Red Hat, IBM Partner to Certify Apps for Linux 99
robyannetta writes "British tech site
Microscope has an interesting article talking about how Red Hat and IBM will join forces to help software suppliers certify their applications for Linux. The program is designed to make it easier for suppliers to migrate their software to Linux, and will also give IBM and Red Hat a boost by enlarging the pool of applications certified to run on Red Hat Enterprise Linux with IBM hardware and middleware. Yet another example of creative business foresight that keeps both Red Hat and IBM in the black."
Re:And soon we will rule the world!!! (Score:1)
(we may have come up with a new language here)
RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:5, Informative)
Also Oracle has a HUGE stake in Red Hat (which explains why they are gaining popularity in "mission critical" organizations).
I also like how Red Hat doesn't play games. They always think it through with logic and reason, rather than just blowing smoke.
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:2)
Taligent?
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:1)
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:2)
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:5, Interesting)
Partnering with multiple Linux vendors will help prevent any one becoming dominant in the market. This, in turn, will prevent the Linux vendors adding too much value to the operating system, which, in IBM's view, should be a commodity layer for running IBM server applications, supported by IBM services.
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, another poster to your comment mention
Re:RedHat vs Novell Suse (Score:1)
PHBs (Score:2, Insightful)
I can see a future where if a linux app isn't certified by this venture (or some other venture if not), then PHBs will refuse to have it on their systems, even though it may be perfectly good for the job, just like with the Red Hat Certification programme. A PHB will see that a potential job candidate is not Red Hat Certified and think that they know jack about Red Hat, or linux for that mat
Re:PHBs (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you mean that the future will be exactly like the past and present?
If you have a PHB who does this, consider yourself lucky -- sure, it's stupid, but at least it saves time. If you work for a company that is large enough, it'll form its own certification review board (and if you misbehave, you'll get to serve on it).
Re:PHBs (Score:2, Insightful)
It could, but that's part of the tradeoff. A PHB doesn't care what applications they have, they care what soluti
Re:PHBs (Score:4, Insightful)
This is part of what helps companies like Apple, Sun and SGI get a core of users who'll follow them to the ends of the earth. Buy the machine, you also get the software & the support from the company that made both. There's no buck passing, like when you contact $OS_PROVIDER for support and find them blaming your $HW_PROVIDER, or vice versa.
It doesn't always work, but it can do phenomenal things for customer loyalty if done right.
loyalty? (Score:2)
That would mean that companies would have to weed out the preditory business personalities, and actualy start thinking about a longer term that next quarter's report or the current bonus period. Followed to it's logical conclussion, they'd have to actualy service their current customers and quite salivating over emerging markets like India and China.
Re:PHBs (Score:2)
It might sound bad that some applications might miss out on being certified - but from RH and IBM's point of view, having the best apps working for your customers means keeping the customers happy - so to me it's unlikely much "perfectly good for the job" software is going to lose out.
That, and probably security elements will be taken into consideration. Perhaps it will mean that they will require projects to have a good QA policy and force them to actively protect that, something that some projects don
Businesses (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Businesses (Score:1)
No application left behind. (Score:3, Interesting)
There is a danger, though. As corporate certification and such becomes a necessity for developers, there will be a corresponding dependence on such higher powers. In the effort to pander to certification boards, innovation and free pursuit of new application and programming paradigms may be squelched.
We have to keep in mind that initiatives like this one can be a mixed bag. I am reminded, somewhat chillingly, of stories of the end times in which a world government, or perhaps a huge corporate monopoly as IBM may become (with the help of Linux, ironically). It is disconcerting to think that these sort of certification programs may ultimately lead to the sort of domination and monopolization the applications were made to fight.
In the meantime, however, let's be sure no open source application is left behind.
Re:No application left behind. (Score:1)
Re:No application left behind. (Score:3, Insightful)
Danger? (Score:2)
"There is a danger, though. As corporate certification and such becomes a necessity for developers, there will be a corresponding dependence on such higher powers. In the effort to pander to certification boards, innovation and free pursuit of new application and programming paradigms may be squelched."
Hardly. You go and innovate all you like. There is no corporate certification anything that's going to stop you from doing anything you want to do.
Do something useful and people will buy it and then
Re:No application left behind. (Score:1)
My own observation is that the major commercial vendors are the primary source of "new application and programming pardigms."
And they are welcome to whatever mayfly of the week they dream up as far as I'm concerned, they deserve each other.
For most part squelching "new paradigms" would let people get back to work.
KFG
What about drivers. (Score:1)
Vendors don't like realeasing software unless they can get somones QA rubber stamp on it.
The Magic Cauldron (Score:2, Interesting)
This resembles Free the software, sell the brand [catb.org]. Of course, the brand being sold is not really Linux; it is actually IBM/Red Hat, but the idea is the same.
Guess What? (Score:2)
Re:Guess What? (Score:4, Informative)
Funny, I had an argument with a friend last night about whether IBM was "in trouble" or not. I find it very strange that a company could post $89.1 Billion in revenue for 2003 [com.com], and people would think the sky was falling. Compare that with MSFT's $32 Billion. [microsoft.com]
Re:Guess What? (Score:2)
The problem with IBM is the aweful culture, lack of innovation, creativity and just plain boring. Even these overplayed million-dollar-commercials nowadays put you to sleep.
