Desktop Linux Summit Highlights
mo writes "The Desktop Linux Summit has just concluded in San Diego. There were a number of exhibitors, including Novell, AMD, and Mozilla. I've put together a summary of some of the more interesting announcements and booths at the conference. Highlights include a Linux-only 3D game, DRM-free music services, and a new Asterisk GUI."
considering i just started using Linux more than i use windows, and I'm a gamer, i'm particularly happy right now ^_^
Beyond doubt, we need better and more 3D games to attract a normal Joe towards using GNU/Linux. Even I reboot to winblows for the games. First step would be to port the existing games to Linux, but this cannot be done by the community. We need help from the gaming companies and I am are more than willing to pay for some nice games like Counter Stike, Half Life and NFS Underground.
OK, Switchvox has got the nicest GUI for an Asterisk-based system I've yet seen. Too bad it only comes on their PBX systems (starting at $995). I'd love to have GUI-based software like that to go along with my home asterisk setup.
How am I supposed to fit a pithy, relevant quote into 120 characters?
And anonymous cowards like you should post your problem in a LUG, not troll around on /. FC3 works fine on my system!!! Heck, I even play Doom 3
The big firms will embrace Linux on the desktop when they can see network deployability and end-user configuration lockdown in an easy-to-buy solution. It's a pretty major acceptance criterion. Anybody focusing on that?
Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
Cached article
it runs on Windows, Mac OS X and one flavor of Linux (Linspire).
Mp3beamer is really interesting, MP3tunes is nice, but Linspire 5 seems awesome.
What a great month this is for OSS. And it's not even over yet, LinuxWorld anybody?
Where are the tubby bearded Unix gurus? The skinny, pasty-skinned, ponytailed technopolitical geeks with the long leather dusters? The thought of any "summit" where friendly user interfaces were highlighted probably scared 'em off.
The first half-day of the conference was an OpenOffice.org RegiCon (Regional conference), and yet there was no mention of them in the article? That's a HORRIBLE summary of the DLS, coming from someone who was there every second of the thing.
Jay | http://oldos.org
Sound really really good, just what we need to get more attention and more users...
neo2k
It's fun to have 11 half baked movie viewers available for my ditro of choice. You want em' you got em'. We've got tuns of desktops (KDE, GNOME, ETC), tuns of newsreaders, email clients, word processors, IDEs, package managers, IM clients, graphics editors, DVD authoring tools... AND THEY'RE ALL HALF BAKED.
Work together!
I can hear it now, "it's about freedom man." "It's about competition man."
Ok. Linus, let's fork the linux kernel into 11 different camps. You will no longer be the central leader. You will be a leader of a single camp and there will be 10 other leaders. Each camp will code off into its own direction to the point where each camps code bases is completely different. I want my freedom of choice Linus. I want the competition from completely different kernels.
Yeah, I can't stand it when people want KDE and GNOME to join forces. It would suck if there was one leader of desktop development (similar to Linus) and everyone worked from the same code base. There'd be no competition. SIGH.
It's a joke.
does Skype compare with the asterisk voip stuff.?? Inquiriung minds need to know!
...it wasn't for those darn half man/half monkey clones downloading illegal copies of games with their modded Mac Minis running Debian!
Its somewhat difficult to envisage what the exact purpose of these innovations are. I mean Linux's userbase is made up largely of coders and firms, neither group see their Linux OS as one to support 3D gaming. Thus, its pheasable to say that these firms are looking to make Linux appeal more to the mainstream market ("Average Joe" users) by introducing methods even the most basic of PC's from decades ago possessed (ie. Video Gaming).
"Why is modern Linux so bloated and slow?"
next time install less of what you dont need. i know choice is a new thing to people like you, but youll learn it!
They don't have these things now, but instead rely on a combination of 3rd party stuff, homebrew scripts, and not-quite-there-but-PHB-friendly vendor FUD. Those sysadmins who claim it doesn't work are quickly ousted as nonbelievers, and the employees quickly learn to give up on the outsourced, non-english speaking helpdesk, and just bootleg their own software instead. Broken NDS-NT/AD gateways, stupidly nested GPOs, invasive and pervasive, reboot-in-the-middle-of-the-day Zen pushes that break the computer are the norm.
The Emperor has no clothes.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
That mp3tunes reminds me that the guy who started easyjet and easycafe started a music download service. Don't think it's been covered here. It'd be nice if one of the European readers found out more and tried to get it on /.'s main page.
>network deployability
Ummm, people have been installing Linux over a network for over a decade. The old NFS installs worked just fine. You didn't even need a boot floppy if you had a boot ROM on the network card. Now I just do everything with a business-card CD of Debian, and download all of the packages, including our custom ones, from a central company server.
> end-user configuration lockdown
UNIX has had this for over 30 years, and Linux for over 13 years. When you don't give the end-users the root password, the configuration is locked-down.
I was there as well and Rob Lanphier, Real's open source guru, unveiled the next feature set of the Helix Player (https://player.helixcommunity.org) and the Linux RealPlayer. The three features I wrote down were: - Subscription radio - Commercial Free - YES!!! - Reduced start up delay - whatever that was - Automatic bandwidth detection - for better roaming I think. Later...
Skype is an implementation of VOIP. Asterisk (and Switchvox) is a sort of drop-in replacement for some very expensive telephone switch and voicemail hardware (PBX) like the Avaya systems.
Linux will never be ready for the desktop, quite simply because the people who use it view themselves as 'above' everyone else.
