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October 18, 2007
by sjvn01
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Former Linspire CEO switches to Ubuntu

The sincerest compliment a Linux distribution can get is when the onetime CEO of a rival Linux company switches to that distribution. That’s exactly what happened when Kevin Carmony, former CEO of Linux desktop distributor Linspire, publicly announced that he’s switched to Ubuntu.

Carmony, who left Linspire in late July, announced his switch to Ubuntu in the Ubuntu Forums on Oct. 17. In his note, Carmony wrote: “Now that I’m no longer the CEO of Linspire, or under any obligation to use that particular distribution, I thought I should take some time and look around at all the distributions and decide which one was right for me and my PC. In addition to already being quite familiar with Linspire and Freespire, I also looked at Novell/SUSE, Red Hat/Fedora, PC Linux, Ubuntu, and Kubuntu.”

His decision? “Well, after all my research, I have to tell you, it was an easy choice. Ubuntu! I’m excited for the new release [Ubuntu 7.10, Gutsy Gibbon] in a few days, which I will use to replace the many Linux desktop and laptop PCs I own (five).”
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October 16, 2007
by sjvn01
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Ubuntu: It’s not just for desktops anymore

Come Oct. 18, Canonical, Ubuntu’s corporate backer, will be offering the shipping version of Ubuntu 7.10 Server Edition for free download.

According to the company, Ubuntu Server focuses on providing a robust server platform that is both reliable and secure while ensuring that users get the usability and ease of management they expect from Ubuntu. The new release adds an enhanced security capability that protects common workloads and is easy to configure for advanced requirements.

7.10 also comes with three new quick-start profiles so users can automatically set up a server for such typical uses as an e-mail, database or Web server. These profiles are in addition to the existing LAMP and DNS ones and significantly ease deployment, management and maintenance for edge-of-the-network server jobs.

In a Linux-Watch interview, Mark Shuttleworth, Canonical’s CEO and Ubuntu’s founder, said the server team has been, and will continue, to grow. Canonical is also working directly with server OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) to ensure compatibility. Specifically, Ubuntu Server Edition is available and optimized for x86, AMD64, EM64T (Intel Core & Xeon), and Sun SPARC architectures.

“There is already a lot of work being done with hardware vendors and there will be a fair amount of hardware enablement after the release,” Shuttleworth said. “We’re confident we can do all the engineering required to just make Ubuntu work on servers.”

Ubuntu 7.10, Gutsy Gibbon, will include several new features. The first will be to improve security by adopting AppArmor. This is a security framework that’s used to protect server applications with security policies. Ubuntu provides pre-set default policies for common server applications such as the Apache Web server and the Postfix e-mail server. Unlike SELinux, AppArmor is regarded as easy to deploy even on applications, which don’t come with a pre-built policy. SELinux is also still available on Ubuntu, but Shuttleworth said “Ubuntu’s focus is on AppArmor.”

It’s because of these security improvements that Shuttleworth has declared that Ubuntu is now a “world-class enterprise operating system.”

Administrators can also implement tailored kernel optimized for use in virtualized environments. This smaller and simpler kernel is particularly suited for virtual appliances. This new kernel includes many improvements for paravirtualization, one of which is VMI (Virtual Machine Interface), a new independent way for hypervisors to relate to the kernel.

Shuttleworth believes that “Virtualization is a key driver for Ubuntu on the server. With this release, it will be easier to use Ubuntu as a virtual machine on Red Hat, SUSE or Windows. In turn, Ubuntu will also be better as a host for other virtualized operating systems.

In addition, Ubuntu has adopted the tickless kernel, which was introduced in the Linux 2.6.21 kernel. This new “tickless” idle mode should result in reduced power consumption and heat emission. The bottom line is that should help a company’s bottom line by reducing energy costs, especially on machines running several virtualized instances.

With improvements to the CUPS (Common Unix Printing System), the Ubuntu 7.10 server can now automatically discover and authenticate many more protocols used by printers, including LDAP with SSL, Kerberos, Mac OS X Bonjour and Zeroconf. Because of this, Shuttleworth said, Ubuntu is quickly getting to the point that it can work out of the box with any Mac OS X compatible printer.

“Ubuntu Server is proving itself as a solid, maintainable platform for business infrastructure,” said Jane Silber, Canonical’s COO. “This release of Ubuntu Server Edition is particularly easy to provision and deploy on large numbers of servers with specific software package requirements.”

