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Yellow Dog Linux Finds New PPC Hardware Vendor

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Tue Aug 23, 2005 11:10 PM
from the less-corporate-means-better-performance? dept.
inditek writes "C|Net's News.com reports that Terrasoft Solutions, the vendor that sells and contributes to the development of Yellow Dog Linux has found, and continues to look for, some hardware alternatives based around the PowerPC now that Apple is moving to Intel chips. They say Apple's move makes for a good opportunity and more open space for a chip they think has a lot of life left in it." team99parody also writes "This is great news for customers like the US Navy who rely on Linux-on-PowerPC for important tasks like sonar imaging systems."
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  • pegasos (Score:4, Informative)

    by larry bagina (561269) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:14PM (#13386456) Journal
    Pegasos [pegasosppc.com] sells non macintosh, linux-based PPC machines. At least, they would if they weren't currently out of stock.
  • by Sv-Manowar (772313) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:15PM (#13386465) Homepage Journal
    It should be interesting to see the effect on Yellow Dog post-x86 macintosh, to see how the PPC Linux platform can compete on its own merits. Of course the comparison will be affected by the existing base of PPC hardware and the potential of stalled development given reduced demand for the platform. IBM have been using PPC in their own products, and its possible that their own demand will continue to drive desktop PPC chip development at the same pace as current.
    • by PDXNerd (654900) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:23PM (#13386503)
      It should be relatively easy to predict - this is a niche market. Always has been, even when Macintosh was PPC. Now that the major marketer for these chips is gone, the remaining market will still be what it was - a niche segment. Add into that the relatively low market share of Linux and I think we are all literate enough to read the writing on the wall.

      AMD/Intel are too cheap, too powerful, and too prevelant.
      • by Krach42 (227798) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:40PM (#13386608) Homepage Journal
        The thing was actually, that Apple was even a niche market within that niche market.

        This is why Apple couldn't pull any leverage against IBM or Motorola or FreeScale to actually make the chips that they wanted.

        Even Apple wasn't that big a market share in the PowerPC world. In fact, there are more PowerPCs out there than there are x86 chips. "Where are they?" you ask? They're in things like your car, and other embedded devices.

        It's like ARM. You just don't realize how pervasive they already are, because the only CPUs you usually ever hear about are desktops.
          • by Krach42 (227798) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:24AM (#13386763) Homepage Journal
            It's like the fact that more Ikea catalogs get printed every year than Bibles.

            It's damned strange to hear, and you wouldn't believe it, but if you actually bother to do the math, and look at where the things are going, you find out that it's got some darn good proof.

            As for real proof. No, I don't have any concrete proof, but I do know that IBM is the largest chip manufacturer in the world, and a large part of their production is PowerPC. Just like I said, they go into cars and other vehicles, not desktop computers.

            Still, even were there less PowerPCs than x86 chips, the point still stands that Apple was not the major consumer of PowerPC chips... just the most notable to date.
          • by confused one (671304) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @02:17PM (#13391714)
            for every one desktop PC made, there are over 10 embedded processors sold. PowerPC (whether it be IBM or Freescale) is a major player in embedded hardware. x86 just doesn't see that much use in embedded applications.

            The company I work for builds instrumentation -- we use PIC or ARM for the low end; and, PowerPC for the high end. It's anecdotal, but representative...

      • by Amiga Trombone (592952) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:57PM (#13386671)
        It should be relatively easy to predict - this is a niche market. Always has been, even when Macintosh was PPC. Now that the major marketer for these chips is gone, the remaining market will still be what it was - a niche segment. Add into that the relatively low market share of Linux and I think we are all literate enough to read the writing on the wall.

        You probably have a point there. While Power and PowerPC derivatives will certainly continue to be used in servers and embedded applications, you have to wonder how much R&D IBM will be willing to put into implementations suitable for desktops and notebooks. Even Apple didn't command enough of a market share to make the expense cost-effective for IBM. Somehow I doubt we're going to be seeing any exciting new PPC chips targeted at the consumer PC market.