Linux users like complex, archaic procedures to accomplish even the most menial of tasks. Somehow, being able to type an intricate string of meaningless characters and get an equally confusing output makes them feel good about themselves.
Just take a look around slashdot. Notice how all the users refer to themseleves as 'us', and everyone else as 'them'. Notice how Linux users always 'talk down' to/about the 'average' user.
It's terrible
Is it just me or do Linspire's products look suspiciously similar to Apple's? lSongs, mp3Tunes, and even the new interface for Linspire 5 looks like it is trying to emulate the feel of Apple software... and failing.
I mean, how many people are actually going to use something with a tacky name like "lsongs". The name is laughable - it's like those store-brand ripoff names like Wal-Mart's "Dr.Thunder".
I doubt mp3tunes will get any RIAA artists to sign on without DRM, which basically means it will go the way of eMusic and that other service whose name I can't quite recall.
In addition, I know it's my opinion, but Linspire 5 is ugly. It looks somewhere between Windows XP and Keramik, which doesn't blend very well.
Linspire has some good ideas, it's just too bad they have such poor execution.
...that the folks at Linspire don't do an MS and run everybody as root: http://adn.bmdhacks.com/desktopsummit/images/lindo ws.jpg
It's been a while since I played with Lindows/Linspire 4.5 and I can't remember if that ran as root by default or not. Can anybody confirm ? I really hope that they've not made that mistake as 'Average Joe' mentioned above won't know its "bad"...
He has got a point.
I think Firefox has proven this. They have proven that people, in the end, really don't give a shit about your political issue and really, all they want is just good software. You won't see anything about the political issues of it apart from a few 'open source' mentions.
I just want a damn distro that includes mp3, divx/xvid, plus working hal, dbus etc. Also binary drivers MUST be installed for me after xorg upgrades. Either that or don't prompt me to install a new xorg upgrade.
I think I have to agree with the parent really. I'm extremely experinced with running Linux on servers. I write server management and monitoring software for Linux exclusively. I often try desktop Linux out as I'd like to 'leverage' some of that experience onto the desktop. But it always ends up with me thinking 'what the hell is the point of fighting with this simple issue'. Last time it was the fact that my network card (very common chipset) couldn't push more than 30kbyte/sec in Linux, but could happily do 7000-9000kbyte/sec in WinXP. I was told to upgrade my kernel. Then I was told to recompile my kernel. Neither worked. The freaking diagnostic tools couldn't even give me diagnostics on it. I gave up and went back to XP which, as usual, has worked perfectly for the last 3 years with very few issues (less than 5 minutes on any day am I fighting with the OS to do something. Compare that to hours on Linux).
The trouble is that when people like me go for help, we get told that 'oh, that'll be in the next version'. Or, 'oh, that's binary, and that's evil'. You know what: I really don't care! I just want it to work.
Yeah, if only the FC3 installer would actually follow my choices. I did a Custom install, deselected a ton of crap.
List of some things I deselected (among many):
- Foomatic printer drivers
- Omni printer shit
- Sendmail
- Media player something-or-other
As I watched in awe, FC3 installed 100 MB worth of printer junk that I remember unselecting, Sendmail was a service on startup, and a ton more services I specifically remember choosing not to install being started.
Yeah, what good is choice if it doesn't actually follow your choices, or the fact that it's slow as shit anyway?
It's titled:
"OpenOffice.org Presence"
I see lots of posts saying "games" are the magic ticket to Linux getting popular. Stop dreaming... it's not gonna happen for a long time. Linux on the desktop is not even remotely near even 10% market share... no sane company is going to put lots of resources into developing games for Linux. Yes there were some flukes where a couple popular games got made but they were hardly profitable. Most of what Linux has for games are done by hobbyist... which is fine for the nostalgic type who like 80's style gaming but will never fail to succeed an impressing most of the gaming public. END OF RANT.
On to what I originally wanted to say... Linux on the desktop could sure use alot of polish in the following ways. Consider:
1) A common control panel. There are a ton of different config tools which vary by distribution. Even on a single distro you can't configure everything from one place- it's often a mix of various config tools and hand editing of config files.
2) Tell the freakin developers to make GOOD intallation binaries and keep them UP TO DATE. Have a common to all distro's install tool that is very easy to use (perhaps a RPM front end). I am a programmer and yes I do know how to compile stuff but when I'm not programming... I'm also a user and feel I should not have to compile anything myself.
3) KDE vs Gnome wars: put an end to it. I know everyone will disagree with me saying 'choice is good'. I agree... but there needs to be a standard. Without a standard alot of manpowers being distributed where it could much be better focused. Perhaps this is the downfall of Linux in general... everyones got freedom so all they choose to work on something different.
I could go on but I'll leave it at that for now.
Blender And Linux Fan
Well, I think the idea of skype is great, and their voice out rates are competitive. Is there anyway to combine the two, such that anyone in the world which calls my skype phone number "sourceview" is then shunted to the asterisk or even the vovida PBX system? By the way, I have an Avaya box for sale!
Amen. Most people don't give a crap about the politics or "freeness" involved. They just Want It To Work. I suppose this is why OS X/Apple are gaining popularity -- people are noticing that It Just Works.
... I can hear it now ...
Proprietary binary drivers are evil? Then write me equivalent/better ones that are open-sourced? What? You can't? Then I don't care, I'll continue using my binaries, because I really don't care about being able to see the source code.
