News and Editorials
[This article was contributed by Ladislav Bodnar]
An unfortunate side effect of the current media frenzy over a certain
legal battle is that many interesting development projects get less
exposure in the media or get buried in between more "exciting"
headlines. Fortunately, there is little doubt that Linux software
development continues unabated, despite all the ill-founded attempts to
discredit it. Last week's
announcement
by Transmeta Corporation about an agreement to allow Chinese 2000 Holdings
Ltd. to develop and market Midori Linux in Asia might have been one of such
missed press releases. But what exactly is Midori Linux and how significant
is this announcement?
Midori Linux is a Linux-based distribution for small and embedded
devices. The name stands for "green" in Japanese, which becomes rather
apparent if you visit the project's home page. Little was known
about the beginnings of the Midori project before it was been open
sourced and released
under GPL in March 2001. However, interest by the open source
community in further developing the distribution has been limited and
the project appeared to be on its way to extinction after the last
release of Midori Linux, version 1.0.0-beta3, nearly 2 years ago. The
announcement about the Asian involvement in the project is Transmeta's
latest attempt at reviving Midori Linux.
Who is Chinese 2000 Holdings? An investigation on the Hong Kong-based
company's background reveals some interesting facts. The company was
initiated by one Henry Chu (Chu Bang-fu), a name that is unlikely to
ring any bells in the minds of most Western readers, but Mr. Chu is a
household name in Taiwan and other parts of the Chinese-speaking world.
In fact, he is often credited with initiating the Chinese computer
revolution by inventing in 1980 a Chinese input method for computers
called "Cang Jie". The Cang Jie
input enables users to enter Chinese characters based on the
character's shape and structural appearance, rather than its
pronunciation. This method greatly reduces the number of key strokes
required for inputting Chinese and eliminates common typing errors.
While many newer input methods, many of them commercial, were invented
in later years, Cang Jie still remains a popular input method of
professional typists in Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Instead of demanding royalties and enforcing rights,
Mr. Chu released his invention into the public domain to be shared
without any strings attached. It therefore comes as no surprise that
the company Mr. Chu later founded embraced Linux wholeheartedly as a
platform for further development. The current range of products
developed by Chinese 2000 Holdings include a desktop Linux distribution
called Chinese
2000 and various Linux-based electronic devices such as their e-book
reader.
This brings us back to Midori Linux and Transmeta's interest to get a
foot into the Asian market for embedded devices. While the adoption of
embedded devices has been slow in North America and Europe (even the
sales of PDAs have reportedly been dropping), Asian consumers appear to
be more receptive to these new technologies. More importantly,
development of embedded Linux is well advanced in Asia and there are
companies in Korea, Taiwan and Japan with many years of experience
modifying the Linux Kernel for specialist needs. Korea's Hancom Linux is a prime
example; all the latest Linux-based Sharp Zaurus PDAs ship with a
modified version of Hancom Office for Zaurus. Many US-based
corporations specializing in embedded devices have also been keen on
establishing active presence in Asia. MontaVista opened an office in Taiwan
in October last year, while RedSonic has set up a substantial
network of development offices and distribution partners throughout
Taiwan, China, Korea and Japan. If anything, Transmeta's Midori is
rather late for the embedded Linux party.
But has the party really started? If it has, it is confined to less
visible and specialist applications, perhaps in car manufacturing or
medicine, but embedded Linux certainly hasn't had much of an impact on
the consumer market. Taiwan's Computex is a good indication of what the
Asian hardware manufacturers are up to and the increasing number of
e-books, tablet PCs and Internet-enabled mobile telephones over the
last two years seem to indicate that these devices are here to stay.
Yet, seeing a morning commuter taking out an electronic reading device,
instead of a newspaper remains an elusive dream. Take into the account
that these types of devices are often expensive, prone to damage, lack
common standards and provide limited availability of reading material
and it is easy to see why consumers have yet to find compelling reasons
to embrace them.
