Practical Technology

for practical people.

April 17, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

Why there won’t be a Red Hat Consumer Linux Desktop

Last May, Red Hat announced that, with Intel, it would soon be releasing Red Hat Global Desktop, a consumer Linux desktop for emerging markets. But, then one delay followed another. Now, on April 16th 2008, Red Hat has announced that it has no plans to create a traditional desktop product for the consumer market in the foreseeable future.”

What happened?

Officially, in its desktop group blog, Red Hat states “The desktop market suffers from having one dominant vendor, and some people still perceive that today’s Linux desktops simply don’t provide a practical alternative. Of course, a growing number of technically savvy users and companies have discovered that today’s Linux desktop is indeed a practical alternative. Nevertheless, building a sustainable business around the Linux desktop is tough, and history is littered with example efforts that have either failed outright, are stalled or are run as charities.”

Off-the-record, according to sources close to Red Hat and Intel, it’s a different story.

Continue Reading →

April 17, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

Shuttleworth starts countdown to Ubuntu 8.04 release

The next red-letter day for Ubuntu fans will be April 24, when Ubuntu 8.04 LTS (Long Term Support) arrives. Mark Shuttleworth, the CEO of Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, guarantees that the next version of the popular Linux distribution will make it on time, with something for enterprise, desktop, and Internet users.

In an interview, Shuttleworth made the point that, while many executives have yet to realize it, “Open source software projects and Linux distros are actually better than proprietary companies at hitting deadlines.” In particular, Shuttleworth says, “Companies are now comparing Linux with Vista, and it’s clear that’s Linux does a better job of meeting people’s expectations.

“When you look at people’s expectations, proprietary software gives the impression that its makers can deliver on time. It’s top-down, it’s how people think businesses should work, but bottom-up innovation actually is more timely. This is a real credit for free software, and it’s also a real challenge for the proprietary guys to meet.” Nowadays, it’s “very difficult to know when proprietary software and operating systems will be out.”

More >

April 14, 2008
by sjvn01
1 Comment

The State of the Linux Driver Address

Everyone grumbles about Linux driver problems, but kernel hacker Greg Kroah-Hartman actually did something about it. Kroah-Hartman created a program by which open-source developers would create drivers for hardware vendors even if their equipment was proprietary. Over a year later, though, Kroah-Hartman has found that the vast majority of hardware OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) already offer Linux support.

As Kroah-Hartman explains in his Linux Driver Project Status Report as of April 2008, “The Linux Driver Project (LDP) is alive and well, with over 300 developers wanting to participate, many drivers already written and accepted into the Linux kernel tree, and many more being currently developed. The main problem is a lack of projects. It turns out that there really isn’t much hardware that Linux doesn’t already support. Almost all new hardware produced is coming with a Linux driver already written by the company, or by the community with help from the company.”

Be that as it may, there are two classes of hardware where Linux users face perpetual hardware driver woes. These are “video input devices and wireless network cards, that is not well supported by Linux, but large efforts are already underway to resolve this issue, with the wireless driver issue pretty much taken care of already, however there are a few notable exceptions,” said Kroah-Hartman.

Continue Reading →

April 13, 2008
by sjvn01
3 Comments

Windows is on its Last Legs!?

Last week, while I was at the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit at the University of Texas Super Computing Center in Austin Texas, I was surprised to find that if I had wanted to cover the week’s most surprising Linux-related news, I should at been at the Gartner Conference in Las Vegas where two Gartner analysts declared, “Windows Is Collapsing.”

It is? Even I wouldn’t go that far and I have little love for Windows.

Never-the-less, that’s what Gartner’s analysts Michael Silver and Neil MacDonald said. Greg Keizer at ComputerWorld quotes them as saying, “”For Microsoft, its ecosystem and its customers, the situation is untenable.”

Continue Reading →

April 10, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

IDC sees $49 billion Linux server business in 2011

Austin, Texas–Once upon a time, you found Linux as a server in two places in the enterprise: on the edge, as a Web server, and in the branch office, as a file and print server. That was then. This is now.

In a speech at the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit at the University of Texas Super Computing Center here, IDC Vice President of Research Al Gillen said that Linux is now growing quickly as the heart of mission-critical enterprise application servers. How quickly? Try the Linux server business will grow to $49 billion in 2011.

In his speech, Gillen said, “While these basic workload deployments continue to grow in volume, additional workloads, including database, ERP, decision support and general business processing, are steadily advancing their share of total Linux deployments.” What this means for Linux is that it quickly is becoming a mission-critical part of business.

In terms of dollars and cents, IDC expects to see Linux software spending growing from 2006 to 2011 at a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 35.7 percent. The overall spending on Linux, including software, hardware, and services, is increasing over the same period at a CAGR of 24.1 percent. So if this spending continues at the rate IDC expects, the total spending on Linux will grow from 2007’s $21 billion in 2007 to $49 billion by 2011.

Now, if only the economy were growing at a rate even half of that, there would be no talk of a recession.

At this growth rate, Gillen said Linux’s share of the total server market “is expected to grow to more than 9 percent by 2011, or $31 billion in Linux-related software revenue in a total market that will grow to $330 billion.” As in the past, much of that growth is expected to come at the expense of Unix.

Linux’s growth is not uniform across different businesses. Gillen noted that “users in verticals such as government, financial services and general services are more likely to move to Linux as a replacement for existing Unix servers.”

Looking ahead, “Windows continues to present a significant long-term challenge for Linux,” said Gillen. At the same time, though, “Microsoft has shifted its approach to both Linux and other open-source technology and today is working both competitively and cooperatively with Linux solutions at a technology and development level. However, the company still takes a highly competitive marketing and sales approach to Linux.”

Another development IDC sees coming in the next few years that may boost Linux’s enterprise server growth even higher is what Gillen calls “software appliances.” These are turnkey software stacks “that incorporate operating system functionality along with middleware and other infrastructure software components, and potentially with application software as well.” If this happens, this will give vendors with a strong software stack–such as a Novell, Red Hat or Sun–a chance for “higher-volume deployments of Linux, even though it will reduce revenue opportunities for discrete products.”

The bottom line: Linux is continuing to become the life’s blood of many businesses. Or, as in the case of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, an early Linux adopter, it already is. A representative of the Exchange at the Summit said, “We’re already doing a trillion dollars of trades on the exchange.” What part of mission-critical ready do you not understand? ”

A version of this story was first published on Linux-Watch.