I find it unacceptable that a modern Linux distro on a modern machine is slow. For instance, I've run Windows XP on a PII-300/128 MB of RAM, and it was quite usable. So usable, in fact, that I have a friend who's been using that configuration for months and he hasn't complained once about any kind of slowness.
Modern Redhat/Mandrake on the same system would be completely unusable. Wait, wait
"Don't use KDE/GNOME, use Fluxbox/IceWM/whatever."
How about no? How about the fact that FB/IceWm/etc. don't offer me the same ease of use and integration that I want? The kind of thing that GNOME/KDE offer me. The kind of thing that XP offers me.
It basically comes down to this -- If you want to use Linux on an older machine, be prepared to switch to lower functionality/features if you want to maintain the same usability performance as Windows.
Somehow, I find your argument that gamers belong to a niche market doesn't hold water.
... I'm such a geek.
Do you have some numbers to back this up?
My numbers say there's more money in videogames than there is at the box office.
P.S. Oh YEAH!!! Take that! Counter-insight on one-two-three- oooohhh.
Unreal Doom3 HalfLife2 Enemy Territory Cube Savage Stratagus Freeciv Wesnoth NeverwinterNights Tribes2 Vendetta YohohoPuzzlePirates Civilization AlphaCentauri FrozenBubble Pydance Teg DeusEx BZFlag XPlane Flightgear Torcs Scorched3d Pingus Lincity Tuxcart Torcs Quake 123 VegaStrike Railz LBreakout Armagetron PPRacer Vendetta and there more impressive titles under development.
Here's my opinion. What "we" need are fewer people saying we need more games, and more people recognizing some of the excellent offerings we have right now. If we support these games (even with nothing more than just a little recognition), the companies WILL notice, see us as a market, and want to cater to us.
Well there is already an open source project that does that, AMP. The people that does AMP also has a commercial version call voxbox. I was at that show, it should have been called the Linspire Expo. Since the show was run by Linspire and most of the booths are for Linspire products.
Everyone has their pet theory about why Linux hasn't made any serious inroads into the mainstream desktop. Here's mine: Virtually non-existent support for the 1,001 hardware goodies you can buy at Circuit City, Best Buy, etc. Until Joe Average can walk into one of those stores, buy something without even having to think about whether it runs on Linux, and then get it to run at least as easily as it does under Windows, then Linux is a no-go on the desktop.
I must be blind because I find no resemblance.
This makes sense, too. If I remember right (I was, like, eight when I had this game), it had mecha in it like the Mechwarrior games, and was the first in a line of games that would eventually lead to the tribes games (Earthsiege->Starsiege->Tribes). I never really played those, and I couldn't really figure out Earthsiege either with its featureless graphics, so I might be remembering wrong. This new game looks pretty cool, though.
Most likely you selected something else that required what you deselected as a dependency.
As a beginner you should use one of the standard base installs and either yum or apt to install software.
Perhaps what you really want is ubuntu. Installs with synaptic by default and is super snappy even on low end systems. Not too much bloat.
ymmv.
As a matter of fact, I tried Ubuntu on a PII-350/192 MB of RAM.
It took about 8 minutes to boot, and any subsequent application from within KDE about 30 seconds to start.
Unacceptable. Why is it so slow?
In the same way that apples compare to oranges. Asterisk is a PBX replacement: go into the phone closet at your office and look for something that looks like a really big motherboard with ridiculously huge PCI cards on it and a bunch of phone lines going into them. An asterisk box is meant to replace that: it can run digital and analog telephony, and VOIP to if you want it to.
All's true that is mistrusted
Isn't the solution to the "linux" gaming issue obvious? The software freedom movement needs to better organize and support the mod community.
The Mugen community, the quake community...
If we make engines for Build Your Own Game style games, the gamers will come.
Sorry about that. Mentioned Vendetta twice. Hopefully the point is still clear, though.
Take an interest in what people are putting out there for you for ALREADY. Just go to Freshmeat and browse through the games being developed there. Find one that looks promising. Subscribe to it. Post a little something that says "this looks awesome".
Go to Linuxgames and check out the releases there. Go to HappyPenguin and have a look at the projects there. Check out the Game of the Month project and see if you can offer some help, even if it's only testing.
Got money? Vote with your wallet -- find a game that's being developed and isn't in danger of stagnation on sourceforge and donate. Give them half of what you'd pay for a commercial game in the genre. Consider what you're investing in -- tons of content, free updates, no subscription fees, etc.
Not impressed by any of the games? Fine. Donate to library-makers. Take a look at libsdl, clanlib, allegro, irrlicht, ogre3d, blender, crystal space, etc. These guys are putting out free tools for developers to use to make games. And they're bloody marvellous.
When a Linux version of a commercial game is published, if it looks interesting, BUY IT. Think about all that time that Loki had their balls hanging out there. Are you telling me that there wasn't some money you wasted on something else that couldn't have gone to them? Loki took a lot of flack for the way things went in the end, but IMO if there were more people willing to put their money where there mouth was, things would have worked out better for them -- they'd have found a way to survive.
Brag about what we have. Show that you're willing to pay to get even more of it. Don't complain about what we don't have.
Or don't. Most of the projects are going to keep working and working regardless of the lack of mainstream recognition. But if you'd like to be a part of the solution, the above advice is a start.
Stop the uninformed posts with +2 or more.
KDE does not use SVG icons by default, they are PNGs, they support SVG, yes, but that's it.
When the SVG backend becmoes more accurate and efficient, this may be the case.
Also, KDE's UI is not a mess anymore than GNOME's is, taht's just marketing BS.