        Which is a shame, really. It's a great chip.
  • It's Surprising (Score:5, Interesting)

    by under_score (65824) <mishkin-slashdot&berteig,com> on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:16PM (#13386475) Homepage

    It's surprising where "odd" hardware/software combo's show up. I would never have suspected Linux/PPC in the Navy. How did it get there? Who knew about Linux, and PPC and had the influence to get it used there? Was it a really good sales job (and the connections that make it possible)? Or was it an insider who went looking for a platform from a clean slate?

    The answers to these questions are extremely important to the further expansion of the use of Linux (or any other product/platform/system).

    • Re:It's Surprising (Score:4, Insightful)

      by maetenloch (181291) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:33PM (#13386565)
      Also depending on where these systems are deployed and what kind of power/cooling/space constraints they had, the Navy may have been more focused on flops/watt rather than absolute performance.
      • Re:It's Surprising (Score:4, Informative)

        by dj245 (732906) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:31AM (#13386797) Homepage
        Bingo. A professor of mine (I'm studying marine enginering) once told a tale of designing a navy destroyer. Among other things, the anchor windlass turned out to be bigger than the manufacturer had initally said (due to a communications mishap) so they had to bubble the deck, an ugly and undesirable feature of a multi-million (billion?) dollar vessel.

        In addition, the radar set they ended up using (because of the required output) put out so much waste heat into the radio room that a bigger AC unit had to be installed in that space than initially designed, but there wasn't anywhere to put it so they stole ceiling space and made the room 5 feet tall.

        It could have easilly gone the other way and they could have searched out a better radio from an obscure manufacturer (Transmeta, if they made radios...)

        • Re:It's Surprising (Score:4, Insightful)

          by antifoidulus (807088) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:50AM (#13386849) Homepage Journal
          Um, that might work for your average PC program, but I wouldn't try doing that on a complex, incredibly expensive real time embedded system where failure can equal lives lost....
          Something tells me the transition isn't nearly as simple as a /. post.
    • Maybe the Navy realized the security risks involved with a homogeneous network. That's at least one great reason to seek out a non-standard (yet reliable and efficient) platform, such as Linux on PPC.
    • Re:It's Surprising (Score:5, Informative)

      by pkb (196241) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:50PM (#13386648)
      AltiVec is big in military applications. Sonar, radar and such are imaging problems at heart.
  • Oh Dear (Score:3, Insightful)

    by eno2001 (527078) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:26PM (#13386526) Homepage Journal
    I can just see the new troll: "PPC is dying. Anandtech confirms it".

    Heh. I remember getting all excited about PPC back in 1994 when Apple first announced the move. It seemed like it was a natural and logical extension from the 680x0 family (one of the best CPUs ever for desktop systems). It's kind of sad how it didn't wind up being as much of a player as it should have. Even the guy who wrote Minix quipped back then that the future would be everyone running some kind of *nix OS on their PPC desktops. Now that dream is gone because even Apple went with Intel. I sure hope Intel can get it together and make a decent CPU/Mobo combo that dumps all backwards compatibility, BIOS and segmented memory.
  • The battle rages on. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by keilinw (663210) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:33PM (#13386562) Homepage Journal
    This is such an interesting discussion. Which CPU is better? Better is obviously in the eye of the behold as price, power, Mhz, and apparently performance per watt matter. I was at WWDC and played with the new MacTel boxes. Interestingly the single 3.6 Ghz pentiums appear to run faster than the dual 2.7 Ghz G5's.

    OK... so I'm not going to go there... but Intel is apparently coming out with some interesting new hardware. I don't know everything about it.. but it appears that they will be chainge the x86 architecture altogether. So was Apples move speculative or desperate?

    Another interesting thing as brough up by the author of the post to which I am replying.. liies in the fact that certain companies are inexorably tied to their hardware. Some institutions, for example, running Pro Tools may not be able to upgrade to the new hardware as their software will not be availible. This is speculative... but it is possible.

    So I'd be interested in an arcitcle that clearly lays out the differences between the PowerPC and Intel architectures and maybe even one that examines Inte's new architecture as well.