Re:Guess What? (Score:2)
With that much cash, I wish I had their problems.
Re:Guess What? (Score:2)
ya, butt... (Score:1)
MS makes the x box and some plastic disks with XP and an office app on them, whereas IBM makes ultra megasized liquid cooled nitro burning sooperdooper clusters with gigs of
Re:Guess What? (Score:2)
Except that they've got some pretty hefty settlements to dole out yet.
$750 million to AOL/Netscape
$600 million to the EU
$1.6 billion to Sun
$1.1 billion to California class action
Did I miss any?
Blah blah blah (Score:1)
This is not the right way to speak to customers. Generally they don't like to be fed loads of BS.
Windows vs. Linux TCO Studies (Score:1)
Good, then I guess Microsoft's rigged TCO studies aren't fooling anybody.
I would like to see real apples-to-apples comparisons between Windows 2003 and Linux (at least RedHat). I think that Linux, Windows 2003 and Solaris (particularly x86 Solaris 10, when available) are all interesting for the server space, each with their plusses and minuses. I assume that Microsoft doesn't commission fair comparisons between Windows and Linux because Linux comes out with a lower TCO. But if that is the
Not quite (Score:4, Insightful)
That almost certainly will count for something in the enterprise, where people will have lots of money riding on whether an application works-- although it may just be a cash cow for IBM designed to convince app developers to pay for expensive certifications. Either way though it won't be very useful in general.
What we need is something more widely practical, for example a certification authority that certifies distributions and applications as being compliant with the LSB. (If nothing else, commercial games on Linux will continue to go nowhere until this happens.) Then again, we kind of need a more meaningful LSB before there's any point to this.
You have a point (Score:2)
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:2)
KDE and Gnome are too bloated, we need a simpler standard.
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:1)
A standard UI/window manager /Toolkit (Score:2)
KDE and to a slightly lesser extent Gnome are far more than a UI-window manager-tk; they are application frameworks. I love my KDE, and there are a lot people who love their Gnome, but most of us will admit there are time we use a less resource intensive WM while doing certain tasks; on my slower machine
One of the reasons for
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:1)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:2)
Then what the hell are all those files that end with ".so"?
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:2)
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:2)
It's a term/acronym pertinent to most operating systems, although the file extension may be alien to unix systems.
See dlopen.
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:1)
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:1)
admit it's 2004 almost 5, not 1994, that hard drives are huge now,and come redundant easily, getting a gig or more of ram is most affordable, cpus are hundreds of times faster than they used to be a decade ago, and that distros are starting to come on DVDs now so that they fit, and then realise the only solution to that SO hell and package management fooferall is to put all the files an app needs inside the app itself, so you can then stick the app wherever th
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:2)
In the distro mentioned above, the package manager keeps track of what programs depend on what libraries, and can keep multiple versions of a library around if different programs depend on different versions. I don't claim to understand how it works exactly, but it is transparent to the user.
The only issue with
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:2)
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:1)
Oh, wait. .
(Oh, and while Linux certainly has dependency hell it doesn't have dll hell, which refers to the lack of version awareness, not simply dependency. In some respects dependency hell is the cure for dll hell. Ain't engineering trad
Re:Solving the technical problems... (Score:1)
Linux doesn't care about file extentions either (they are available in the gui's though for easy association, eg pdf to kpdf or whatever), and are used to show the user what type of file it is at a glance, but bash for example doesn't care if you end your file with
There isn't a dependancy hell on linux, if you use aptget or emerge (or if you use any package man
dont you mean (Score:2)
Thats really what redhat is all about.. If you want to use enterprise linux your stuck with old versions of software that often may not have the functions et that you require (see Redhat ES3.0 with PHP / GD etc.
Maybe Redhat can supply newer binaries and source packages so that you can still get support for newer revisions of software if you require it. Makes it much more attractive as a corporate package then.
Re:dont you mean (Score:4, Insightful)
open installation network (Score:5, Interesting)
Various distros bundle the Linux kernel with GNU and other packages, built into executable binaries for certain hardware architectures. Another layer can be built on this foundation: standardized test suites, and specs for HW configs within the architecture. Like i386.nVidia-GeForce2.3Com-3C509.SMS-EIDE.SDRAM-51
Every time someone installs a package, they generate data for this database. Why not upgrade the "make" util, wrap it in a reporting util, or distribute a component that "make test" calls? Like Mozilla's crash reports, including HW configs. That open DB can offer the kind of searchable install results that everyone's now running ad hoc, by Googling their build error messages. The database can have a set of certified HW/SW/config parameters that work, for each installable package.
Submit and publish the data under the Creative Commons license. Fund the servers by running a subscription service that proactively mines the install data, fixing problems popular in the field or popular with clients. That company, the Red Hat of "open installation", can compete directly with this RH/IBM venture. Its economies of scale will likely eventually attract RH/IBM itself to use the open database.
