Extensive Coverage of Ottawa Linux Symposium 2006 90
cdlu writes "LWN and NewsForge both extensively covered the goings-on at this year's OLS. NewsForge: day 1, day 2, day 3, and day 4. LWN (subscription required for most): article 1, article 2, article 3, and article 4." I especially enjoyed the description of reverse engineering a USB device from cdlu's coverage of day 3; one day wireless USB devices will really work with out-of-the-box Linux! Update: 07/25 04:57 GMT by T : Eric Preston, who delivered that talk on reverse engineering USB devices, kindly linked to both his slides and the accompanying screenshots.
Yes but.. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yes but.. (Score:2)
Re:Yes but.. (Score:1)
Since... (Score:1)
And, boy oh boy, its anything but penquin weather here. We get the extremes and its on the hot end of the scale right now.
Re:Not likely. (Score:2)
Why Ottawa?! (Score:1, Funny)
Obviously, they must have not be expecting a lot of out-of-towners.
Re:Why Ottawa?! (Score:2)
No. However, they *were* expecting you.
Re:Why Ottawa?! (Score:3, Funny)
pretty good place (Score:2)
Warning: do not forget to smuggle real Mountain Dew into the country. Canada banned caffeine in drinks that are not brown, and Pepsi chose color over content.
Re:pretty good place (Score:2)
Re:pretty good place (Score:3, Funny)
Actually, tea escapes anyway because the caffeine isn't added. If you can find a heavenly plant that grows fruit containing Mountain Dew as the juice, you'll have solved the problem. I don't know if genetic engineering counts.
Re:pretty good place (Score:3, Interesting)
I must argue your first point.
Black tea is red. You could call it brown, but you could also call GNU, Unix.
White tea isn't brown at all.
Green tea isn't either.
Oolong tea isn't and has a respectable amount of caffeine.
Re:pretty good place (Score:1)
We Suck! (Score:3, Insightful)
Killing Kittens (David Arlie)
LuserSpace sucks (DaveJ)
Myths about Linux (Greg KH)
OK, not the exact names, but you get the picture.
The first one adresses graphic vendors that think their closed driver has fairy poo on them.
The second adresses brain dead programmers that keep mistreating files AND the general OS.
The third has the coolest last slide I've seen in a presentation.
Re:We Suck! (Score:3, Insightful)
The "Open Source Graphic Drivers - They Don't Kill Kittens" talk was very entertaining, but was it any good? There was a fairly lengthy debate in the halls afterwards over whether it was productive or not to rant about ATI and Nvidia.
Yes, it got across the point that the video card vendors are not playing nice, but is whining about it going to get the community anywhere? I'd have liked to have seen a counter-presentation from the vendors listing their concerns in their own words and what is required for
Demanding programming specifications (Score:5, Insightful)
And then I watched the OpenBSD project flame the hell [theaimsgroup.com] out of a Hifn representative for asserting that his company provided 'open documentation' (when in fact acquiring said documentation required registration that the OpenBSD developers felt violated their privacy). When I first read the systematically harsh response to the Hifn representative (including Theo's threat to drop the free driver from the OpenBSD tree), I was absolutely stunned that a group of free software developers would be so reckless.
But it got me thinking... we can't all bend over and ask for it from the vendors forever. Linux marketshare is growing in every segment, and we do have an increasing amount of support from giants like IBM. If it were possible for the projects to take a unified stance (across Linux and the three *BSDs) and persistently demand programming specifications from the vendors, what's going to happen -- they're going to say "fuck you for asking" and drop their binary drivers too?
Something tells me that giving your customers the finger, even if it's only an operating system or two only represent 6-10% of your desktop market, isn't the sort of thing you do to appease shareholders. So while they might not respond immediately, it's not like we're losing anything.
I'm thinking we should start a unified petition to AMD now that they're acquiring ATI - form an online petition to AMD that says "We are NVIDIA customers who will eBay our GPUs tomorrow and buy ATI if you release open drivers".