    The PowerPC is undoubtably an excellent platform....but there are other factors to be considered.
    • by Bastian (66383) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:03AM (#13386685)
      So was Apples move speculative or desperate?

      Probably more on the desperate side. Laptops are now slightly more than 50% of the market. I don't have any numbers, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's even more for Macs, where you don't get people buying big gaming desktops and the cheapest desktop isn't less than half the price of the cheapest laptop.

      The G5 is power-hungry, hot, and decidedly not suitable for mobile and low-power applications. It probably never will be, given how little pull Apple has with CPU manufacturers. And the G4 is more than ready for retirement.

      Academic arguments on the relative advantages of PPC and x86 just don't play into the issue. If Apple wants to continue to sell computers, they really have no choice but to jump ship on PPC.
  • Plug plug plug (Score:5, Informative)

    by -Neko- (67564) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:16AM (#13386730) Homepage
    We finally get on Slashdot and nobody mentions the bloody company name!

    ARGH! :)

    http://www.genesi.lu/ [genesi.lu]

    Neko
  • by slashflood (697891) <flow AT howflow DOT com> on Wednesday August 24 2005, @03:27AM (#13387377) Homepage Journal
    This is great news for customers like the US Navy who rely on Linux-on-PowerPC for important tasks like sonar imaging systems.

    IBM just teamed up with a company called Mercury [mc.com] to build Cell-based [ibm.com] computers for (military) applications:

    As a result, demanding applications such as radar, sonar, MRI, digital X-Ray, and many others can be taken to new levels of sophistication and performance.

    And as we all know, the Cell is basically a Power processor.
  • By the time Apple quits shipping PPC, the XBox360 and PS3 are likely going to be out. How big a deal do people anticipate it to be to run YDL on them?
    • Re:navy (Score:3, Interesting)

      That their existing software is all written for it.

      True, they could recompile for a different architecture, but that costs money, and test time.

      So, they're better off continuing with PowerPC hardware.

      So, pull your head out of your ass that everyone can just jump ship from a chip design when it isn't going well for them, and shut up.

      Interestingly enough, the newest Apache modifications (that I had heard about, this was Spring 2001) put a Voodoo 4 in for the HUD displays. So, again, the question, "what shit
    • Re:navy (Score:5, Insightful)

      by zulux (112259) on Tuesday August 23 2005, @11:29PM (#13386543) Homepage Journal
      What is so damned special about PPC for sonar imaging.

      It's working.

      Seriously, when something is working, don't screw with it. Just leave it alone, and use your talents to solve a new problem.

      • Re:navy (Score:5, Informative)

        by kinema (630983) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:57AM (#13386866)
        It's working.

        I would say that it has more to do with the fact that the system designers looked at the availiable COTS CPUs and decided that the PowerPC was better suited to the task. Most likely the PowerPC's SIMD/vector unit (AltiVec) was superior to the offerings of other similar processors namely Intel's SSEn on the Pentium IV.

        After the choice was made to go with the PowerPC/AltiVec processor piles and piles of hand optimized ASM code was created by some very well funded geeks to perform what I'm sure is an ultra high bandwidth and sample rate siganl processing system.

    • Re:Isn't it odd? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Bastian (66383) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @12:15AM (#13386724)
      Just like the z80 was all but dead when everyone quit making desktop computers that ran CP/M? I guess all those countless TI calculators, Game Boys, cell phones, and the like don't count. Come to think of it, I think I have 4 devices that use a z80 sitting on my desk right now. I bought two of them in the past year.

      There are craploads of things out there that use PPC chips that are not Apple computers. It most certainly does have a lot of life left in it.
    • by Arker (91948) on Wednesday August 24 2005, @01:39AM (#13387028) Homepage Journal

      I believe that Debian is ported to the PPC. How does Yellow Dog compare to Debian as a distribution? If I could use Yellow Dog on the x86 would I have a reason to use it instead of Debian?

      No.

      Yellow Dog is based on Redhat. Debian is... Debian. Score one for Debian.

      Yellow Dog comes from a single company that will sell you a support contract. Debian is an open standard, if you need a support contract you can choose from several competitors, and if the one you choose initially gives you any problems, you can dump them and move to another without having to change your software. Score two for Debian.