And Linspire's business is nothing like Apple's, in fact tehy are trying to be more like Winows than Apple.
STOP THE BS!
1. Coz you're running a modern Distro on dated hardware. Try a low-fat distro. Slackware/Debian come to mind.
2. Coz you're running KDE. Try a *box (black/flux/open). Or if you must have a desktop environment try XFCE.
(This isn't a troll, I just want to see some clear arguments.)
I'm a fairly heavy Windows user. For about 90-120 minutes a day, I check email through Thunderbird, browse some sites with Firefox, chat on Gaim and XChat, and download my daily dose of Mercury Theatre[1] with Azureus. I use Sygate Firewall and AVG Anti-virus, and I rarely have a problem.
Why should _I_ switch to Linux?
[1] Mercury Theatre is in the public domain, so this isn't a warez-related post.
Is this a particularly effective and mature attitude by the article reporter and the community? Then again, are we talking about the slashdot community, the Linux user community, and the actual development (for Linux) community?
Well yes, the asterisk system can be pretty easily configured to recieve any type of call and route it to another place. All that matters is having the support line there whether it be POTS or whatever.
Umm, no. Things like Group Policies on Windows provide much much more than "lockdown". Software installation, sure. But most importantly, configuration. I need to be able to enforce configurations like, "this group of users automatically point to mail server X, file server Y, and this set of icons and default reports for our financials applications. Also, make plain text their default email format, and set their in-office hours on their calendar to 9-to-5 weedays. Prevent them from changing that stuff, but only if they're not in the help desk group. Finally, hide all of the database integration functions from the spreadsheet program, so they don't get confused."
Many many hours of scripting would be required to replicate this functionality on Linux, if it were possible at all with all the customized configuration files each application has. With Windows, Active Directory, and Group Policies, this sort of mass configutation is just point-n-click.
The closest thing I've ever seen to this on a UNIX-style system was how the University of Notre Dame ran their Solaris workstation clusters on AFS back in the mid-1990s. But there was really no application-level configuration done, just some automatic setup of X, the window manager, and user directories.
I find ubuntu's default desktop install (with gnome) to be very reasonable on a P-II 500 with 256 mb of ram. But it's not going to be super snappy. I haven't timed the boot, but it's sure as hell not eight minutes.
I thought that only worked for Roland Piquepalle?
How do you attract the big game companies (and the small-time developers) to Linux?
Here's a thought. Build a good open-source game engine. Something that they'll want to develop for. With a license that's acceptable to the bosses. And make it cross-platform.
Developers should go for this because they save time and costs developing the engine, and it's nice to use. Plus, they get secondary markets ('nix and Mac gamers) with almost no extra effort, and without sacrificing their primary market (Windows gamers).
This is a big technical challenge, but it should work if the developers have nothing to lose by going this route.
SDL is great. It takes care of a lot of things. I personally dont use it, but I have notice there listed of support things are more then I could of ever hoped. Things I would like to see are Networking, and fast FileInput Output added. Even if SDL was perfect, it still leaves issues related to have to compile the source code again. Realisticly the community needs to promote a solution that doesn't need to be recompiled. Wouldn't it be nice that once you bought a game you could always end up using it even if you change your hardware, or OS. Now SDL does have a Java linkage, but I dont really see that being a good solution. I feel the API needs to be added to the Java installer. So hopefully someone from Sun can read this and decide to make a good API for games.
mnewberg.com
What kind of open source project requires people to assign their copyright on contributions to a company for the specific purpose of releasing proprietary software based on those contributions?
How we know is more important than what we know.
It's all well and good to talk about Linspire, but what I really wanted to hear about was Linspire. Did anyone catch what Linspire was doing at the show? Maybe someone should post an article about Linspire. I'm sure there where other things at the show, but clearly Linspire needs more exposure.
Sigh... You know I've been wasting my time reading Slashdot for almost as long as it's been around. At one point it really *was* "News for Nerds". I was happy to have wasted those few minutes a day -- that was what nerds did!
But Slashdot is now "News for idiots who enjoy flamefests and astroturfing". I can accept that from ignorant commentators such as myself, but from the editorial staff?
If I wanted shocking, controversial, manipulative propaganda, I'd listen to the mainstream news. I want mindless, trivial, techno-mation. I want cool factor, not empire building. Geez, I even miss poor, petrified Natalie Portman. At least that had geek apeal.
So, see ya guys! I end my less than illustrius time on Slashdot completely off topic and being a total troll.
Enjoy!
If only that were true. Yes you can deploy install via nfs quite easily, if you have LAN connectivity.
... its a lot harder to push things through management when they look different.
What about maintenance over frame ? Can you push images out rather pulling down over NFS? What about maintaining multiple patch repositories with different versioning (YUM/APT get close to this).
Regarding locking down configuration by not providing a root password: nice, but it does not go far enough. Can we get true single-sign-on ? Does user A on computer B get exactly the same experience as user A on computer Z, even if B and Z have completely different hardware, and user A has never logged onto Z before. Is user A on B and on Z viewed as one identity by network services (the PAM/WINBIND/KERBEROS or PAM/LDAP suites get close, but again no cigar). Novell has done a lot of good work in this area, as has SUSE with its KIOSK framework.
The big Open Source projects need to focus a little harder on integrating together to provide a consistent and manageable suite of enterprise products. Similarity with the equivalent Windows apps is also a plus
I detest the idiotic decision by the gnome group to change the evolution interface from the old ximian interface (complete outlook clone). While this may satisfy the existing Gnome users, there are now exponentially more Windows users who will now be confused if they try to switch. Bravo Gnome
I would suggest staying with Windows for the time being. Why becuase it works for you, why fix something that isn't broken.
