Red Hat Explains ArsDigita Purchase 136
hezron writes "Red Hat VP, Howard Jacobson, sent a mass email explaining their acquisition of ArsDigita's assets. Here is the press release concerning the acquisition." The press release is actually a quick FAQ about the purchase - Howard does a good job of explaining the purchase and the reasons for it. Howard's a smart guy, and I hope that the purchase of AD will mean a longer life then how AD's past management was handling it.
Re:Step one: (Score:1, Insightful)
Riiiight.
Just what they need...someone to take his golden $6M parachute.
I feel bad for the poor guy.
"Quick FAQ" is right! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:"Quick FAQ" is right! (Score:4, Funny)
Which is nice, but I think they got a BIT repetitive. If I read "Red Hat will" or "Open Source (roots|software)" one more time. All I kept thinking was 'Bob Dole thinks he...' He always spoke in the 3rd person :)
Should be interesting to see where ACSJ goes from here!
Top Embarrassing Lines Of Windows Source Code (Score:1, Offtopic)
#define BACKDOOR_PASSWORD "!seineew era sreenigne epacsteN"
this is good for arsDigita (Score:4, Interesting)
O great... Acronyms... (Score:2)
Of course, this is probabyl why they are not planning to rename ACS
Re:this is good for arsDigita (Score:3, Informative)
Re:this is good for arsDigita (Score:2)
When did they ever make a profit ? I think you are confusing Red Hat with SuSe ...
The Raven.
Re:this is good for arsDigita (Score:2)
Article expanded my vocabulary! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Article expanded my vocabulary! (Score:1)
Mike
Re:Article expanded my vocabulary! (Score:5, Funny)
1 thing... (Score:1)
Re:1 thing... (Score:1)
From the FAQ (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:From the FAQ (Score:3, Informative)
Ummm, let's see, Alan Cox on the kernel, Chris Blizzard on Mozilla, Havoc on Gnome, bero does KDE packages
Those are the ones on the top of my head. I probably forgot a few, but GNOME, gcc, and certainly Mozilla on Linux wouldn't be as far as they are today without the Red Hat guys.
Re:From the FAQ (Score:1)
Re:From the FAQ (Score:1)
True. If you look around you will occasionally find a single-person project, but you would for sure also find pledges for help on the projects home-page
True. The original pre-java version of ACS was fully open sourced. Their new java version is not, though.
Will this press release bore the hell out of all? (Score:3, Funny)
* RedHat has long been a proponent of boring press releases.
* In light of this historic relationship, this press release will bore the hell out of everyone who reads it.
I like RedHat but... (Score:2, Insightful)
Somehow, I think a company should refrain from acquisitions until it is comfortably in the black itself. I'd hate for RedHat to burn through its reserves faster than necesary.
Re:I like RedHat but... (Score:5, Interesting)
Greylock was the VC firm behind both RedHat and Ars Digita. RedHat's 'purchase' of Ars Digita allows Greylock to bury the aD losses in the RH books, as well as give a glimmer of hope to the ACS product making the light of day again.
About the Ars Digita staff going to RedHat - the total number appears to be about 10 to 15 people, so it's hardly the flood of engineers. RedHat got ACS for a song. And to think that two years ago when aD approached RedHat about putting ACS into the standard distro, they laughed in our faces.
(Yes, I was an aD wonk)
Re:I like RedHat but... (Score:1)
Makes me glad to own Red Hat stock, even though I did lose a lot riding it from $30 to $9, I made it back riding it from $4 to $7, and still holding those shares right now. It would take a major turn of events to make me sell their stock now.
Red Hat is THE American Linux company, now that LNUX is misnamed. I always knew they would come through in the end.
--This post powered by Red Hat (tm) Linux.
Hah! A face saving move... (Score:3, Insightful)
You're being way too polite... this was nothing but a face-saving move by the vulture capitalists... better than just saying the company tanked and shut its doors (which is the real truth).
But... (Score:1)
they've fired or alienated into quitting
enough of their Tcl people.
Re:But... (Score:1)
BTW, the ArsDigita stuff is not TCL any more. They're using Java or something (last I heard).
Personally I think both TCL and Java suck... If the functional language people would get off their collective butts and write a real compiler, those would be the languages of choice. By real compiler I mean something that compiles directly from source to assembly language without using a middle layer of C. This would allow compiled functional programs to run at what we consider normal speed ("normal" being C).