“Having established its credibility on the desktop, with millions of deployments worldwide, Ubuntu’s aiming to bring that same strength to the server platform,” said Stephen O’Grady, principal analyst for open-source analysis company RedMonk, in a statement. “With strength in its application repository volume and a focus on virtualization, Ubuntu’s likely to be an increasingly attractive choice for buyers.”

Shuttleworth certainly thinks that’s the case. Shuttleworth said, “We feel confident in saying that Ubuntu now has six-million-plus users. Many of those users are now deploying Ubuntu on their company and organizational servers. For them, it makes it much easier to have a single operating system from the desktop and workstation to the server.”

“Ubuntu,” however, “will not be targeting Red Hat.” Nor will Ubuntu be going to use its model. Instead, Shuttleworth sees Ubuntu “expanding the Linux market. The early adoption of Linux came at the expense of Unix. Today that is no longer a fertile source of growth for Linux. People who are still on Unix today will stay on Unix.”

Instead, Ubuntu will grow not from taking market share from Unix or the other Linuxes, but by “changing the economic model, and making money only from customers who need support at the appropriate places, we’ll represent a challenge to Windows.” It’s from Microsoft that Shuttleworth sees Ubuntu’s customers coming from.

“This will not be happening overnight. The server market is a conservative one. It will take years for certification for IHVs and ISVs, but we can see it happening in the future,” said Shuttleworth. And, after all, “Ubuntu is here for the long run.”

Ubuntu 7.10 updates will be published at no charge to all users of the platform. This free maintenance service includes backports of new hardware support, minor updates and security updates. Ubuntu 7.10 will be maintained for 18 months on both the desktop and on the server upon which users can upgrade free of charge to a new version. Ubuntu 7.10 is not a LTS (Long Term Support) release (three years support on the desktop and five years on the server); the next LTS release will appear in 2008. For more information on the server, see the Ubuntu server site.

For deployments which require additional service guarantees, full telephone and online support is commercially available from Canonical professional support team. Details are available at the Canonical support site.

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

October 12, 2007
by sjvn01
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New CrossOver Linux improves Windows apps support

Who says you have to give up all your Windows programs to use Linux? Not CodeWeavers, with its latest version of CrossOver Linux 6.2.

With this new version of CrossOver Linux, you can run more Windows programs on Linux than ever and such Windows mainstays as Microsoft Office–from 97 to 2003–Internet Explorer 6, and Quicken run better than ever. Even programs like Adobe Photoshop are coming along. At this point, I’d recommend that only people who are interested in helping to debug Photoshop on Linux give it a try, but I can see Photoshop running well on Linux sometime soon.

But, for the rest, many Windows mainstay applications run quite well on Linux with CrossOver Linux 6.2. This isn’t just an idle opinion. I’ve been running CrossOver Linux, the release candidate and the final version, for several weeks now. With it, I’ve been running Office 2003, Quicken 2005, and IE 6 without a single hitch.

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October 12, 2007
by sjvn01
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Patent-troll company attacks Novell and Red Hat

IP Innovation, a subsidiary of Acacia Technologies Group, has filed a patent infringement claim against Linux distributors Novell and Red Hat for violating U.S. Patent No. 5,072,412 for a User Interface with Multiple Workspaces for Sharing Display System Objects issued Dec. 10, 1991 along with two other similar patents.

This patent was originally made in 1991 by Xerox PARC. It also references even earlier patents. The short version of what this patent covers is that it describes a way to create a window with controls that enables users to switch between views of multiple objects within that window.

The company, whose parent company’s officers include former senior Microsoft executives, claims that Red Hat and Novell have infringed its patents in Red Hat Linux system, the Novell SLED (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop) and the Novell SLES (SUSE Linux Enterprise Server).

Acacia recently added two new corporate officers from Microsoft. These include Jonathan Taub, who joined its Acacia Technologies group as a vice president. Immediately before joining Acacia, Taub was Microsoft’s director of strategic alliances for the mobile and embedded devices. At Microsoft, Taub received a 2006 Heroes and Key Achievers award from Microsoft for negotiating strategic deals with Qualcomm and STMicroelectronics.

Just days before Acacia’s subsidiary launched its patent lawsuit against Red Hat and Novell, on October 1st, Acacia hired Brad Brunell as a senior vice president. Brunell joins Acacia from Microsoftwhere, during his 16 year career, he held a number of management positions, including general manager of IP (intellectual property) licensing.