Now from your description I would suggest to moving to Linux in the future. This is how I would do it.
First Thing I would suggest you to do is read up on how to use Linux, and get used to it. Try out one of the bootable distro and use that for awhile, make sure you can use everything. If everything works(hardware and software), and you have the time go ahead and (Backup)install Linux.
Otherwise I would wait for when you are ready to replace your computer, and plan my purchases around Linux. Linux is really good about Hardware support, but I would be careful and double check everything you buy and make sure it would work, and isn't too hard to setup.
Once you have everything working, then transfer all your work related things to the new computer and then put that Windows Box to rest.
mnewberg.com
Normal Joes do not play computer games.
You're right. These are the Game Joes. But they don't stop being Joes after all. Being a nerd or liking games doesn't make you a linux uber-genius automatically.
to learn how to operate all the programs under Linux? Nobody mentions that part. I like my UseNet. I have been comfortible using newsShark as my news-reader for years. Now I have to learn Pan. I like my Nero. Now I have to learn a brand new program to make CDs. I like my WinMX and eMule. yes, there is WINE, I KNOW that. now you are telling me I have to install and run WINE? More new programs to learn to install and run. and Linux is far from perfect. KDE runs slower than Windows. It crashes and the programs crash too. Sorry, but time equals money. I have to invest months to be able to run most of the programs I now run uner Windows.
The closest thing I've ever seen to this on a UNIX-style system was how the University of Notre Dame ran their Solaris workstation clusters on AFS back in the mid-1990s.
Actually, that's basically how Mac OS X Server works. User preferences are stored in tiered layers through a facility called NSUserDefaults. Some preferences can be set at the group layer, some at the user layer (by an administrator) and some by the user himself.
Now, many third-party applications (especially legacy 20th-century stuff) haven't gotten around to implementing NSUserDefaults yet. There's not really any excuse for that; it's only been around since 10.0. But if life were perfect it wouldn't be interesting.
Check out Irrlicht. It's cross-platform, free, open-source, handles mesh imports from 3d studio max, maya, DirectX formats, and can import Quake 3 levels and Quake 2 models, amongst other things.
Or Blender, which has support for 3d game creation.
Or Ogre3d, which is more of a graphics engine than a game engine, but which can be used for game creation.
But I think irrlicht is the closest to what you're talking about.
Robin Rowe founder of LinuxMovies.org
Linux in the Motion Picture Industry
He showed clips of 'The Last Samurai', Bad Boyz, etc. He said Shrek2 had a 2,500 cpu render farm and was fast approaching their deadline. They contact HP for an additional 1,000 cpu render farm and sent their info to them so that could finish. Like in last samurai he said no arrows were shot in the whole movie they were painted in. Also the shot with thousands of arrows the actors had them stuck in their legs and the digital effects people had to reverse trajectory paint them in. Pretty neat stuff.
Mitch Kapor lotus 1-2-3, co-founder of eff.org, working on chandler
I really liked his talk...he really is a visionary. He basically just sees it as a matter of time till open source blows over but his time frames are like 10 to 15 years.
Brenno de Winter
This guy single handedly wrote an op-ed and had the Dutch goverment stop a 160 million Microsoft contract of 5 years for something like 25,000 desktops. Instead he had redhat, suse, etc. summit alternative bids for like 7 million dollars. Anyway he now has minister and politicians asking him about DRM, etc. I stood next to him while I was buying like 25 firefox and thunderbird cds but didn't say anything. He's really a funny guy. He kept belting out s-word and b-word, etc. totally hilarious.
Gary Edwards like a co-ordinator for openoffice OASIS. I almost didn't sit through this talk cuz I was like what the hell is OASIS? But boy oh boy this is really gonna revolutionize all office suites and the way business share documents.
He said last 3 years OASIS (open document) has been in the making. Microsoft objected to it being called 'openoffice document' so they settle on 'open document'. It'll be in Openoffice 2.0. It supports XML, Xforms, UBL (universal business language...bills of lading, etc.), compound documents. Say Abiword opens a compound document with some word processor format with spreadsheets and it'll gracefully handle it just saying it can't display the spreadsheet portion.
Barry is totally in the know and I couldn't get enough of what he had to say. Other talks I liked were Doc Searls and Simmon Phipps who is a Sun guy and anyway.
I really got the feeling that Novell and Sun are embracing it slowly but surely. Anyway about those Linspire 4.5 and Linspire 5.0 beta...I guess they just don't like my little shuttle box. I guess I'll have to wait till they send me a japanese version (hey Scott) of 5.0 and hopefully I'll have better luck with that one.
I did try that Novell 9 Linux Desktop 60 day trial and yeah it's basically suse but with an administrator's perspective to make it easy to manage hundreds and thousands of workstations. Kinda cool.
Now they said they were videotaping all presentations but for the life of me I can't find squat online. I got that cd from Kim Brand (opensource in small schools) but it doesn't seem to have 25% of what was in the whole slideshow presantation.
Yep. Linspire is working on an enterprise version of CNR so you will be able to deploy applications in a corporate network. For lock down there is the KDE Kiosk framework which is being worked on.
[Please type your sig here.]
these people can explain everything to us. You see, here I am, spending sleepless nights worrying about what Linux "needs", and so on, and this guy has it all figured out! I just don't understand why people can't just listen to him! C'mon! Work together! Or you will be all half baked!
