I don't know if anyone here recalls the Brazil Nut theory of Economics. In a nutshell (unintentional humor), it parallels the unusual and easily reproducible fact that in a can of mixed nuts, if you shake it long enough, the brail nuts (the largest ones) rise to the top. I've seen this phenomenon in piggy banks as well. In economics, what this means is that certain companies eventually will rise to the top of the corporate world.
VA Linux^H^H^H^H^H Systems, IMHO, should've tried to duke it out a little more in the hardware market. Now it's a company basing itself on software and intellectual property (like, oh, Slashdot and other Andover.net aquisitions). Penguin is starting to feel the crunch of smaller margins in this commodity market. Oracle's probably taking a breather before Comdex, or maybe it's laying off the trade show circuit to save some $$ (after all, upholding a legally and ethically built monopoy takes a little work to hold together).
One of the things to keep in mind about trade shows is that, oh, they are intended FOR THE TRADE. They are pitching their products and services to organizations that could potentially purchase them. So you won't see the Linux-based PDA's except as an item to be resold or maybe as a remote network monitoring tool (think a Sharp Zaurus with an 802.11b CF card).
Something that slightly itches at me like an Asian Ladybug's bite.. Is Apple there? I know some people are belligerent over the BSD vs GNU/Linux thing, but right now Apple is the world's leading supplier of Unixish systems thanks to the miracle of OS X. (My next system is going to be an iMac2 with OS X.1 and PPC SuSE dual-boot.)
I used to be someone else. Now I'm someone better.
Real life is underrated.
there's a link to a video clip of Taco and Hemos This Page if you just want to see what they look like. (on the screensavers)
Just watched that. How ironic the ajoining "stock ticker" table cell to the left of the video reminded me of how proud good ole' Larry A. was to aquire the LNUX symbol and carry the Linux torch high (in what seems like just a few months ago.) The new video in the window in front of me (and just to the left of the LNUX symbol) was 6 minutes of good ole' Larry stressing (in not so many words) how they are "oh so past that yucky Linux thing" now. I don't know about you all, but that makes my stomache churn a bit. (Not quite in the "selling your own mother" category -- but not far off.)
(+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
Considering also the imminent death of Slashdot, Holland has some rough days ahead of it.
VA is still supplying network connectivity to Debian, not a cheap proposition given their bandwidth needs. Try a traceroute to www.debian.org:
13 s6-0.border1-7206.valinux.com (209.81.23.54) 102.552 ms 86.615 ms 86.868 ms
14 fe0-0.dist5-3662.vasoftware.com (198.186.202.86) 95.753 ms 134.836 ms 95.819 ms
15 e2-2.community8-bi8000.vasoftware.com (198.186.202.102) 124.682 ms 88.352 ms 114.626 ms
16 klecker.debian.org (198.186.203.20) 91.755 ms 96.514 ms 93.637 ms
The Edge Report has posted a series of pictures from the event. Every day until our 100+ pictures are exhausted, we will be posting a new set. Check out the first one at:
http://www.edgereport.com/article.php?sid=123
if you want a shot at winning a 'coveted' gold penguin, i suggest you sit in the front row of the Golden Penguin Bowl (that's right, take a Press seat). Mr. Petreley will select at least 1 (usually 2) volunteers per team, and he usually selects from the first row.
that's how i got mine, yay!
oh ya, this doesn't apply to dumbasses, at least know yer shit.
Yup, that debian company. I wonder what their stock symbol is...
They laughed at Einstein. They laughed at the Wright Brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown. -- C. Sagan
(from the 96 page requirement document.. btw - TiB = tibibyte - 2^40 bytes or so)...
Example: For a 60 teraFLOP/s peak system, requirement 2.1.1.2 specifies that the system shall
have at least 30 TiB of memory, 1.2 PB globally addressable user disk, 6.0 TB/s intra-cluster
network aggregate link bandwidth, 3.0 TB/s intra-cluster networking bi-sectional bandwidth, 30
GB/s system sustained productive disk I/O bandwidth and 75 Gb/s external networking.
Black backgrounds and minimal text are so...late '90s. Not that late, at that.
One day, you guys might get some programming or design skills, and you'll be able to charge for your work. Don't hold your breath, though.
Debian is a semi-loose collection of volunteers.
Though I realy like your revised logic "debian will die therefore debian will die".
Btw, what are you going to do with that $200,000 bonus? By some pubic hair to tide you over until you develop some of your own?
Slashdot trolls are so funny!
They laughed at Einstein. They laughed at the Wright Brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown. -- C. Sagan
Happy to burst your bubble on this one. "Linux users" are not the target of the companies at LW. Those companies know that you can't sell anything to people who are either too ideologically "pure" or just too damn cheap to spend money for anything except hardware.