At Microsoft, Brunell was as responsible for inbound and outbound patent licensing. He created and managed a team of negotiation, financial and legal experts. This group developed outbound intellectual property licensing programs and brought in intellectual property via acquisitions, strategic partnerships and licensing.

In the patent complaint, which was filed in the patent lawsuit-friendly Eastern Texas U.S. District Court, IP Innovation claims that not only has “Red Hat’s and Novell’s infringements … injured plaintiffs and plaintiffs are entitled to recover damages adequate to compensate them for such infringement but in no event less than a reasonable royalty but that Red Hat and Novell had received notice of the patents, and “therefore the infringing activities have been deliberate and willful.” If a company is found guilty of willful patent infringement, the plaintiffs is entitled to increased damages.

Novell, for one, won’t be taking the case lying down. Bruce Lowry, Novell’s director of global PR said, “We’re assessing this filing now. Obviously, we’ll defend our interests. But it’s too early at this stage to talk about specifics on this case.”

A version of this story first appeared in Linux-Watch.

October 12, 2007
by sjvn01
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Red Hat Tries to Make Its Partners’ Lives Easier

On October 10th, Red Hat announced the launch of the Red Hat Partner Center, an online resource offering a centralized place for Red Hat partners to more easily and seamlessly conduct business with Red Hat. Over the last year, Red Hat has been trying to improve its channel partnerships. It started in October 2006, when the Linux giant hired Mark Enzweiler as its vice president of North American channel sales. Since then, the company, based in Raleigh, N.C., has made major strides in its channel programs.

Now, through the global Red Hat Partner Center, partners around the world will have access to product, program, pricing and training information on Red Hat and JBoss solutions and services from a single Web location.

The Partner Center isn’t just for English-speaking system integrators and VARs. The Center is localized in Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean and Spanish. From here, Red Hat and JBoss partners of all partner tracks and membership levels can access the information needed to develop new business opportunities, renew existing customers and fully leverage the benefits of the Red Hat Partner Program. Red Hat claims that with this new, easy-to-use resource, partners will be given further opportunities to increase revenue and profits, align technologies with Red Hat in order to meet customers’ needs and enjoy a simplified Red Hat partner experience.

“We worked closely with our Business Partners from around the world during the development of the Red Hat Partner Center. Our partners made it clear that they wanted a central partner repository, an easy and seamless way to work with Red Hat, language localization, a single global agreement and access to information to help develop new business and manage existing business,” said Enzweiler. “As we continue to bring in new partners each quarter and specifically expand our JBoss partnerships, the Partner Center will ensure that all partners have a simple, useful resource where there is access to relevant communications and streamlined processes.”

“Red Hat moves much closer to its partners with the new Partner Center online library. Local language is a key success factor within EMEA in order to be close to partners and have successful partnership development,” said Thomas Kucher, director of new business at Magirus International GmbH, a major international IT player, in a statement. Margirus, which has a U.S. presence via Agilysys, works primarily in Europe and the Middle East.

“The Partner Center is clearly arranged with the ability to find relevant sections with a glance. It is a great support to daily work and will also help Magirus, who is strongly committed to Red Hat, with additional services to ease the entry into Red Hat’s open source offerings.”

“In the past seven years, we have seen Red Hat commit to and invest in the success of the channel, especially in government,” said Christine Schaefer, director of marketing at DLT Solutions, Red Hat’s largest U.S. government reseller. “The new Red Hat Partner Center is just another example of that commitment and rivals some of the best partner portals we have seen in the industry.”

A version of this story was first published on Channel Insider.

October 12, 2007
by sjvn01
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Red Hat Global Desktop to appear in November

When Red Hat announced its upcoming Linux desktop at its annual summit in May, the company predicted the Red Hat Global Desktop would be out by September. Now, delayed a bit, the new desktop Linux will be appearing in November, company executives are saying.

The delay was caused, Gerry Riveros, Red Hat senior product marketing manager for enterprise Linux, said in an exclusive interview with DesktopLinux.com, by Red Hat’s desire to support Intel’s full PC hardware platform lines.

Originally, RHGD (Red Hat Global Desktop) was going to launch with support for only Intel’s Classmate, Affordable, Community and Low-Cost PC lines.

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