Caldera Division Re-naming & Targeting Set-Top
Matt Levine writes to us with the news that the Caldera division, Caldera Thin Clients, will rename itself Lineo, and will be focusing on set-top boxes, and cash register systems. The system is beig developed using an Embedix, which is based an OpenLinux.
Why is the set-top box market so lucrative? Isn't the purpose of a settop box simply to be able to change channels and allow one to watch scrambled channels?
I know companies like MS and Caldera might have big plans as to what a settop box could do if only it ran their OS, but I don't think the average consumer who still can't program their VCR, are going to want a settop box that they can't use.
Alex Bischoff
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Alex Bischoff
HTML/CSS coder for hire
Here's another article that is somewhat more detailed (and dare I say, more accurate). The president of Lineo already responded (see above), but I think it's important to point out that we're not just targeting settops. We're making an embedded distribution, and an embedded systems development platform. We just happen to have our own application on settops as well.
No, never seen Linea here (and I live near the dutch border)..
Wasn't that the woman who played the babes in Deathstalker 2?
Only because Windows buyers are accustomed to a monopoly supplier. BSD people shouldn't have too much trouble with multiple variants, I think..
What about all the suppliers of automobiles ? All slightly different, but all pretty well drop-in replacements. Most people consider this choice to be good - the days of 'any colour you like as long as it's black' are forgotten.
yuck
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SCO employee? Check out the bounty
Haven - I know what you mean, and I'm sure you're not the only one who feels this way about it, even though I like the business / market stuff.
One way I see around this is to assign more than one category to the news items so that readers can do tighter filtering. So this one could be filed under at least categories like:
- Caldera
- Business / marketplace
- IPOs and Spinoffs
- Embedded Linux
If in the user configuration menu, you could choose not to see things about Business and Marketplace, then you wouldn't see this, even if you would normally see things about Caldera, say.
Arranging the heirarchy so that it is understandable to users setting it up, and not too much of a pain to go back and change later would be the toughest part. UI is tough, even with an informed, savvy audience (and I'm on the low end of informed or savvy for slashdot), so making it better than the @$~# voicemail set-up menu at work is a real challenge.
BTW, I think a system like this (multiple indexes or tags on slashdot items) would be useful even if it was applied somewhat arbitrarily, as long as there were a few categories that were used consistently, so someone could, say, choose to "Always view items about the linux marketplace" and be confident that they would have been marked for inclusion if appropriate.
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
Found something else interesting at The Register in this article. Looks like they're going to be porting the WebSpyder browser and calling it Embrowser. (Oooooh, aren't we creative ;) Has anyone actually used this? Could be more competition for the current version of Netscape (especially if it doesn't crash every hour and a half...). Still waiting for Opera of course...
Maybe that laughter will die in their throats soner or later...
;)
(i know, its off-topic - give it a -1
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Jor
I don't see this as a fork like the desktop distributions. For embedded Linux, we only have Hardhat Linux and Embedix now as competitors. That's not a lot of choices, but it's probably enough. Keep in mind that these products are aimed at a market where a desktop (install to a hard disk) type distribution is completely inadequate. Developers of embedded Linux applications require a system where the tools are not self-hosted since their targets probably can't suport self-hosting. Step back and consider that this makes the "distribution" method look a lot different now. Lineo and Hard Hat need to provide a product where developers can sit on a workstation Linux and build a target Linux system from a set of packaged building blocks. It's a completely different problem to solve that a typical distribution is designed for.