Re:But... OCAML! (Score:1)
www.ocaml.org.
It's a great language, and transparently compiles to assembly on both windows and linux. Fast, modular, with all the functional fun that the kids want these days.
Re: I have, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
It seems to me that you, like many linux users, are really saying "why don't they compile directly to x86!" The world is bigger than x86. Most scripting languages want to be cross-platform. And no that does not mean run on windows and linux-x86.
If you took a second to look at how much code gcc is then you would realize how fscking big a task that is.
t.
Re:But... (Score:2)
You mean like you can do it with Objective Caml, Standard ML, Haskell, Common Lisp, Scheme, and probably a lot of other functional languages?
Seems you need a better excuse to keep using ugly languages...
Re:But... (Score:4, Interesting)
Proof? Of course, there cannot be one, but if you like benchmarks, compare the Great Computer Language Shootout [bagley.org]. Though C "wins", I wouldn't exactly call it "much slower".
Wrong. For all languages I mentioned there are native compilers available. For all (AFAIK, not sure about Standard ML), there are also bytecode compilers available, for some also compilers to C.
BTW, nobody would ever be so stupid to first generate bytecode, then C out of this (At least I hope so). Oh, and assembly isn't what you compile to in the end, thats why there are assemblers.
If you talk of generating native binaries directly, you surely should try to get to know more. Here are a few:
Re:But... (Score:2)
Nor do SBCL, ACL, MCL, or LispWorks. There are a number of CL compilers that compile via C, such as GCL and ECLS, but you don't have to use those, there are lots of other choices.
As for the other languages, I am not sufficiently familiar with the compilers to say whether they use an intermediate C stage or not.
Re:But... (Score:2)
One of the fun things .NET does is to finaly make a fair comparison of programming languages possible. In the past the problem has been that most competitions of that type tended to be won by FORTRAN, not because the language was any good or fast but just because of the humongous amount of work that has gone into optimizing FORTRAN compilers.
C compilers have recently overtaken FORTRAN for the same reason, the effort put into optimization, plus C is quite a bit friendlier to the optimiser than FORTRAN.
With .NET you can use the same back end to produce code for practicaly any mainstream language and plenty of far from mainstream ones. It is very unlikely that there will be major performance differences between Basic, C#, and J#.It will be interesting to see how much the gap between C and Perl is narrowed.
Some of the traditional gap between the C languages and functional languages will be narrowed because CLI is a managed code environment. I suspect there is still some performance penalty to using functional languages in a functional maner but it will probably be irrelevant since you only need to use thefunctional code for the parts where functional languages help.
Case in point here is I remember once writing a prolog program to do soe stuff. Prolog was great for the real problem but when it came to all the support code to do the UI and I/O it really started to creak. Not only was the code slow, it was also really hard to write and was full of kludges (anyone remember the cut?).
Re:But... (Score:2)
Any measurement of performance will need to analyze the performance of the compiler and the "fit" with the C# VM if anything meaningful is to emerge.
I hate it when non-compiler writers pontificate on slashdot about compiler technology.
Not that it's different than with any other topic, it just happens that I'm a Compiler Expert (TM).
Re:But... (Score:2)
As I stated in the post the difference between the C familly languages is likely to be least. In particular I don't expect there to be a speed penalty for J#.
I also stated that functional languages are likely to be somewhat disadvantaged. I suspect that overall however the differences between languages will be somewhat reduced compared to traditional contests where the quality of implementation is the dominant variable being measured.
Not that it's different than with any other topic, it just happens that I'm a Compiler Expert (TM).
Pity you don't appear to be an English comprehension expert.
I hope they buy Sourceforge as well (Score:1)
Risky (Score:1)
Looks to me... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Looks to me... (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Looks to me... (Score:2)
Re:Looks to me... (Score:1)
Re:Looks to me... (Score:2)
'ACSJ provides enterprise customers with a scalable, reliable platform for ACS deployments' - LOL.
To my knowledge there has never been any site succesfully built using ACS Java - sorry, ACSJ - and I doubt there ever will be. I don't know why RedHat bought the company - what were they thinking of? Did Greylock tell them to?
Re:Looks to me... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sun's refusal to open Java to a standards body is making it really hard for me (a card-carrying Open-Source-Looney) to figure out what is better long term. I'm all for open standards, and (on the surface, at least) it looks like .NET is more open than J2EE. (Microsoft, has at least submitted some of .NET to ECMA)
Is this a correct analysis? Something the back of my mind tells me I've just been tricked...