Re:Demanding programming specifications (Score:1)
Re:Demanding programming specifications (Score:3, Interesting)
I am glad to see some people in the Linux community standing up for open documentation, for a change. The
Excellent whitepapers (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Excellent whitepapers (Score:1)
Re:Excellent whitepapers (Score:1)
Re:Excellent whitepapers (Score:1)
Why Don't they advertise in Ottawa? (Score:1, Interesting)
Was there advertising in 'trade' papers that I just didn't see? Or is this basically a convention for out-of-towners with no seats for 'off the street' folks? More of a 'Linux Symposium' (held in Ottawa) than an 'Ottawa Linux Symposium' I'd say... heh.
Kevin
Re:Why Don't they advertise in Ottawa? (Score:1)
Haven't read the news on it yet, but I wonder how many people actually showed versus how many would have had they known.
Re:Why Don't they advertise in Ottawa? (Score:2)
Cincinnati (Score:1)
Re:Cincinnati (Score:1)
Re:Cincinnati (Score:2)
You misspelled "support less gun control."
Re:Cincinnati (Score:2)
Re:Cincinnati (Score:2)
Re:Cincinnati (Score:1)
Re:Cincinnati (Score:2)
WTF is CDLU? (Score:2)
road hazard ahead... (Score:4, Insightful)
Getting a driver into Linux is so full of road hazards because the "community"(read: the loudest mouths) is too idealistic, eccentric, and inflexible...and as a result, most companies go "fuck that 2% of the market" and release Windows drivers that, long as they work, nobody complains about, ever. Even MacOS X is easier; it's a much more stable "target" hardware/software-wise, and the community doesn't mix politics with purchases.
Not to mention most likely Brand X wireless card came complete with drivers from OEM company Z, just with Brand X silkscreened on the PCB...and Brand X couldn't "release" the drivers or write open-source ones if they wanted to.
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:2)
Investigate the causes of the Free Unix kernels having the reputation for stability. This isn't fucking WinXP - it actually has to function properly.
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:2)
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:2)
The whole point of the FOSS method is that there's a huge ammount of peer review. The multi-month wait time is put to good use. The vast majority of third party driver code is utter shit. Many people have seen, first hand the poor quality of third party drivers. In fact, they're a largeish factor in why Windows crashes so much. You notice with home users that aren't fussy about what they install on their
Take your strawman and go sit in the corner. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:2)
Who mdded this fool up anyway?
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:2)
Re:road hazard ahead... (Score:2)
I'm sure most Linux users are much more aware about who really made their wireless networking hardware, due to the fact that what Linux driver you need depends on the chipset, not the manufacturer or model. In fact, there are often several versions of a wireless network card with
Containers (Score:5, Informative)
- Eric Biederman's talk about namespaces
- Cedric Le Goater's talk about application mobility (a.k.a. live migration of containers)
- A BOF on containers, moderated by Dave Hansen
- A BOF on the resource management (one of the components of containers), moderated by Dipkanar Sarma
There was also a half-an-hour discussion about containers on the Kernel Summit. Let me summarise all these in a few lines:
1. Containers are a real alternative (or a good addition) to Xen and paravirtualization. In most cases they can be used for same applications, without incurring all the Xen's overhead and dirty hacks)
2. Everybody wants containers in the mainstream kernel
3. There are different implementations (IBM's stuff, OpenVZ, Linux-VServer, and Eric's) and their developers need to agree upon them what to submit/push into mainline. This is hard to do, but a required step.
4. Resource management: User Beancounters from OpenVZ is a good (the only?) candidate for inclusion into mainstream.
no, we don't want containers (Score:1, Flamebait)
Containers hurt everybody.
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:1)
In multiuser operating systems there are a lot of checks for uids, gids etc.
Now the question - do we want multiuser and multitask OSs? Do we want ownership and permission checks on files? Do we want resourse limits (such as ulimit, disk quotas)?