Those companies are marketing to the people running big business systems, who see Linux as a very attractive alternative for small to mid-range servers. Whine all you want about commercialism and the lack of OSS purity and all that nonsense, but the bottom line is Linux is very significant success in the real world, even if not on your terms. Live with it.
The Edge Report has posted a new crop of pictures from the event. Here's a list of all three sets.
Set One
Set Two
Set Three
More sets to come after our photography from today and Friday is processed.
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Why would apple be there? They are using a varient of *BSD, not a distribution of Linux to build and model Darwin off of, and they are contributing back to the BSD community with code, not the Linux community (at least, not directly). I'm not sure what they would do there. Maybe if it was Unix World, then it would make a lot of sense. Otherwise, apple should save the cash and come up with a good marketing strategy, they need one!
F-bacher
James Tiberius Kirk: "Spock, the women on your planet are logical. No other planet in the galaxy can make that claim."
...Was that all the HP and Compaq machines were running windows.
I also played in a game show near the compaq booth. It was acutally nothing more than a long advertisment. The funny thing was they were running windows with microsoft powerpoint on the big screen tv.
"He who laughs last is usually the dumbest kid on the block." - John Lennon
The newly combined Bayonne / PreViking teams will also be working on www.phonestreamer.com, built on top of GStreamer.
Just to elaborate on this project a bit for those interested. The aim of the phonestreamer project is to provide an easy frame work on which to build telephony applications. The system works by having a series of modules linked together connect through sources and sinks. For example, a source might be a MP3 file pulled from a web site, it might then go through a series of modules that do various manipuplations that convert the audio stream to 8bit U-Law that can be played straight out on an ISDN line. The sink would then be an ISDN card or something similar.
The phonestreamer project will provide sources and sinks for many different types of hardware starting off with those already supported in GNU Bayonne and PreViking. For example, Dialogic, NMS, Capi and eventually SIP and H323. If someone then wanted to create GUI telephone applications under Linux most of their work would already be done and they could concentrate their efforts more on the application and the GUI functionality and wouldn't need to worry about the low level telephony programming.
There will also be source/sink modules for all sorts of audio conversion. Many of these have already been written for the GStreamer architecture anyway.
Those visiting the show, don't forget to come and check out telephony under Linux by making free International calls at booth #13.
perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10);'
Purple Helmet linux?
C-X C-S
It's linux...BLOWING JIZZ ALL OVER YOUR FACE!
No Mozilla presence at the show :(
The great benefit of Open Source if it becomes the mainstream will not be that some of the volunteer contributors will make money off it. As we have all seen, it is hard to make money off things you give away.
The great benefit will be that everyone can share the huge value of what economists call the the "network effect" that comes from everyone else using the same system. Every new user to a shared system like an OS makes the system more valuable to those who already use it. That is the source of the huge inertial power of Windows, but we have to pay Microsoft billions for the priviledge of sharing their protocols.
With Open Source, not only don't we have to pay to enjoy the network effects (if Open Source really takes off), but we are free to modify whatever part we think needs tweeking.
Big corps don't work for charity. The will support Linux iff it makes money for them. The benefit to the rest of us is the expanding network of Linux users. Let's hope all the big corps jump on the bandwagon and make this system the standard.
John Gallup
Patriotism is the conviction that your country is superior to all others because you were born there. (GBS)
The irony out of all this is that IBM had their lunch eaten by Microsoft because they thought the money making in computers would be from hardware. They gave away the farm, at the time.
But what if all the predominant operating systems are free software? Where is the profit to be found? Why in hardware and Services, of course. Linux perfectly fits the earlier vision for them.
It is unfair to categorize IBM with Oracle. IBM has taken a real leadership role in the community, and has stayed fairly agnostic, supporting many different companies and endeavours, but not tying to any one. One can probably argue that IBM may have even saved a few along the way.
As far as Linux on the desktop, you obviously wish it doomed to failure. Why on earth would anyone wish an effort like giving every computer user on earth the best software for free to fail?
Acquiescence leads to obliteration
Well, you can't blame him. Everyone from ESR to RMS was telling him how he could make billions by giving away the software. So he dumped his hardware business and started giving away his software.
A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
All these absences and attendance being down
and the commercialization of linux all add up
to one thing: linux is dying. RIP.
Linux conferences are a big thing now. so are expos etc etc and LWN etc. But through all the coverage its the marketing and the muscle which gets the hypoe. have the developers, the faceless men who tiol through the nigh so that my mozilla dosnet crash or my Gnome is smooth or my kernel is secure just are forgotten.
