Comparing Linux To System VR4
robyannetta writes "Paul Murphy from LinuxInsider.com asks the question
What's the difference between Linux and System VR4? From the article: 'If there's a real bottom line here, the one thing I'm clear on is that I haven't found it yet, but the questions raised have been more interesting that the answers -- so more help would be welcomed.'"
LinuxInsider has on several occasions in the past been a troll site for the SCO/IBM Linux dispute, coming down firmly on the FUD-mongers' side. They are a platform for people like Enderle, DiDio. Ignore, is my advice...
Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
Or this: What makes a patch "artificial" ? Whatever that means, how does it imply anything about the sco/ibm lawsuit? Weren't the 2.5 development line split and the major scheduler changes introduced before the lawsuit? Even if not, what would he consider a continuation of the development up to 2.4? In short, can somebody explain to me what this guy is saying?
As another comment above noted, "LinuxInsider" is not a computing news site in any real sense of the term. It is in fact little more than a FUD factory. The list of contributors reads like the who's who of Microsoft/SCO paid schills...
I'm surprised that Slashdot gave this latest garbage a front page headline. Hopefully if enough people ignore LinuxInsider it'll go away...
Code, Hardware, stuff like that.
Just so you know... best boot manager out there is called Gag. It has no problem supporting whatever operating systems it finds on your disk, and it finds new operating systems AT BOOT TIME.
Intolerance for ambiguity is the mark of the authoritarian personality.
Bruce
Bruce Perens.
You are correct on a bunch of this. Apparently, they did internal benchmarking and found that 2.6 was killing them esp. con networking.
In fact, Sun has recently had to re-write major portions of Solaris BEFORE releasing 10.0 to the public. My understanding is that the top ppl spent a lot of time looking at Linux and then "borrowed" ideas.
I find it funny, that when they take ideas, it is borrowing, but when Linux takes ideas, it is theft. Oh, well one groups terrorists is another's freedom fighter.
I'm not sure what the kernel has to do with it. The point of achieving concurrency is to avoid kernel entanglement. That means lock-free programming where possible. How successful you are there depends on the hardware architecture and who's supporting lock-free programming. As someone who's doing the latter (Atomic Ptr Plus), it's not likely I'm going to get ahold of a Niagra processor based system (and I'm going to dump my SB100) so you won't see too much there. However, I am going to get a Mac Mini, so you will see support for Darwin as well as Linux.
- He would not respond to my argument that there is BSD code in UNIX.
- He thinks SCO has a case, but their lawyers are doing a bad job of explaining it.
- He thinks IBM's lawyers are in cahoots with Groklaw to make SCO look bad
Just for grins, I will now debunk TFA:Companies like Sun have PR firms that will synthesize buzz if they can't get any legitimate buzz. I'd suspect something like that is afoot, or it's just an ill-informed person biting off more than he can chew.
Bruce
Bruce Perens.