Same answer applies to containers.
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:2)
Ordinary users of all types definitely get real benefits from multitasking.
Ordinary business users, and to a lesser extent home users (because of malware and accidents), benefit from access controls and resource limits.
Containers are rarely of use and never important. If I'm isolating something for development, I'll at least use VMWare. That lets me do multiple kernel versions. For serious testing, I'll just buy extra hardware. If it is security I want and
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:2, Informative)
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:2)
Often, it goes beyond that. Multiple OSes may be a requirement. You don't do Windows XP or OpenBSD.
As far as I can tell, the HSP/VSP stuff is the only real use of containers. That is very obscure. It's not nice to severely hack up the kernel for something so obscure.
BTW, you are wrong about VMWare. It lets you migrate live images. (not the free version)
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:1)
Speaking of security - all those HSP would went out of business very soon if VPSs they sell would be hackable. Also - if you have any knowledge about yet unclosed holes - security@kernel.org is a better place fo
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:2)
If you need to patch many VMWare images in parallel, you just do it. People manage server farms all the time, certainly not involving login on any of them. (You think Google has some dude doing that? Server 765430, server 765431, server 765432, done! Whew! Time to start the next update!) Really, there are tools for this.
You can increase the RAM on a physical machin
Re:no, we don't want containers (Score:1)
O.K., this looks like an ethical question, and looks like my ethical principles is a bit different of yours. Anyway...
Wireless USB? (Score:3, Insightful)
Has the Wireless USB (WUSB) specification even been finalized yet? Isn't it a little early to get excited about a niche protocol that may never reach the market?
Or does the submitter not understand the difference between Wireless USB and USB Wireless Networking Adapters?
Re:Wireless USB? (Score:3, Insightful)
IMHO PEBKAC
For most of us, "wireless usb devices", -are- "usb wireless network adapters". Given the notoriety these things have and the context of the sentence... "one day they'll actually work out of the box..." it seemed pretty clear to me what the submitter meant, to the degree that I didn't even think about WUSB.
I think at this point, "wireless usb", as the "thing that sort of works just like
Re:Wireless USB? (Score:2)
Have you forgotten where you are? This is slashdot. If you are geeky enough to submit a story you should know what wireless USB is.
Plus you should have read about it [slashdot.org], twice [slashdot.org].
Re:Wireless USB? (Score:2)
Re:Wireless USB? (Score:2)
Actually, both the article and the submission only talk about USB, and never mentions networking cards at all.
"Wireless USB" is just something timothy (the editor) made up and tacked on the end.
Re:Wireless USB? (Score:2)
Microsoft rejoices! (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh dear. I can see that being quoted.
Ottawa Linux Symposium 2006 (Score:2, Funny)
Babes on Booth St. (Score:1)
Re:Babes on Booth St. (Score:1)
Regardless... Score!!
Re:Ottawa Linux Symposium 2006 (Score:1)
In a forum where brain size reigns supreme, I would argue that a certain oracle-of-filesystem-wisdom counts.
Protests (Score:2)
Or if someone insults someone else's text editor. "WHAT DID YOU SAY ABOUT vim? I DON'T NEED AN ENTIRE OS FOR A TEXT EDITOR! OR A BROKEN PINKY!" "HEY YOU, WIMPY VIIMACS USERS, ed PWNS YOU ALL. IF YOU NEED MORE THAN A "?" FOR OUTPUT, YOU ARE TEH SUCK""EMACS CAN
Hauwei CDMA card+Ubuntu=Out of box. (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, we had to figure out the wvdial config file to make it do anything, but that didn't take long.
Yeah right... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah right. That will happen the day after video card manufacturers release Free Software drivers...
Re:Yeah right... (Score:2)
Intel, the video card manufacturer with the most market share, employs people to work on the DRI project, which releases MIT-licensed drivers.
Re:Yeah right... (Score:2)
LWN Subscriptions (Score:2)