AccountKiller
... Was there much in the way of WM updates? Distros other than Linspire? Productivity apps? Prosumer (iLife-style) apps?
I mean, it looks like pretty much a Michael Robertsonfest going on, a few interesting bits, but nothing that's gonna give MS cause to worry...
Now a solid production IMAP or WebDAV groupware release with a free Outlook plugin, _that_ would be cause for partying.. And getting full xinerama support for OpenGL....
There is no law or rule that says everything (or anything) written for Linux has to be GPL or any other Open Source license (the GPL is not the only Open Source license, you did know, right?). In fact, there are huge amounts of expensive proprietary (closed source) application software written expressly for Linux.
Want to fix Linux? Start by getting rid of the "you can change everything" aspect of it.
Supposedly, Windows has this type of "interoperability" too, at least that's what Redmond has been tooting of late. And, I'm sure there are quite a few applications that run on specially tweaked Windows as well.
"Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
"I've done quite a bit of work in SVG under Inkscape and I must say that I think the format is wonderful. Whether it's appropriate as a native icon format or not is pretty much a matter of choice, but it's *great* for designing them."
Fonts are a vector format. Now ask yourself: why do fonts have "hinting"? Why is it SVG doesn't?
I'm working on a cross platform(Linux | Mac | Win) driving simulator. I'm confident it's going to be a success is due to our use of 3rd party libraries to aid in development but how long it takes depends on how much help we recieve. A lot of aspiring OSS developers aren't aware that high quality libraries exist to aid in development of increasingly complicated games. We get to focus on the driving dynamics and not arcane shader technology because our graphics engine simplifies it.
Check out our image gallery for a look at the shadowing capabilities we're taking advantage of. If you or anybody you know are C++ gurus and have a love for driving and/or Open Source Software please consider lending a hand. Say hi on irc... irc.boomtown.net #motorsport
What if Digg added local news and a Slashdot inspired comment karma system? ---
http://houndwire.com
How soon people forget Loki. They took your premise of, "People will pay for good ports of Windows games," and built a business around it. Guess what? People didn't pay. Whether it was because the game world moves so fast that something even six months old is relegated to the bargain bin, or because the typical view of, "Linux is free, and thus any software for Linux should be free as well," held by many Linux users did them in is hard to say. I suspect it's a mixture of both, and other pressures. The moral of the story is that people won't pay for game ports, at least not in the numbers you need to break even, let alone profit at the porting business. If the port doesn't sim-ship with the Windows product, you're screwed. Even if it does ship at the same time, you need some massive marketing to let folks know that there's a Linux version. If you bundle it in with the Windows version, you have no way of tracking how many sales are for the Linux version, and if you have separate versions you risk pissing off your customer base ("I bought this game, but it doesn't work on my Windows machine." "You bought the Linux version. Install Linux or exchange it for the Windows version." "You suck. I'm not buying your games anymore. I'll just warez them and play them for free.").
Now we're into a catch-22. You need to get games ported to Linux to bootstrap Linux game development, but you can't get enough people to buy the port to sustain a business. What Linux needs is a couple dedicated professional gaming studios writing Linux-only games (similar to Bungie and the Mac back in the Marathon days). Good luck selling that one in a market where if your game doesn't sim-ship on PC (Windows), PS2, Gamecube, XBox, and GBA, you're not going to make a profit (and even if you do pull it off, you still may not make a profit).
None of this is to say that Linux can't be a games platform. Anything can be a games platform (calculators, wrist-watches, set-top boxes like Tivo, you name it, chances are games have been written for it). More, Linux does support popular 3D accelerators, it supports OpenGL and has a decent framework for other bits (input/output, audio, networking, 2D graphics) in the form of SDL. Everything is there except for the marketshare to make it profitable, and the professional development studios to make commercial-quality games on Linux as a first-class platform. I don't know how you get there from here, but I'd suggest talking with others in a similar situation (*cough*Apple*cough*) and see what develops. Too bad the decentralized nature of OSS makes it difficult for a key set of players to be indentified for those types of discussions.
In the meantime, you're going to have to continue booting into "winblows" (hey, real mature there, buddy!) to play the latest mega blockbusters. And I don't want to hear any crap about how games "used to be so much better". If you want to start that discussion, you'll first need to relinquish your rose-colored glasses and recognize that the majority of games (movies, music, books, web sites, ...) have always sucked, will continue to suck, and the only reason why the past seems "better" is because you've forgotten all the shit that came before.
Perhaps this year will finally be The Year of Linux on the Desktop(TM)!
"This really sounds like a commercial. Do you work for them?"
Nope. He's just lamenting that a commercial company has to patch an open source weakness, and charge for it. Instead of an open source developer who will not charge any money.
Things are usually implemented in Linux when someone thinks it is worthwhile. I can see why we are more worried about games.
Disclaimer: I am a developer of OpenOffice.org Mac OS X and a founder of the NeoOffice project.
The DLS was held right across from a gun show (credit to The MacRat for the photo. I'm impressed the guy in the penguin suit at the door didn't go bonkers from the sun, run on over and get a semi and proceed to mow down geeks at will.
<shameless plug>
Of course, for me the highlight was Simon Phipps call for recognition of NeoOffice admist a truly wonderful presentation arguing that open source is a natural evolution of a connected society that will effect a societal transformation, similar to the rise of artisan guilds. But I very well may be just a tad bit biased having been a visual aid... ;)
</shameless plug>
ed
"There is no law or rule that says everything (or anything) written for Linux has to be GPL or any other Open Source license (the GPL is not the only Open Source license, you did know, right?). In fact, there are huge amounts of expensive proprietary (closed source) application software written expressly for Linux."
