Archive for September, 2004

Sun gear for auction 10

Want to be as cool as me? Ross's Auctions (sic) are selling some Sun Microsystems gear this Saturday at their Maylands auction house. I might check it out. Let me know if you're intersted in coming along (Tanman?) and we can make a crew.

It's mostly older gear, but there's an Enterprise 2 in amongst it. If that's what I think it is, I might need some help lifting it.

Do you Ubuntu? 4

ubuntu.jpgLast night at the Debian Special Interest Group (Sydney Linux User Group) No-Name-Yet.com / Canonical / Ubuntu was revealed to the public. The mystery is no more! I was so excited by this that on Monday I was checking Virgin Blue's flights. On reflection, the $350 can be better spent, but it was really something that I'm interested in.

Ubuntu is a Linux distribution that is based on Debian. I've heard it described as what Debian would be if it had slightly 'user friendlier' guidelines, and some full time staff. What does that mean? Debian is well known for the Debian Free Software Guidelines, which sometimes restrict non-free software from being part of the Debian project. Lately, things like binary-only drivers have been a problem. On top of this, Debian has over 1,000 active developers, and 10,000 packages. This sized community means that it's difficult to steer Debian in any new directions as required. Just check up the in-fighting on the debian-devel mailing list...

Ubuntu is a project from Canonical, a group comprised of some noteworthy Debian and GNOME developers. It's basically the who's-who of open source. Jeff Waugh, Matt Zimmerman, Daniel Stone, Ross Burton, Benjamin Mako-Hill... People that get my attention when they talk.

Rumour has it that this guy is funding Canonical, and reading his bio he sounds like the kind of dude that might. Watch out Billy G, there's a cool nerd chasing your crown. I've always quietly wondered why some uber-rich guy hasn't thrown their weight behind a Linux distribution in the past; maybe I've been wrong, or maybe Mark Shuttleworth (does anyone else find it ironic he went into space with that surname?) is reading my thoughts. Right. Now.

This new distribution is focussed on 6-monthly releases encapsulating the latest and greated software. As an example, the public preview launch last night coincided with the launch of GNOME 2.8. At the moment, their release cycle is planned to match GNOME's. This is a huge step forward, because Debian has a release every 18-24 months. One of the big criticisms of Debian is that it's too old. The stable release (Woody) is now 26 months old! For servers, this is acceptable, but as more and more people are looking at Linux on the desktop, it's just not going to cut it. Sure, using Sarge (testing) or Sid (unstable) means that you have have more bleeding-edge machines, but that's no good for newbies with no skill. If a package breaks something on my laptop, I can probably fix it, but Maggie definately couldn't (Hale: could Mel?), and she's the target audience for a lot of these new distributions. Users just want to be users, and Ubuntu might fit that gap.

Whilst Ubuntu draws on Debian package structure, the archive is different, meaning you can't just point your source.list file at Ubuntu's package repositories and apt-get dist-upgrade to Ubuntu. Infact, their package archive is more up-to-date, and with many of the Canonical people wearing Debian Developer hats too, this means we get the patches shipped upstream to Debian (and beyond).

Do I think another branch is good? Sure, as long as it's not another branch that doesn't provide innovation. I think the calibre of people attracted to Ubuntu is a clear indicator that this will be a player to watch.

SunRay Server Software on Debian 7

SunRay1.jpgI found this page outlining exactly what I need to do to get a SunRay thin client to connect to a Debian server. This page was found in a posting made to the SunRay Users mailing list.

We're looking at using a bunch of these to create internet cafes at future conferences we might manage, like we did at Diggers and Dealers this year. Having a box of SunRays means we'd hire flat screen monitors and not have to worry about viruses or XP crashing. Most users simply needed a web browser, so having 2.4GHz PCs was an excess (both in expence and computing resources).

A central X server, dishing up a GNOME interface would be fantastic. I know XDMCP works a treat over a LAN, but the Suns use a different protocol, so I'm not sure how it would work. At $300 a terminal (for Sun iForce members ;) they don't exactly cost a packet, so I might grab one to test things out on.

Big up to Sun for making SunRay Server Software v3.0 Beta available to the public.

Leaked Xbox2 designs 2

Could one of these hardware designs or logos be for the next Xbox?

120904144553xbox2.gif

120904144703xbox21.gif

I don't think they look too bad to be honest. Max Console is reporting that there are other designs to be leaked later, as a result of a focus group study. I'll be interested to see if this is legitimiate, and if it actually eventuates into anything.

Printing under Linux 1

Just a quick point; I'd always thought that printing under Linux was difficult to setup, but if tonight's anything to go by, then it's actually quite easy.

Maggie's Epson C61 was configured and installed in about 10 minutes. I installed CUPS, checked out LinuxPrinting.org, read a short HOWTO and was away. Logging in through the web interface to manage the printer is a nice touch, though I'm not scared of .conf files. I think it will make Linux and OSS just that little more attractive to those that want to try but are too scared.

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