Practical Technology

for practical people.

February 5, 2008
by sjvn01
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Google`s Real Goal: Messing with Microsoft

Oh, you might think that Google actually wants to help Yahoo, but what it really wants to do is to mess with Microsoft’s head.

The shoe’s on the other foot. Microsoft has made a multi-billion dollar business from FUDing its competition, now Google is enjoying its chance to see how Microsoft likes the same treatment by objecting to its proposed purchase of Yahoo.

It took Google less than a weekend to respond to Microsoft’s offer for Yahoo. By February 3rd, Google senior vice president of development and chief legal officer, David Drummond, had said, “Microsoft’s hostile bid for Yahoo raises troubling questions.”

Hostile? A bid of $44.6 billion, or $31 a share, a 62 percent premium on Yahoo’s share price, which was at a four-year low, is hostile? Wow. Give me a hostile takeover any day then.

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February 4, 2008
by sjvn01
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Can XP Be Saved?

If Microsoft sticks to its guns, you won’t be able to buy XP after June 30. The public has other ideas.

Microsoft’s plan is to start retiring Windows XP on June 30. Some users, however, want to keep XP around for years to come.

According to Popular Science, there’s a grassroot effort afoot to force Microsoft to keep selling XP to customers in shrink-wrapped packages and to OEMs. What’s driving this movement? Two things: First, it’s not really a “grassroots” movement. It’s actually being orchestrated by InfoWorld, an online news publication.

That said, with 71,386 people signed up as of noon Jan. 30 to the Save Windows XP petition, clearly the movement is tapping into a spring of resentment against Vista.

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February 1, 2008
by sjvn01
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Asustek to release more ‘Eee’ Linux desktop PCs

Asustek, the company behind the popular Xandros Linux-powered Asus Eee PC 4G ultramobile PC, knows it’s got something good going on, and so it’s going to push its Linux desktop PCs for all it’s worth.

In 2008, Asustek will be releasing an entire line of Linux-powered PCs: the E-DT (desktop PC), E-TV and E-Monitor.

The E-DT, which we can expect to see by May, at first will use an Intel Celeron processor. The versions after that will use Intel’s upcoming Shelton architecture with a Diamondville processor and the 945 graphic chip set. Diamondville is being designed for low-cost laptops, such as Intel’s own Classmate PC design.

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February 1, 2008
by sjvn01
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Yahoo Is Microsoft`s Last Web Stand

Microsoft doesn’t just want to buy Yahoo; if Microsoft wants a decent shot at still being the number one company in the world by the decade’s end, it must buy Yahoo.

Most people still think of Microsoft as the unchallenged superpower of the software world. It’s not. Microsoft doesn’t just want to buy Yahoo; if it wants to have a decent shot at still being the number one company in the world by the decade’s end, it must buy Yahoo.

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January 31, 2008
by sjvn01
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Apple TV Take 2 Delayed

Feh! The new Apple TV software has been delayed until sometime in February.

Buried in an Apple press release about the release of the MacBook Air, which is on time, is the news “that the new Apple TV software update, which allows users to rent high definition movies directly from their widescreen TVs, is not quite finished. Apple now plans to make the free software download available to existing Apple TV customers in another week or two.”

Or, if you read farther down, it’s that the new release “will be available as a free automatic download to all Apple TV customers within two weeks.” Why?

Well, the official story is that the software’s not ready for prime-time. Unofficially the rumor mill has it that there are still some hitches in negotiations with some of the studios.

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January 30, 2008
by sjvn01
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Why companies don’t support Debian

At a recent Australian Linux conference, Sam Varghese reported that two Debian developers pointed out that the Debian Project needs more corporate support for “men, money and machines” to advance the operating system.

They’re right. It does. They also pointed out that many companies, such as HP, IBM, Silicon Graphics and Google, either use Debian Linux internally, or actually incorporate it into products. For example, HP uses Debian “Etch” 4.0 in its new t5735 thin-client device. Right again.

Debian, either directly or through related Linux distributions such as Xandros, is used both by Linux enthusiasts and Fortune 500 companies.

Of course, you couldn’t prove that by the vast majority of Debian developers who never see a thin dime from their Debian work. Or, I should add, get access to new hardware, travel expenses to Debian developer conferences and so on.

The reason for this is twofold. First, Debian, as a developer community, has never wanted any kind of “business” organization or corporate partnerships or sponsorships. It is purely a volunteer operation and woe unto any would-be developer who tries to change Debian’s ways.

For example, in 2006, several Debian developers, led by Anthony Towns, the official Debian project leader at the time, decided to arrange for the two release managers to be paid for some of their efforts. In response to this, other developers refused to work on the next release of Debian. As Andreas Barth, a Debian release manager, explained at the time, the delay has resulted because, “Some people who used to do good work reduced their involvement drastically. There was nothing I could do about, and that happened way before I started full-time on release.”

At other times, there have been efforts to create a commercial alliance of Debian groups and Linux companies that made Debian-based distributions. They have always been met with strong resistance from the Debian community. Even the most important of these efforts, the Debian Common Core Alliance, which was led by Debian founder Ian Murdock, met with Debian opposition. The group, beset by the very community it sprang from, eventually changed leaders but still failed.

Debian doesn’t just turn on its own when they try to organize Debian in a more businesslike manner. The community also turned on the Mozilla Foundation because it restricted the use of its Firefox Web browser logo. So it is that today “pure” Debian distributions include IceWeasel, which is essentially a carbon copy of Firefox with a different, “freer” logo.

So, while I think Debian’s development needs radical change and commercial support, the community seems dead set against it. A large number of the developers would rather be free than beholden to any corporate entity. As CJ Fearnley, CEO of Linux service provider LinuxForce, and a long-time Debian developer, put it to me in late 2006, Debian is “Very, very messy at times. This is democracy in action!”

This comment points to another side of Debian’s problem with corporate support. Let’s say someone, say a company like Google, does give Debian a completely unrestricted gift of money or equipment. Who does Google give it to? The current Debian project leader, Sam Hocevar? That’s a one-year position.

The group itself? A fine idea, except it’s made up of more than 1,000 developers scattered across the world. It’s also, as Fearnley alluded to, not a very organized group. For example, the Debian Weekly News, a newsletter for the Debian community, doesn’t appear to have been published since July 3, 2007.

If Google were to decide to give financial support or PCs to what it determined to be the most “deserving” of Debian developers, it would only be following the path already taken by Anthony Towns, which proved to be a failure.

In short, there’s no there there in Debian. There’s no one to write a check to, and even if you did write a check to an individual, the other developers seem likely to turn against him or her.

Now, despite all this, Debian does keep going. It just released a major security update to Debian 4 late in 2007. But, it’s going to do things its own, cranky way.

If you want Debian to behave in a more businesslike way, if you want companies to support Debian, what you really need to do is to break away from Debian and make your own distribution on a more traditionally organized basis. This, of course, is exactly what Mark Shuttleworth did when he founded Ubuntu in 2004.

Ubuntu, as its deals with Dell and Sun show, has had little trouble finding corporate partnerships. For Debian, as it’s now constituted, that will never be an option.