He's talking about the attitude amoungst a certain (very vocal) group of people (leeches). Not the legal reality of Open Source Licenses. Actions DO speak louder than words.
Point proven. The *box suggestion had to come.
Read my post further down.
If you make all of the home directories live on file servers, the per-user configuration is all on the file server, where you can populate it on account creation, make it symlinks, deny users permission to change it, and so forth. MIT's been doing this (on AFS) for at least a decade. (Actually, they use a database for some of the configuration stuff, like mail servers, and prepopulate defaults on account creation and update accounts which still have the default with new Athena releases, so that users can customize things.)
On the other hand, it would be really nice if there were a config file that would set up talking to mail servers regardless of the client you're using, so you could set up one file and have it work regardless of the mail client the user ended up with.
Now I find out about it (and I live in San Diego, too!), when it's over. That's me - always a day late and a dollar short.
We apologize for the inconvenience.
Just a question, what other games are there in that "etc etc" you ended with? You pretty much listed all of them right there, and they're just a series of 3D shooters.
Desktop Linux - it's an oxymoron, right? But at least Novell is making giant efforts, and the programs ARE coming to make Linux a viable enterprise setup *for the majority* - KABOOM!
or how about kiosk mode on KDE?
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Linux is a popular OS in the server and increasingly the embedded devices market, but I don't see it taking over the desktop.
The problem is that Linux development is spearheaded by coders writing for other coders.
It takes more than a programmer's mind to make a truly polished end-user app. It's fine for things like Apache or db servers where the user is also a techie, but not for the average joe.
You need UI experts and designers to finish things off, and these types of people just don't give away their services to the open-source movement for free.
Linux developers will never spend the kind of time that Apple does to make things cohesive and easy to use and maintenance free. I agree that Lindows is trying to follow the Apple model and I wish them well, but when I tried it about six months ago I found the desktop to be sluggish and there were annoyances to be had here and there, like the embedded HTML browser in the file explorer not being the same as the regular web browser, hence pages rendering differently. Lots of weird font issues.
I was hoping to use it on a salvaged PIII600 I gave my dad but I wound up putting Windows 2000 on it instead because Win2K ran faster/better.
You want Linux to look and behave just like Windows so you don't have to learn anything. For any Linux user who is motivated enough to put a small amount of time into what they're doing, what you're asking for is already available. I know because I've rolled out just such a solution.
But keep sitting there waiting for people to 'ring' you. I'm sure you can focus on that.
"P.S. Using a shorthand term (like RegiCon) and then explaining its meaning (Regional Conference) in the same piece of text is retarded. "
Obviously someone who failed Writing 101.
"There are times when the author will use an unfamiliar abbreviation or when abbreviations may resemble each other. It is then good practice for the author or editor to write out the term the first time it is used in the document, followed by the abbreviation, as in "revolutions per a second (r/s)."" from "Technical Editor's Handbook".
"Disclaimer: I am a developer of OpenOffice.org Mac OS X and a founder of the NeoOffice [neooffice.org] project."
Slightly off the path, but I noticed that OpenOffices format would fit perfectly into a CMS framework.
I came here to read all about it, and it is a gamers forum! As passionate as gamers are, non-gamers don't give a shi* about that.
What about the rest of us, who actually use computers for productivity and not shooting at animated characters?
A.C.
Amen
On the other hand, it would be really nice if there were a config file that would set up talking to mail servers regardless of the client you're using, so you could set up one file and have it work regardless of the mail client the user ended up with.
Sort of like a
What do the freedesktop people do about this sort of stuff ?
Alex
Part of the huge benefit of going to linux in the first place is limiting priviledges, and yet the easy to use distro makers fuck it all up and encourage use of root....
Ah well.
smash.
I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
Purely playing devil's advocate here, but why should a user choose to use Linux over Windows on a machine like that, when it means having to deal with a stripped down '*box' style desktop rather than a full desktop environment ? On a P-II 350mhz/192mb, a Linux user gets either a '*box' or slow, cludgy performance. On the other hand, my girlfriend runs Windows XP on a somewhat weaker P-II 266mhz/128mb and after simply tweaking the Performance setting to 'Adjust for best performance' it runs at a surprisingly usable speed. I'm not trying to talk up Microsoft here, I'm as much of a Linux fan as most people here... I'm just saying that if MS's latest and greatest can perform perfectly usably running a full desktop environment on 5-6 year old hardware like this, why can't ours? The KDE/Gnome/X.org teams really need to work on optimizing and cutting out bloat.
[take a step back from the shiny GUI art and consider the basics]
4) binaries that install on all linux systems. one-click installs. i don't care if gcc or whatever is started behind the scenes. no excuses - one click installs for all linux distros, please. or at least for all "desktop linux certified" distros.
5) copy / paste, and, to a lesser extent, drag and drop work across all applications. probably the most basic of all requirements, yet not met by brand new linux distros / apps?!
linux has much improved in technology and graphics. its the basics of day-to-day life that are the problem now.
I'm not 100% sure, but as far as I understood Novell is offering/is going to offer soon exactly that with Zen works for Linux and their RedCarpet-derived products and their upcoming Netware-SuSE Linux hybrid server OS.
Big firms themselves.
How do I know?
I work in one.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
In Windows you are subjected to the whims of whatever company or individual that handles to put a piece of software in your computer, from known manufacturers to spammers, crackers and fraudsters.