Few will doubt that Linux is an excellent choice for small and embedded
electronic devices, capable of providing solutions for specialist
needs. But a large scale consumer adoption of electronic devices that
many have predicted has yet to happen. Nevertheless, work continues and
Midori's latest expansion to Asia is a proof that this field is far
from dead.
Comments (none posted)
Distribution News
Below is a letter from Seth Vidal, at Duke University, who points out that
many universities have customized distributions based on Red Hat Linux,
Duke included. This
mailing
list has been set up to facilitate discussion on supporting these
systems past Red Hat's end-of-life dates.
Full Story (comments: 1)
This week's edition of the
Debian Weekly
News is out, with a look at a survey which demonstrates a high level of
interest in PCs preloaded with GNU/Linux across the world; the story of
Tux; and much more.
Debian Planet has
announced the creation of a Debian 10th birthday party
coordination page. Debian turns ten on August 16, 2003.
Comments (none posted)
The Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for June 16, 2003 is out. This week's edition
looks at Gentoo Linux Enhancement Proposals and a new home for
bugs.gentoo.org, plus user stories, Gentoo Linux in production
environments, and more.
Full Story (comments: 2)
The
Mandrake Linux Community Newsletter for
June 5, 2003 is out. In this issue: Mandrake in the News --
TweakHound.com, LinuxWorld.com; BizCase of the Week -- Multimedia: Ambitone
Oy; Quick Tips -- Mandrake Community TWiki, Easy URPMI Setup; Software
Updates -- sb, mozilla, gnupg, more; Headlines from MandrakeClub.com --
Write better PHP code, 101 modules for Advanced Extranet server.
MandrakeSoft has announced the immediate
availability of The Definitive Guide to Using Mandrake Linux, 2nd
Edition which has been thoroughly updated and
expanded to cover the recently released Mandrake Linux 9.1.
Here's a bug advisory for qt3, which would
cause a crash when XFree86 did not support render.
Comments (none posted)
Slackware Linux has some new
changes in the
slackware-current changelog, including upgrades to Linux kernel
2.4.21.
Comments (none posted)
ZDNet picks up an article on
easing
Lindows OS into an existing network. "
When the Lindows OS
developers were working with version 1.0 and readying version 2.0, I was
extremely skeptical as to whether or not this operating system would find
its way into the enterprise. With the release of Lindows OS 3.0, I think
they've got a potential winner on their hands as long as it is approached
with an open mind. Let's take a look at how you can slowly introduce this
Linux-based operating system into your Windows environment without having a
major upheaval of your existing infrastructure." (Thanks to Con
Zymaris)
Comments (none posted)
New Distributions
Alcolix is a minimal Linux
rescue distribution with the goals of being small, compatible, and very
usable. It has a cozy shell and a multitude of partition rescue/editing
tools, all based on up-to-date releases (e.g., 2.4.x kernel with USB
support). It uses cpio.bz2 data disks and has a full GRUB bootloader,
memtest86, and more. Version
2.4.20 BETA3 was released
June 16, 2003.
Comments (1 posted)
CERN Linux is based on Red Hat Linux,
with modifications to the kernel (to better support their hardware) and
with additional software for High Energy Physics (HEP). It is used mostly
at CERN and a few of the smaller HEP institutes worldwide, running on farm
machines, servers, desktops and embedded PCs.
Comments (none posted)
free-EOS is a French
distribution with the aim of being incredibly easy to set up and get a set
of services running. Version 1.1 was released June 14, 2003.
Comments (none posted)
Linux4Geeks is a collection of
GNU-software, several programs and the Linux-kernel. If you want a fast
and stable system - this distribution is the right for you! But if you are
looking for an easy-to-use operating system - go and get another
distribution! Linux4Geeks is based on Linux from Scratch. So if you don't
want to compile all needed packages by yourself you can easily take this
distribution and start to integrate your needed programs. By the way: To
install Linux4Geeks you need a working installation of Linux to make your
Linux4Geeks bootable. Version
0.01 was released June 11,
2003.