      Debian supports nearly as many platforms as NetBSD, meaning that you can run a very heterogenous environment, PPC here, X86 there, ARM over in that corner, SPARC behind that wall there... and have the same tools, use the same methods to administer each one, regardless of platform. Yellow Dog runs on PPC, so if you have anything else in your environment, you'll have to learn to admin Yellow Dog, plus something else. Score three for Debian.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 24 2005, @01:39AM (#13387029)
      *if you understand the fact that the difference between POWER and PowerPC is pretty small and IBM uses the term 'Power Platform'. They are API compatable in linux-land. (meaning the system that I use on my PowerPC laptop will work just fine on a Power 5 server without recompiling...)

      Go check out OpenPower for starters.

      These are server stuff specificly to use the Power 5 proccessors with a Linux-specific machine.

      For example the low end of it is a Power 710 'express'. A rack mount system with a 1.65 ghz Power 5 proccessor with 36 meg cache(!), 2 gigs of RAM, and 2 73gig 10k SCSI drives.

      Very fast, huge cache, ok amount of memory, ok fast harddrives. 4,500 USD

      You can get dual proccessors for under 10k, which realy realy realy kicks the ass of anything you can get from Sun for that price range. The Power 5 systems with their 36meg cache and HUGE transistor counts blow the AMD opterons out of the water.

      IBM does not have a OpenPower workstation, and does not have a OpenPower desktop though. These are server/database systems and it shows. They AIX workstations you can order, but have Linux installed on them instead if you wanted to, and those aren't much more expensive.

      IBM's stuff has always been expensive though. I'd rather have a army of 3rd party manufacturers make PowerPC machines.

      However I don't see much of a point, other then platform snobishness.

      Personally I like my PowerPC lappy; a Apple Ibook, but it's the last one I'd buy because it's video card is the ATI 9200 and is the last supported by Open Source drivers.

      There is the R300 project for newer cards, but I don't think that it's paticularly usefull at this point (although I am gratefull for it, don't get me wrong.)

      Having a PowerPC machine realy drive home the values of having free software.

      Free software is stable, it's cross-platform, and it 'just works'. All propriatory software runs like ass on my system, if at all. It's a night and day difference.

      Trouble is, what is the advantage to PowerPC desktops over x86?

      NONE that I see. The newer intel setups are faster, use less power, and are supported well by open source drivers.. much better then the overpriced apple hardware. The ibook when I bought it was vastly superior to all small Pentium 4-m systems aviable and was cheaper.. for the 12 inch long-lasting-battery form factor.

      Since then Intel has surpassed it wholy with it's Centrino/Sonoma stuff.

      (and beleive me, the x86 Apple stuff will be overpriced, too. I'd probably avoid it personally)

      Truth is they are both proccessors, they do both the same thing. Other then price and speed, the differences are purely academic at this point when considuring their use with Linux. Both work fine, x86 allows propriatory applications easily, PPC doesn't.

      To me they are on equal ground. If third parties start suppling powerpc laptops that are well supported by free software, I'd strongly considure it.. but otherwise I realy don't care to much.

      IBM needs to realy get in gear about their Power systems otherwise they will simply lock themselves into a small high-end market with slowly, yet consistantly, shrinking share.

      If the average geek AND the average developer can't have easy access to PPC machines then Linux will stop being cross platform in a few years. It's ineveitable, and there is nothing nobody can do about it. Most people don't have 5000 dollars to burn just to have a extra server in their basement, or feel like spending 1000 dollars for a slow ass machine of lesser quality then what they can by at walmart for 300 dollars.

      The biggest hope for future PPC machine in my future will be the Sony PS3. If they release a Linux distro for it, I'll buy it in a second. At 3ghz with a limited core it will be somewhat faster then my aging AMD desktop and my 1.2ghz Ibook. The SPE's offer interesting possiblities and will be fun to mess around with, especially when it comes to things like ray tracing and whatnot. If Sony gets Nvidia to release drivers for it it can actually have the possibility of being a rather kick-ass Linux box, otherwise it will just end up being a nice toy.