Bossie Awards Honor Open Source Software
The Alliance writes "InfoWorld has announced the 2007 Bossie Awards for the Best of Open-Source Software. Awards were given to 36 winners across 6 categories. Honorees include (among others) SpamAssassin, ClamAV and Nessus in security, Wireshark and Azureus Vuze in networking, and ZFS for storage. Interestingly, they split the operating system winners across two distributions, with CentOS winning for server OS and Ubuntu for desktop."
Interesting that CentOS won for server OS. Shouldn't that go to RHEL?
"Interestingly, they split the operating system winners across two distributions, with CentOS winning for server OS and Ubuntu for desktop" *Raising hand...* Um... exactly how is that interesting? --Ray
http://www.beanleafpress.com
In the [Dead Tree Magazine] world, you'll usually find that the number of [Award]s a product gets is related to the dollar value of ads that product places in that magazine. "Secure Computing" magazine is still today a classic example of this premise.
It's interesting because previously OS winners weren't split like that. It's also interesting because CentOS and Ubuntu are two completely different distributions, yet both are community-maintained and supported.
My blog
Oh come on, who modded this as interesting? The pun is too much.
Nessus is a funny one since it's no longer open source.
Hey, more interestingly they should split the winners between amounts of infringing code. ta-ching!
I find it MORE interesting that both CentOS and Ubuntu are not purely community based entities. CentOS is pretty much RHEL which is of course a commercial linux distribution. Ubuntu is heavily backed/sponsored by a private corporation.
There seem to be some inconsistencies in the awards, under the open source awards, Ubuntu win best client operating system award, but under best platforms, SuSE linux Enterprise wins the Best Linux Desktop award.
Best Client Operating System Award:
http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2007/09/114-best_of_open_so-3.html
Best Linux Desktop Award:
http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2007/01/29-2007_technology-7.html
Secondly, Ubuntu lacks a lot of the real-timeness of a server, which screws with audio/video links, and won't always detect package collisions - it'll sometimes just whatever was/is already running there should do fine.
Thirdly, Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!
I'd prefer one OS that could be tuned properly than a hundred OS' that can't operate properly because there's no resouces left to go round.
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)
WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
they give the one an award that has what "most people expect" and "a good pedigree"?
well, in a business setting, a program that works damn-near-identically to the one you currently use is certainly a better idea than throwing something completely different out to the masses to learn. training costs and temporary loss of productivity are important things to consider.
upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
I grabbed Azureus Vuze when it first came out. I'd like to try it but it finished downloading about 12 days ago and has been loading ever since.
Wireshark, however, is a very nice application and I have used it countless times to troubleshoot network issues and it even as a visual aid to help people understand basic networking.
Not sure how they are even close to comparable.
Kidding aside, an application whose function is to implement a simple file transfer protocol should not be 50 megs, especially when you open it and wonder where the file transfer interface is.
What's interesting is where there wasn't a winner. One area, Enterprise Monitoring, the editors decided that they couldn't arrive at a conclusion for. So no winner - just officially putting HP OpenView and IBM Tivoli "on notice".
Check out the article: http://www.infoworld.com/infoworld/article/07/09/10/37FE-boss-enterprise-monitoring_1.html
Full disclosure: I work for one of the, um, finalists/threats mentioned in the article. Hyperic http://www.hyperic.com/. That said, I know they are doing a review of our product. I guess they will announce it later... another way for the BOSSIEs to just keep on keepin on...
I think it's a bit sad that they focus almost exclusively on Java in their "open source in software development" area. Where are other really interesting languages like Python, Perl, PHP, etc.? The world does not run on Java alone.
I tried using CentOS 5 for an Intranet server once (MediaWiki, some other internal apps...).
Result? I got to about the 15th self-compiled RPM and decided that maintaining the damn thing such that all these apps were patched would be a distributor's job, and I'd never keep up. The security concerns that I raised here forced me to move to Ubuntu, where everything just worked.
Interestingly, all I was doing was rpm-rebuild on Fedora RPMs.
Support my political activism on Patreon.
Huh, I switched to Timex when Swatch became old and outdated...
New punctuation update "~" (no quotes) at the end of a line to indicate sarcasm. ~