The open source revolution is just getting started. Leveraging the freedom of exchanging the source code with tools that combine the power of the community is the chief advantage over proprietary source. If we just crudely install packages, and post build failures to arbitrary mailing lists, we're just taking from the community, without giving back. That community communication is the central strength. Without using it, we're just wallowing in an academic sense of freedom that will be crushed by proprietary organizations that are better organized and more competitive. Now, in the beginning, is the time to ensure the balance is set in our favor.
Re:open installation network (Score:2)
Right on. Vendor "certification" is a red herring, meant to shift power away from the community, back to support organizations like IBM. And ironically, only a novice would install a "certified" package and expect to be done. Ac
Re:open installation network (Score:2)
Who are they? (Score:1, Insightful)
(-1 Troll, here I come.)
Re:Who are they? (Score:5, Interesting)
Technical: Red Hat has written more of the kernel than any other source. IBM has also donated tons of code. They know and understand the kernel inside out. They also have helped to write many of the major popular open source software packages like Apache. Red Hat hires the most intelligent linux hackers in the world. IBM also has some of the brightest people in the world.
Authority: Red Hat and IBM are both considered market leaders. They both have billions in market cap. (although IBM's is of course larger). Red Hat is also the company responsible for pushing Linux into the public eye.
If they don't do it, than who will?
Regards,
Steve
Re:"If they don't do it, than who will?" (Score:1)
OTOH, not that many of the actual contibuters (besides IBM and RH employees) to the linux platform will be running RH (let alone RHEL). As suppliers of the tech
Re:Who are they? (Score:1)
Re:Who are they? (Score:4, Interesting)
They have the authority of supporting what they themselves supply. That's what "certified" means in this context.
"We've run app foo under RHX.X on an IBM ASXXX and we say if works. Therefore, if it don't, we are responsible for making it work."
It's a pretty simple concept really.
If you don't run RH on IBM iron, or don't write apps that you somehow feel must get into the IBM/RH enterprise "solution set," the whole thing is meaningless to you and you can quite safely ignore it.
(-1 Troll, here I come.)
Yeah, you're at 0 Troll as I post this. I don't know why. You asked a perfectly good question, based on a perfectly good lack of understanding, which deserves a perfectly good answer, which I'm sure other people could use as well.
Some mods not only don't know how to take a joke, they don't know how to take a serious either.
Well, as granny used to say; "Fuck 'em!"
KFG
Certification (Score:2)
good and bad (Score:2)
1. increased use of oss in enterprise environments
2. the perception that oss is from an "amateur" community is removed
3. people will have someone to "trust" with regards to an application
some bad things i can think of:
1. they can corner certain apps with certifications and leave others out that can affect development
2. will they have enough resources to test every oss around? if not, then it would be unfair
3. they can use the certification process t
Commerical vendors who's word means nothing (Score:2, Interesting)
Progress? (Score:2)
Great. So now we can go from a scenario where you can pick the hardware from any vendor, but your stuck with software from Microsoft to a scenario where you have to get your hardware from IBM and your software from Redhat. One of the major selling points of Linux is that your no longer dependent on a single vendor. I'd rather be dependent on a single vendor
Adjust your foil hat (Score:1)
Re:Progress? (Score:1)
This agreement does not tie you in with IBM/Red Hat, it just means that if you want to run a certain software that is certified, IBM/Red Hat guarantees that it works. If you are not interested in that guarantee, buy your hardware from Dell/HP/whatever, your OS from Suse/Debian/whatever.
It's all YOUR CHOICE!
Graphical installers suck (Score:1)
I'd like to see installshield burnt to the ground, the ground then sown with salt before finally digging the whole place up and throwing it into the sea.
What does Active Directory have to do with directory permissions? Bugger all. POSIX draft ACLs are better than the NTFS methods -- at least you can move a drive from one machine to another without the whole lot going kaboom.
I don't give a shit if anyone else uses linux,
Need certification of no buffer overflows (Score:1)
Certifications tend to test relatively benign stuff for the weak minded people who have no clue (but at least known they don't have a clue). It tests to make sure it indeed works under Linux or whatever. It tests to make sure it conforms to standards (doesn't install components in strange places, etc). It makes sure things like security protocols are correctly chosen (don't use MD4 when SHA1 is called for).
One thing certifications lack, however, is testing for bugs. And this not easy to do because the
This is probably good (Score:2)
E.g.: Take your copy of Alpha Centuari and try it on Fedora Core 2. Core dump, right. Switch over to the Debian boot on the same hardware and it works flawlessly. Ditto for sound card usage. (Fedora *recognizes* my sound card, it just won't play any sound through it. But Mempis and Libranet use it without problem
Re:This is probably good (Score:1)
Re:This is probably good (Score:2)
OTOH, are you claiming that Libranet runs Gnome 2.2 and Red Hat Fedora won't? If not, then I don't follow the sense of your comment.
Re:This is probably good (Score:1)
For a while I was playing with SUSE 9.0 last September and was dissapointed in that it had GNOME 2.4 (which to me seemed old).
So GNOME 2.2 is downright ancient.