With windows you are waiting that uncles Bill snaps his fingers to be out of support, need to upgrade or having to agree to draconian EULAs when installing things like media viewers.
With Linux you are free of those inconveniences and you know that the software you use has a better chance to be improved in the benefit of the users that use it, not in the benefit of the company that produces it.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
The same thing can be done on Linux/Unix with any ldap or sql server and remedial skills with a particular language (perl, python, java, etc). It is a custom job, and no GUI exists (as it would be a custom GUI) unless you count offerings from Sun, Novell, and IBM. In fact, now that I think about, Linux/Unix has this exact same functionality. If you go with a custom solution, it is even included with the cost of a good admin or two, no license required.
The home is a distinct market segment with its own history, interests and values, and a market segment Microsoft has dominated for close on to twenty years now. It is driven by more than games and more than SOHO office apps. It is digital photography, home video and entertainment. Windows MCE sold well over the holidays. iTunes on Windows has proven quite successful for Apple.
At least I think it is. After all XP really is a pretty good desktop all other things aside. The problems are a) cost b) security c) adminsistrative overhead. Linux addresses two out of three. Administrative overhead is still pretty high, at least if you're the guy doing it because no one else will be able to. In either case Linux also suffers from a few distinct disadvantages: a) installation complexity b) inability to run Windows apps without introducing another layer of complexity in Wine, etc. c) It really doesn't run well in a desktop environment in hardware that is significantly cheaper or underpowered compared to Windows. XP requires quite a bit of juice to run well whereas W2K runs rather nice on my P2-400 with 288MB RAM. Similarly ANY good Linux desktop really does need 256MB RAM and at least that much processor. Installation disk requirements for Linux are somewhat higher but disk is practically free.
So instead of playing to Windows strengths why not play to Linux strengths? Make a desktop that can run Windows apps when it needs to but runs the machine in a highly configured, locked down, no spyware, no virus no end user ability to change anything configuration? And run it on cheap hardware? In fact a Linux terminal server starts to look like a nice alternative for a home LAN.
Other than that I'd ask for better support and much much cleaner functional installs of devices that are no longer exotic, like Wireless NICs, scanners, multifunction printer/scanner/fax machines, drawing tablets and USB devices of all kinds. Instead of building the 19th most popular UI for Linux why dont' we build better integrated support for LAN bootable 802.11G NICs?
Yep, LDAP is one answer, Apple use this for Mac OS X Server. I'd agree that much more work at this needs doing; centralised management seems to revolve around ssh'ing in to individual machines currently. Linux is miles away from the desktop in terms of having a simple management system with sensible defaults to help guide setup, so less skilled admins can properly support even less skilled users. Currently I'd only trust a Linux desktop with someone who knows exactly what they're doing. Anything else will just lead to exponential increases in support calls.
I am No freek, and I need noe Deskpot.
u're welcom..........
You fail it, herr Eivind. Gå tilbake til matte klasene dine.
I dont see it on EAs pages........ were u talkin aboit emuladors?????
I think this Post is biased towards Linspire.
Was it the only sponsor at the summit?
Aint it supposed to be an OPEN SOURCE summit???
I don't know about everyone else, but personally I found that the last screenshot gave me shivers.
Username: root
Hostname: linspire
I don't really think that touting "looks and works like windows" is a good thing, because eventually that just dumbs down to "gets 0WN3D like Windows" as well.
I run as a local user, which works just fine for me (and guess what, my touchpad scroll also works on X.org). For things that need root access (such as installing new software through apt), specific apps are allowed via sudo.
"So where do we find a balance between all the companies that want to use the intellectual properties of linux for their own gain without contributing anything back?"
If you don't want companies (or maybe just a select few you designate) to use Linux's "IP"? Then stop pushing Linux as a solution to every problem under the sun.
If however you want games, and other software to be released on your prefered platform then you're going to have to be honest, and understand that your license ALLOWS companies and individuals to indirectly use open source IP WITHOUT releasing the source.
"I realize the motive, but some seem to forget that a LOT of work went into linux and other open source projects. They leverage this "free" work and then get stingy when people ask that they contribute back."
They bothered to even release software for your platform, which INDIRECTLY benefits you (consider it a CONTRIBUTION). They benefitted indirectly on open source IP (much as any program running on Windows benefits from running on an OS). ALL which I might add is legal, and fair under YOUR terms.
In short the call for everything, and anything even tanginal to open source to be released for free is going to hurt the community.
Webmin?
In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they're not.
No, you don't. No, I wasn't.
Cedega. GIYF.
This is enterprise-grade SOE territory, and is pretty much owned by Microsoft at the moment. What I'm trying to say is that if Linux is to take its fair share of corporate SOE the corporate perception of the supportability of product has to change. The way to their hearts and minds is a strongly marketed solution by people with enough clout to convince the executives they're getting a better deal. Not hype, results. You can't sell them an army of OSS volunteers, but you could sell them a Linux-focused support environment if it was comprehensive enough. They will not focus on one single implementation, they want flexibility as well as low costs. They have money to spend, generally, and they can usually pin down the "overall costs" down to the exact dime. What they want to buy is fewer headaches. Security is only one aspect, a cost they can control. Managing 16,000 custom installations is one they can not.
Build it and you can sell it.
Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
Merely quoting a big number does nothing for your argument.
What you're asking for is already on offer. No hype here. No references to big numbers. No buzz words. Just what you're asking for. Do some research.