I have always been of the mind that the trio of Sun/Netscape/Oracle was the One_True_Religion, but now I'm not so sure.
Re:Looks to me... (Score:1)
t.
Background (Score:3, Informative)
See this for background about ArsDigita:
ArsDigita: From Start-Up to Bust-Up by Philip Greenspun [waxy.org]
More background (Score:2)
Here is more background information about ArsDigita:
ArsDigita VCs v. Co-founders: The battle for control of ArsDigita Corporation [unicast.org]
To me, the entire dispute was very interesting.
Deep background (Score:2)
People with no technical education often think they can participate sensibly in a technical enterprise. They often use an immense amount of energy hiding the fact that they cannot.
The acting performances by Academy Award winners are, literally, bland and unconvincing compared to the acting performances of managers trying to pretend that they can manage a business they don't understand.
Here is an article about that subject: An Engineer's View of Venture Capitalists [ieee.org]
Want to try Venture Capital anyway? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Venture Capital Links:
The Venture Capital Marketplace (See the VC Directory: Many Resources.) [v-capital.com.au]
Finance Web (Lists VC Companies.) [financeweb.com]
Venture Capital on the Net Links (Large Free Database) [advocacy-net.com]
National Venture Capital Association (Select NVCA Members.) [nvca.org]
Infon Venture Capital Database ($99) [infon.com]
YAHOO! Venture Capital Firms Listings [yahoo.com]
I don't have any connection with these companies. I cannot comment on their usefulness.
Excellent article! (Score:2)
Let's define what a CMS is... (Score:2, Insightful)
I poked around on the ArsDigita pages, but what I found was a lot of marketing and buzzword crap, and no really good to the point explanation on what it is. I don't have the time to read all the marketing B.S., so I'm hoping somebody here can get straight to the point and tell me what this is all about.
If I were to download and install the ArsDigita CMS, what exactly would that buy me?
Is it a collection of APIs for developing web pages?
Is it a templating engine for generating markup?
Is it a kind of uber-Wiki?
Is it a message board system?
Is it some online collaborative environmnet like Source Forge?
It it an online publishing system like Slash or PostNuke?
Help me get to the point!
Bryan
Re:Let's define what a CMS is... (Score:3, Funny)
BINGO!
Re:Let's define what a CMS is... (Score:1)
Re:Let's define what a CMS is... (Score:5, Informative)
CMS is software to define rules to manage content production and publication. So if you were to download and install the aD CMS, you would get all of the above, except integrated. So you post content as with the publishing system like Slash, but you can collaboratively author and manage said content a la SourceForge. The previous four are part of the basic ACS system; they are necessary but not sufficient to describe CMS. Additionally, the focus of CMS is to manage content -- so the CMS software also allows you to write the control flow of content and integrate it with all the above. So rather than being limited to the rules for posting on /. or Scoop, you can define the rules for "such and such must review, approve here, loop and edit, comment, publish, email, repeat" or whatever you come up with on-site.
Of course, unless you have a penchant for Java-flavoured pain, it might be easier to use the CMS with OpenACS 4.5beta1 [openacs.org] than the packages from a defunct company that fired most of their programmers. Still, it's nicer than what Vignette will charge you 6 figures for.
Re:Let's define what a CMS is... (Score:2)
No subscription for me! (Score:3, Funny)
Ouch, so close! Only a few more hours and Slashdot would have had my $120! [slashdot.org] I guess you just can't lose a bet against Slashdot grammar. This time it was Hemos, not Taco. The illiteracy twins are at work again.
Well, this ought to please cheapbytes! (Score:5, Funny)
Note: Sun's trademark prevents us from calling the software "ACS Java", though "ACS for the Java Platform" is OK. Hence the abbreviation "ACSJ".
To this unfortunate obfuscation at cheapbytes.com:
Looking for CDs containing the downloadable
version of the XXX XXX Linux distribution?
Hint: The name has to do with an article of clothing
to keep your head warm.
We can't call it by it's real name due to trademark law.
Our president will be providing a statement and information at
a later time regarding this subject. Please be informed about
this matter prior to jumping to any erroneous conclusions.