Comments (none posted)
Minor distribution updates
Adamantix (formerly known as
TrustedDebian) has released
v1.0.1 with minor feature
enhancements. "
Changes: In this version all packages are GPG signed,
there are random PIDs, the kernel is compiled with SSP, several packages
have been fixed, there are several security updates, the PaX functionality
test suite was added, PaX, RSBAC, and SSP were updated, and several kernel
fixes (mostly security related) were added."
Comments (none posted)
Astaro Security Linux
has released
v4.008
with major feature enhancements. "
Changes: This ISO adds support for
AMD K6, Intel P1, and VIA C3 CPUs, as well as modern boards with dual CPU
support and interrupt controller programming (APIC). It also updates all
occurrences of glibc (security fix). The new Linux kernel includes the
security routing-cache-hash and TCP/IP fragment reassembly handling patch,
the TTY expolit patch, an ext3 bugfix, new modules for PPTP, drivers for
NICs, support for the Toshiba LCD, and support for Compaq SmartArray 5 and
Adaptec I2O RAID. A new exim (SMTP-Proxy) is included for a small AV
interaction bugfix."
Comments (none posted)
Freepia has released
v0.3.6 with major feature
enhancements. "
Changes: This release supports 5.1 surround sound
over S/PDIF (coax). A new graphics driver brings better performance. There
is dhcpclient support and smbclient support. Partitions are now
autodetected. USB storage supporthas been added to store configuration on
USB devices. Kernel 2.4.21-rc2 is now used. rootfs has been shrunken. There
is cramfs support for packages, a US keyboard layout, and many
bugfixes."
Comments (none posted)
MoviX has released
v0.8.0rc1 with major
feature enhancements. "
Changes: The DVD interface has been
completed. The VCD, XCD, and AudioCD interfaces were implemented. APIC
kernel support was added. A menu entry for filing bug reports was added. A
Spanish translation was added. Linux swap partitions are now automatically
activated. The DXR3 modules call was fixed, and new DXR3 menu and
partitions/net volumes menus were implemented. Support for TrueType fonts
and Chinese fonts was added."
MoviX2 has released v0.3.0rc1 with minor
bugfixes. "Changes: Bug fixes were made for the "Error while reading
cmd fd 7 : Success" message, for eject, and for ISA audio cards
bugs. Subtitles with True Type fonts were added. Simplified Chinese
subtitle fonts were added. NVidiaTV label was added. setHardware.pl from
MoviX was synchronized. The default color depth was set to 16bpp for all
cards. Support for Intel video cards was fixed. Minor changes were made to
input.conf and gui.conf. bugReport was improved. Support for Sony remotes
was added. ACPI support was added to the kernel."
Comments (none posted)
PLD RescueCD has released
v1.01 with minor feature
enhancements. "
Changes: The kernel was updated to PLD 2.4.20-8. 235
new modules were built (USB serial, irda, mtd, ieee1394, bluetooth, pcmcia,
gigabit ethernet). Framebuffer support was added. 115 packages were
updated. The following programs were added: diag-ether, fbset, iptstate,
mathopd, pound, progsreiserfs, trafshow, and wireless-tools."
Comments (none posted)
Recovery
Is Possible! (RIP) has released
v53 with major feature
enhancements. "
Changes: All the software and the kernel have been
updated."
Comments (none posted)
Rock Linux has announced
v2.0.0.0-beta5 with minor
feature enhancements. The Desktop Rock distribution (dRock) has also
released
v2.0.0-beta5.
Comments (none posted)
ThinStation has released
v0.92 with major
bugfixes. "
Changes: The order of downloading
thinstation-group-XXX.conf with TFTP was fixed. The XFree 4.2 cursors were
tweaked. The thinstation.conf file was cleaned-up."
Comments (none posted)
Distribution reviews
LinuxQuestions.org adds a
Distribution Review
Section to its website. Compare different distributions, read what
others like (or don't like), and add comments of your own.
Comments (none posted)
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