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Announcing Specifix Inc.

From:  "Melissa London" <melissa-AT-londoncalling-pr.com>
To:  <melissa-AT-londoncalling-pr.com>
Subject:  Former Red Hatters and Cygnus developers Start new Linux company
Date:  Wed, 14 Jul 2004 08:51:09 -0400

Specifix Inc. Enables Tailored Linux Offerings

 

Former Red Hat and Cygnus Executives, Erik Troan and Kim Knuttila, Form
Specifix to Deliver 

Hardware Independence and Cross-Platform Portability through Linux

SAN JOSE, CA-July 14, 2004-Former Red Hat (NASDAQ: RHAT) and Cygnus
technology executives Kim Knuttila and Erik Troan today announced the
formation of SpecifixT Inc., an open source company that produces solutions
targeting enterprises, hardware OEMs and other Linux users that need to
tailor the Linux operating system.

Specifix brings together leaders and experts from the Linux and GNU open
source development tools communities to deliver ConaryT --a technology for
building, deploying and managing a single Linux code base across unlimited
number of configurations and hardware platforms.  With Conary, users can
modify Linux source code to suit their needs, track and merge changes with
the Specifix Linux reference implementation and build the tailored OS.  This
cycle can be repeated through multiple versions of the users' tailored Linux
OS.

The Specifix management team represents more than 35 years of Linux, GNU
tools and open source development experience.  Kim Knuttila, the company's
co-founder and chief executive officer, was most recently the VP of
Engineering Services at the Linux company Red Hat, Inc. In this capacity he
managed the former Cygnus business unit to deliver open source and embedded
Linux solutions.  Before that, he served as VP of Engineering with Cygnus
Solutions, a tools developer acquired by Red Hat in 1999, where he was
responsible for partnering with industry-leading OEMs to produce open-source
based tools for their hardware platforms.

"We are extremely excited about having the opportunity to execute on a dream
that Erik and I share to deliver open source solutions designed for a
company's unique needs," said Kim Knuttila. "We've built groundbreaking
development and deployment technologies to enable OEMs, internal IT groups
and device manufacturers to take advantage of the power and infinitely
customizable nature of open source."

Erik Troan, co-founder and Executive VP of Operating Systems brings
extensive open source and Linux development experience to Specifix. For the
past decade, Troan led the development vision at Red Hat, where he served as
Chief Developer and VP of Product Engineering.  In this capacity, Troan was
responsible for specifying and building all products developed by Red Hat,
including RPM, Linux operating systems, the Red Hat Network, high
performance web servers, and the infrastructure for Red Hat's web site.  He
led teams in engineering, quality assurance, documentation, and product
marketing with offices all over the world. Most recently, Troan was Senior
Director of Product Marketing at Red Hat, where he was responsible for the
marketing and positioning of Red Hat's product lines, including software
products and service offerings.

Specifix is already gaining traction with industry leaders. "Rackable
Systems looks forward to working with Specifix to build Linux solutions that
meet customer demands for high performance systems on both IA-32 and  X86-64
platforms," said Tom Barton, CEO of Rackable Systems, a leading provider of
Linux-based high-density computing systems.

Linux developers will have a chance to hear and learn more about Specifix
when the company presents a paper entitled, "New Approaches in Software
Provisioning and System Maintenance," at the 2004 Ottawa Linux Symposium
July 21-24. The Linux Symposium (www.linuxsymposium.org/2004) is a core
technology conference, targeting software developers working on the Linux
kernel, OS infrastructure, security, networking, and related research
projects. 

About Specifix Inc. 

Founded in 2003 by open source industry veterans Kim Knuttila and Erik
Troan, Specifix is the creator of Linux solutions customized according to
customers' specific needs.  More information about Specifix can be found at
www.specifixinc.com <http://www.specifixinc.com/> . 


Specifix and Conary are trademarks of Specifix.  Linux is a trademark of
Linus Torvalds.

 

(Log in to post comments)

Cygnus co-founders

Posted Jul 14, 2004 18:53 UTC (Wed) by JoeBuck (subscriber, #2330) [Link]

Cygnus was co-founded by three people: Mike Tiemann, John Gilmore, and David "Gumby" Henkel-Wallace. Since I don't see Kim Knuttila claiming to be a Cygnus co-founder in the press release, I assume that this is LWN's error.

Cygnus co-founders

Posted Jul 14, 2004 19:08 UTC (Wed) by corbet (editor, #1) [Link]

My screwup; I misread "co-founder" in the PR. I'll fix the item.

Cygnus co-founders

Posted Jul 14, 2004 19:41 UTC (Wed) by JoeBuck (subscriber, #2330) [Link]

"manager" seems wrong as well; perhaps "former Engineering VP of Cygnus" would be better.

Announcing Specifix Inc.

Posted Jul 14, 2004 20:23 UTC (Wed) by piman (subscriber, #8957) [Link]

> The rise of distributions such as Fedora and Gentoo has moved the development of Linux distributions from small, tightly-connected groups to widely-dispersed groups of informal collaborators.

Yeah, crazy tightly-connected tiny Debian... Oh wait.

Announcing Specifix Inc.

Posted Jul 16, 2004 7:37 UTC (Fri) by mbp (guest, #2737) [Link]

Yeah, that is kind of dumb. But I think the SCM comparison is illuminating. Debian has very much the kind of problems you might expect from a single big CVS branch with many contributors.

It takes a long time to get it stable to release, it's hard to tell when it will be stable, and it takes a long time to get back there next time. Sometimes particular features (XFree 4.3) take a very very long time to merge, even though they're internally stable enough that a large fraction of people want them.

Another example: there's no easy way to get testing+security patches.

Something modelled more on Monotone might be a better approach.

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