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[News] LinuxWorld Expo in an Age When Linux is Already Mainstream

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An unplanned quick look at LinuxWorld 2008

,----[ Quote ]
| I did not actually have any plans to attend LinuxWorld this year, and I 
| suppose that I barely actually did: I was there half a day as it turned out. 
| Even in the little I saw today ("Today" being while I am writing this, which 
| is Wednesday, August 6th, 2008) the show has changed. More about that in a 
| bit.    
| 
| [...]
| 
| This felt different. This looked like an event that was about something that 
| was utterly mainstream. It felt like a mainframe conference of old, where all 
| the vendors were selling things that made the MF work better  or analyzed it 
| in some way or added missing functionality (Hey!  We do that!).   
`----

http://talk.bmc.com/blogs/blog-carl/steve-carl/Welcome-to-the-Linux-World

Linux World 2008/Streets of San Francisco

,----[ Quote ]
| The latest edition of Linux World ground to a halt in San Francisco today.  I 
| made it into town just last night for a VIP party hosted by the Linux 
| Foundation, where I caught up with lots of true believer friends (developers, 
| journalists and corporate supporters), and for the Board meeting today.  I 
| never  made it to this year's show, though, opting instead to arrive early 
| only to head back out of town for a few days of hiking in the hills south of 
| town.      
`----

http://www.consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/article.php?story=20080807222514715


Recent:

Linux still top embedded OS

,----[ Quote ]
| In a new whitepaper on Linux in the embedded market, VDC researchers cite the
| following reasons for Linux's popularity:
|
|     * Licensing cost advantages
|     * Flexibility of source code access
|     * General familiarity
|     * Maturing ecosystem of applications and tools
|     * Growing developer experience with Linux as an embedded OS
`----

http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4920597981.html


Linux still super in Top500

,----[ Quote ]
| In the June 2008 Top500 list, Linux still lives large with a role in 92% of
| systems (It is the only OS for 85.4%, but when considering all distributions
| (SUSE, Red Hat, CentOS, and general ‘Linux,’ as well as mixed uses that
| include Linux, I figure the share is more like the 92%).
`----

http://blogs.the451group.com/opensource/2008/06/26/linux-still-super-in-top500/


Related:

You're A Linux User/Supporter: You Just Don't Know It Yet  

,----[ Quote ]
| I'D like to start by asking you a series of seemingly unrelated questions.  
| Have you watched Shrek or Harry Potter And The Philosopher's Stone?  Have you 
| flown on Continental, Virgin America or Singapore Airlines?  Do you drive a 
| BMW, Fiat or Renault car?  Are you serving in the United States Army?  Have 
| you ever bought anything online using Paypal?  Have you ever stayed in a 
| Sheraton hotel?  Or travelled by train in Canada?     
`----

http://www.raiden.net/?cat=2&aid=409


The hidden world of Linux

,----[ Quote ]
| There are many great FOSS projects that utilise old PC hardware and give it a 
| new lease of life. The best is desktop computing with various Linux 
| distribution flavours like Mint, PCLinux, Ubuntu and countless others. In 
| fact it is my considered belief that the best hardware to run Linux on is 
| infact (almost) any machine that is at least 12 months old. It is possible, 
| of course, to select components based on the degree (and maturity) of the 
| specific support under Linux but this has two major drawbacks.      
| 
| [...]
| 
| Not only do such projects look to modify embedded Linux devices, but some 
| great projects have sprung up to utilise old PCs every household seems to  
| accumulate in order to fulfil a number of key uses. For example, 
| comprehensive firewall distributions like IPCop or Smoothwall or NAS 
| distributions like FreeNAS (although this is based on BSD.) These are not 
| dirty hacked operating systems either but very mature, streamlined, low 
| memory footprint distributions which run headlessly. Being totally 
| administered through a web browser makes these distributions feel extremely 
| professional and polished (even if the archaic hardware they are running on 
| doesn’t) this being coupled by the extraordinary amount of options present 
| really makes these projects an extraordinary example of the flexibility of 
| Linux/BSD.          
`---- 

http://whyamistilltyping.wordpress.com/2008/04/05/the-hidden-world-of-linux/


Linux everywhere

,----[ Quote ]
| Take yesterday as a case in point.  I checked the order status of my Elonex 
| One, and sent an email to see if my order for the One can be upgraded to the 
| One+ (bluetooth, and bigger internal memory).  I then caught the train to the 
| Queen Elizabeth hospital, watching the in-train tv which is powered by some 
| Linux flavour (given the error message I saw a few weeks back).  Visiting my 
| friend Simon at the QE, he’s spotted that the tv/phone/internet screens that 
| each patient has are powered by Linux.  This is of course when he’s not 
| tapping away on his Asus EEE, and hopefully writing the next Da Vinci Code 
| (only better).        
`----

http://andyhollyhead.wordpress.com/2008/03/28/linux-everywhere/


Linux is truly everywhere

,----[ Quote ]
| I spent a long time smiling about the Linux bootup screen that I had just 
| seen. To begin with, it reminded me that Linux, and other open-source 
| products, are now everywhere. Linux is no longer for the uber-geeks. It's not 
| just for system administrators and programmers, either. Linux is now at the 
| core of mainstream appliances, there even when you don't think that a 
| computer or operating system might be involved.     
| 
| [...]
| 
| Finally, Moore's Law and the general trend toward cheaper and faster hardware 
| means that Linux now fits into even more places than it did before. We 
| normally think of Linux as an operating system for servers, or even for 
| desktop computers. But we can expect Linux to be at the heart of a growing 
| number of appliances, from video-on-demand devices to digital video recorders 
| (e.g., TiVo), to cellphones (e.g., Android and OpenMoko). The Linux-powered 
| refrigerator, with a built-in bar-code scanner that can tell you how long ago 
| you bought milk, isn't far behind.       
`----

http://ostatic.com/158401-blog/linux-is-truly-everywhere


What CAN’T Linux do?

,----[ Quote ]
| 1. The story mentioned above. A man installs Linux on sixteen Playstation 3s 
| (with zero hardware modifications), clusters them together, and creates a 
| system to simulate black holes.  
| 2. Installing Linux on a Mac. I was just reading the most recent Wired 
| magazine that has a good story on how Apple has created a very closed system 
| where only Apple software plays on Apple hardware. Hello Yellow Dog Linux! I 
| have run Linux on an iBook - it was sweet.   
| 3. Routers. We all know that Linux works well on routers. OpenWRT installs 
| well on many Linksys routers. 
| 
| [...]
| 
| 11. Airplane black boxes. Montavista uses a Carrier Grade Linux to power 
| in-flight recorders. 
| 12. Brain surgery. Yep. This Linux-powered robot helps in brain surgery.
`----

http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/opensource/?p=186
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