Okay Linux, Eric etc have fame. but by and large all these things have become corportate focused! Everybody has myopia when it comes to developers. This really has to change
My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
You make a good point but think about it for a second - companies (MMM MS, Adobe, Macromedia) already make big money out of closed source.
Transmitting software on the internet is only of marginal cost if you live in western europe and the united states - the rest of the world pays big bucks for bandwidth and on an overall basis 56k modems are still the standard way to connect to the internet - this is useless for software distribution, and thats not even discussing viruses, corrupted downloads, dropped linbes, insecure payment systems.
People are not replacing pirated windows with linux, windows XP is the most pirated software on the planet right now and in fact people are replacing linux with it.
MS are actually having no major issues with XP licensing (despite what the register and certain sites tell you) they had a few glitches but so does anyone.
The simple fact is this. Microsoft can afford to make their OSes public domain. The company makes money off applications and if they wanted to they could give away the OS for free (and they can do it and still have it closed source)(the very thought of them doing that is chilling).
In fact MS have never prosecuted a home user for running a pirated windows (and i deal with MS daily - they are well aware of it and dont care as its another user of their product) - they are going more after business and they are looking mainly for breaches in licensing of applications not OSes. The fact is they can give do a cheap upgrade of Office and your software distrbution on the internet model makes it more cost effective thus meaning they could easily do it - and most people dont consider a couple hundred bucks every few years to be a lot of money (shock)
The thing about your post that makes me laugh is the last line - The danger is that the thing that costs money - software development will die because the companies cannot make any profit from which to finance it. - thus shooting yourself in the foot as the reality is Development costs money and preaching about it to people who think software costs nothing is a waste of time.
BTW - a defention of "Pretentious" is quoting 2 communist/socialist tracts and then shooting yourself in the foot with your closing line, uber Pretentious is quoting carl marx and uber leet Pretentious is mispelling Pretentious in the first place. (to be uber uber leet Pretentious you would have needed to quote Stallman (who makes marx look like a moderate)
I refuse to argue with Anonymous Cowards - if you want a discussion get an account....
Wow. A spelling flame. Very good.
Timothy where were you. I went to the OSDN "meeting room" across from the CA & IBM booths (big signs pointing too it) only to find CMDRTACO and HEMOS sitting on a couch checking their email, talking to Mandrake & DiBona. It looked like a "booth" to me!
The room was full of people. I even noticed that OSDN was a media sponsor of the event and had a huge banner in the entranceway. It seems obvious they felt LWCE had turned into a commercial event. I was even told that they planned to have a presence in Ottawa later this year.
The Edge Report has a new batch of pictures from LinuxWorld Expo in New York City. Set 4 - NuSphere, IBM, Caldera, Dice.com, Sony; Set 5 - Veritas, Sharp, Sun, O'Reilly, and Compaq's Game Show.
.orgs, Compaq, fsf, Sun.
The last series were: Set 1 - Walking in, CA, AMD, Red Hat; Set 2 - Ximian, IBM, Games, "The Tattoo Guy", MandrakeSoft; Set 3 -
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Here's The Edge Report's last batch of pictures from LinuxWorld Conference & Expo in New York City. Set 6 - Veritas, Intel, hancom (they really like Commander Taco); Set 7 - AMD, Inferno, Linuxfund, Entertainment; Set 8 - Miscellaneous; Set 9 - Miscellaneous, Booth Babes, and New York City.
.orgs, Compaq, fsf, Sun; Set 4 - NuSphere, IBM, Caldera, Dice.com, Sony; Set 5 - Veritas, Sharp, Sun, O'Reilly, and Compaq's Game Show.
Older sets include: Set 1 - Walking in, CA, AMD, Red Hat; Set 2 - Ximian, IBM, Games, "The Tattoo Guy", MandrakeSoft; Set 3 -
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Here's The Edge Report's last batch of pictures from LinuxWorld Conference & Expo in New York City. Set 6 - Veritas, Intel, hancom (they really like Commander Taco); Set 7 - AMD, Inferno, Linuxfund, Entertainment; Set 8 - Miscellaneous; Set 9 - Miscellaneous, Booth Babes, and New York City.
.orgs, Compaq, fsf, Sun; Set 4 - NuSphere, IBM, Caldera, Dice.com, Sony; Set 5 - Veritas, Sharp, Sun, O'Reilly, and Compaq's Game Show.
Older sets include: Set 1 - Walking in, CA, AMD, Red Hat; Set 2 - Ximian, IBM, Games, "The Tattoo Guy", MandrakeSoft; Set 3 -
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