Thinkpads For Penguin Lovers: Q3 2000 129
MikeFM writes: "It looks like IBM is set to release
Linux Thinkpads! This is great news to my ears. I am just holding out for a Transmeta powered Linux Thinkpad and then I can be happy. I do hope these Thinkpads are compatible with other versions of Linux though. I always use either Debian or Mandrake. Being that these would have limited use as a server I'd probably go w/ Mandrake." Question is, why so long? Thinkpads have been running Linux for a long time, after all.
Forget IBM, Dell has 1400 x 1050 display (Score:2)
It's on the Danish TV news (Score:1)
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Re:Running Linux already.. (Score:1)
Choice is good. I can see people ordering it with linux on it 'just to try'. This is a nice-sized step towards getting more linux out there... even if it IS Caldera.
I wonder how long until other companies follow IBM's example?
Re:( yawn ) (Score:1)
Re:Thinkpads for "Penguin Lovers" (Score:1)
I mean, wtf? I was hoping to get some daemon lovin' [freebsd.org] before 5.0! Oh well, at least Solaris will always be my slut. >:)
This [bsdchicks.com] looks promising, though... though not the level of Stile's Linux stuff [stileproject.com].
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Re:Transmeta/Crusoe news (Score:1)
more support from big blue (Score:1)
IBM's PPC Laptops? (Score:1)
The way WINE-dev is going now (Score:1)
I use wine all the time for most of my games (just got Tribes working) but it is far from being the holy grail.
I like it alot but I'm sorry to say we wont get to see wine/linux come to be a major enduser OS till linux 3.0
Slack runs fine, too (Score:1)
Tips on Buying a Laptop - My Compaq Presario 1800T (Score:3)
http://www.goingware.com/laptop [goingware.com]
Note that the machine came with Windows 98 installed and doesn't support NT; NT was the most difficult installation and still doesn't work very well.
On the other hand I've been testing the 2.4.0-test1-ac* kernels every few days and generally they work pretty well. The only serious problem I had was that my Adaptec 1480 SlimSCSI card didn't work; that wasn't a problem with the laptop itself but some problem in the Linux PCI drivers as well as a temporary bug in the SCSI driver. Recent 2.4.0 kernel patches work great and I can burn CD's off my laptop through SCSI.
If you're considering buying a laptop, I encourage you to read my page on my laptop, as I think the information I give could improve the wisdom of your choice.
Generally I've been happy with how it works, but I'm afraid I'm not so happy with the mechanical design of the thing; there's a ribbon cable in the DVD drive that gets tangled when I close it if it's been opened too far, and the most serious problem right now is that the power adapter doesn't always make good contact so the battery drains even when it's plugged in. Sometimes if I leave the house with Linux running it will power down while I'm away. Note that I've only had the unit for 7 months; if they could have the same electrical design but built for more rugged use I think I'd be happy.
Re:cheaper? (Score:1)
As far as the Microsoft tax goes, many OEM's actually have to pay more to Microsoft if they don't include Windows on the machines. Though after thinking it over this may be a winning plan, I'd gladly pay money not to have Windows on my machine. Anyone else willing to send Microsoft $50/yr not to write software or otherwise interfere with decent computers everywhere?
Re:cheaper? (Score:1)
I wonder if they'll be significantly cheaper than their propriety-software-running counterparts?
They will probably be the same as Win98/2000 notebooks. Dell's notebooks that come with Linux as an option are the same price. They come with the "full" version of Red Hat with the support, manual, etc. Plus it's pre-installed and configured for the hardware.
andy j.Re: Remember the Cyrix PR numbers (Score:1)
I think you may be right about the MHz speed being an albatross. MHz is a weird rating. I think non-techies might believe that clock speed is roughly the same has a combustion engine's horsepower rating.
AMD was certainly bitten by this same confusion in the consumer's mind.
Anyway, I currently run redhat 6.2 on my IMB thinkpad 390x. Installation was a dream. It found the sound card, the Xircom card (which is not official supported) and X worked at 16-bit, 1024x768.
The reverse is true too (Score:1)
The day major hardware/software makers DON'T support a major release for Linux and that story makes it to /., you know Tux has become a 500 pound gorilla. :-)
Re:cheaper? (Score:1)
Volume/OEM discount is when a comapny pays a lower price for each actual shipping copy of MS software - this allows a Mfg. to sell servers without WinNT at a lower cost, but each copy of WinNT they do sell costs more than their competitors.
Model License means the company agrees to pay MS for some pre-determined software collection based on the number of units of a particular model they sell (tecra 8100 laptop, for example). Now in order to get this cheapest software, the Mfg. agrees that *only* MS (OS) software will be installed, and the Mfg. will pay *per system* (meaning everyone gets the MS OS). The Mfg. take this deal because it lowers their cost for both software *and* advertising, since MS will subsidise advertising for 100% MS laptops/desktops/servers.
For a Mfg. to sell a (in this case) laptop without MS software, they need to either create a new model, that is free of the MS model license and it's MS tax (and forgo the subsidised advertising) or "eat" the MS tax and not include the MS software that was paid for.
I suspect IBM found a way to preserve the Thinkpad name and not mess up any pre-existing discounts on MS software for the other models.
Re:Buggy as Hell (Score:2)
There are tons of reasons to like the ThinkPad even though (as I said in another message) the X-Windows performance lags a bit.
D
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Sure, but Dell charges you more... (Score:1)
My suggestion: buy it with with Windows (you're paying for it anyway with Dell) and install Linux yourself.
Re:Tips on Buying a Laptop - My Compaq Presario 18 (Score:1)
Anyway, if you're in the market for a very good linux laptop and (a) you want it next week and not in Q3 or whenever IBM ships, and (b) you have a life and can't waste your time configuring one yourself from scratch, then definitely check out these guys. They have a good product and are very friendly.