Cheapbytes, IANAL and this is not legal advice, but if the statement above is good enough for redhat, I wonder what could prevent you from saying something like
Note: Red Hat's trademark prevents us from calling the software "Red Hat", though "XXX XXX" is OK. Hence the abbreviation "XXX XXX".
Re:Well, this ought to please cheapbytes! (Score:2)
You despair about Cheapbytes' notice stating that they have to call Red Hat Linux "XXX XXX Linux" because of the trademark. Don't despair, they could be even more serious about trademark law. I personnally think they should call it "XXX XXX XXXXX". Maybe it's just me, but a "XXXXX distribution" sounds a lot more interesting than yet another Linux distro. The GUI on that has to be nice.
XXXXXX distro (Score:1)
Yeah, and it comes with an industrial-strength porn download manager and viewer.
Then/than? *argh* (Score:1, Insightful)
Is it TOO much to ask supposed "editors" to actually make sure that what they write (and expect us to PAY for) is at least vaguely grammatically correct?
*sheesh*
Moving to compete with VA? (Score:3, Interesting)
Looking at the press release, I noticed the following bullets:
Perhaps RedHat is moving to provide a collaborative development platform ..... ala SourceForge Enterprise edition. Could VA's SourceForge business be about to get another competitor. Of course, if you believe what their CEO had to say on their last conference call, they don't have competitors.
Who's gonna manage it? (Score:1)
Re:Who's gonna manage it? (Score:1)
Eve's past life (Score:1)
http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~eveander/
Repost:Eve's past life (Score:1)
But will ACS/Java be truly open? (Score:2)
So, does this mean we'll get a usable ACS/Java with every Redhat boxed set? That would be cool...
In the meantime, I'm learning Tcl!
Re:But will ACS/Java be truly open? (Score:5, Informative)
We've got one thing aD never had - a truly community-based and community-supported development effort.
aD shut their "luser" community out (pronounce it out loud and you'll understand their attitude, starting with Philip Greenspun and never modified thereafter, no matter what disputes he and the VCs might've had), refusing bug fix patches, design input, etc from the large set of folks interested in the fruit's of Philip's efforts to start a company devoted to providing an open source toolkit for web development (but based on Oracle because that's how you Get Rich Quick!)
Well ... the OpenACS community is certainly weaker in numbers and in hours (we all work for a living doing something else, typically custom client development).
But ... we stumble along and have a few coups of our own, such as an OpenACS application winning a prestigous mobile computing award in the UK recently.
I think it is great that RedHat intends to continue forth with ACSJ, if true.
But ... our little project won't care. We have a half-dozen or so companies making a living off our cooperative efforts (a socialist-capitalist mind-meld, if you will, as we have our separate businesses, compete, yet cooperate on the shared toolkit). So we're motivated to suceed.
openacs and java (Score:1)
Re: openacs and java (Score:1)
There is discussion and experimentation with ways to add Java to the mix for those who need it. See the current thread about related AOLserver modules ns_java / ns_javablend [openacs.org] and their current status, on the OpenACS.Org [openacs.org] site.
It's not especially relevant to the Java question, but I'm the person who tries to create Red Hat RPMs for OpenACS.
Re: openacs and java (Score:2)
From what I understand, not all the Java ACS has been released as open source, though all the TCL stuff has.
Nomenclature (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Nomenclature (Score:1, Offtopic)
Of course - and I got a couple points karma out of it. I thought everyone had signed up for that franchise? :-)
As A RedHat Shareholder (Score:1)
I expected/hoped that RedHat would make decisions that struck a balance between open source and capitalistic risk taking. I think I'll pick up another 100 shares. Nice job.
Translation (Score:1)
We bought them.
How does the Red Hat/ArsDigita deal complement Red Hat's business?
They make us bigger.
How will Red Hat change the ArsDigita business?
We'll swallow them.
Will Red Hat continue to develop ACS for the Java Platform (ACSJ)?
Yes.
When will the 5.0 version of ACSJ be released?
Whenever we damn well feel like it.
Will ACSJ remain Open Source?
Yes.
Will Red Hat change the license for ACSJ from ADPL to GPL?
Yes. Well, probably.
Will ACS continue to be called "ACS"?
Yes. Well, maybe.
What will happen to www.arsdigita.com?
We'll swallow it.
Will Red Hat continue to operate ArsDigita's public discussion forums (web/db, "ACS Core & CMS", etc.)?
Yes.
Power Point... (Score:1)