I've found that other laptop users in coffeeshops will try to casually peek at your screen to see why your windows desktop looks so weird. :-)
Re:cheaper? (Score:1)
Root? (Score:1)
Are they going to leave it as a default password and let people like me tinker with other people thinkpads left unattended without changed passwords.
Is there a way they are going to have it prompt them for a root password when they first start it up?
I am just wondering, in all the Linux distro's I've used you had to set the root passwd on install...
...and I'm not sure we should trust this Kyle Sagan either.
Intel.... (Score:1)
Re:Coming out? (Score:1)
No offer was made to ship it with Linux. (Not that I wanted that either)
Still waiting for Sony (Score:1)
Re:blah (Score:1)
Or maybe IBM got them to provide tech-support for the Linux laptop users.
It's not that hard... (Score:1)
I think the only thing new with this article is the fact that IBM will officially support it.
Re:Thinkpads for "Penguin Lovers" (Score:2)
#]mount pengiun
mount: Only root can mount pengiun.
#]root penguin
...
See ?
Re:Transmeta/Crusoe news (Score:5)
Most Slashdot readers know the difference between performance and clockspeed, but I think this will be an issue that'll be important when Transmeta-powered equipment hits the mainstream notebook/PDA/appliance market: Joe Sixpack and Joe Marketing will get their Crusoe-powered notebooks, and realize, "Hey, what gives, this 1 GHz Crusoe notebook isn't any better than my P!!! 600 notebook. I've been cheated!" I fear that the clockspeed/performance differential between Crusoe and x86 processors will become an albatross around Transmeta's neck, possibly damaging its reputation among non-geeks. After all, the non-Geek would read that it takes a 1 GHz Crusoe to be as powerful as a 600MHz P!!! or Athlon*, and deduce that somehow the Crusoe is inferior, not realizing the Crusoe's strong points and completely different architecture. I fear that magazines for the semi-computer-literate will fuel the fire, magazines like those in ZD's stable of consumer-targeted stuff. A similar thing dogged the K6-2, though the K6-2 certainly didn't have Crusoe's low power consumption or nifty new architecture; but, not being clock-for-clock as powerful as P!!! or even Celeron did hurt its image.
*: The comparison here is pulled out of my ass rather than from actual figures since I don't have the time to look them up/calculate a good comparison, but they shouldn't be too far off the mark.
my experience (Score:1)
Okay, I'll bite. I'm a scientist. What do I want in a laptop linux system? If one has to transport bulky computers, then the answer is obvious. But there are other factors to consider.
First and foremost, software compatibility, either home-grown or from elsewhere. For home-grown code the question is does it compile and run the same. If one has a GUI interface program, does the GUI work? Ppl that post here seem to hate Motif/Lesstif. But compatibility is important for this specific case.
Is this a replacement for some other system? What type of system? Why change? To the latter question is the answer, because it is cheaper in terms of hardware and licencing costs. Additionally, if one comes from a Unix based environment, Linux provides a means to implement a mobile system. About 10 yrs ago, some company tried to sell a mobile Sparc system. AFAIK, this was not a financial success.
Problem: binary compatibility (aka the big/little endian problem). If you don't have conversion code or don't use XDR, then you have a serious problem.
I use a dual boot PowerBook. Other ppl that I work with use dual boot IBM's and Dell's. I've been trying to convince the powers to be that we can buy a good laptop system for the same price as the additional higher cost of shipping a bulky traditional workstation/computer. Note: laptops need to have effective access to large disk storage devices.
My personal bias: USB support is critical when it comes to laptops. The next one with be Firewire/ILink support. Good to see the 2.4.0-test kernel providing more support for this.
It won't work... (Score:1)
Re:Some more good news. (Score:2)
I don't think governmental action will be the answer to what ails the software industry. I think free software is.
--Bob
Huh? (Score:1)
Also they've said they won't be using the CPU at it's own instruction-set level both because it'd defeat the purpose of code-morphing software and also because the processor is designed specificly to be run by a code-morpher and isn't appropiate to use without the code-morphing layer. Important features of a CPU are left to the code-morphing layer. Transmeta's version of Linux, to my understanding, is just a normal lite version of x86 Linux w/ a few extra's thrown in (all which are still open so don't worry).
Re:but will they, like, work? (Score:1)
Buggy as Hell (Score:3)
JWZ is right: they are buggy as hell. IBM documents the bugs candidly as "Considerations" in their manual, so they happen in Windows too. Thus, the answer to JWZ's question is, "No, it will be just as buggy under Linux as under Windows."
Incidentally, the IBM laptop drives were the least reliable of any I handled. I never had a Toshiba or Hitachi drive fail, but lost two IBM drives during burn-in.
The BIOS access problem, though, has been mostly solved by Thomas Hood's "tpctl" program. IBM, uniquely, has provided a protected-mode interface to the BIOS so that you can reconfigure BIOS modes without shutting down Linux. Furthermore, IBM's PS2 program runs under DOS, so you still don't need Windows even for the things tpctl doesn't do.
I did get suspend/resume mostly working... on some models you have to unplug from the power main before popping out a network card. Also, you have to have all your programs close the sound devices first, or you won't get sound again until you cycle power. (Rebooting isn't enough!) Thus, the "esd" sound mixer daemon component of Enlightenment, or the equivalent in Gnome, messes up the hardware on suspend. It is useless to try to run APM event scripts: IBM's BIOS doesn't deliver the events, at least on the 600. (The 570 seemed to do better.)
I suspect the buggy BIOS is because they don't really have actual I/O devices; they are all simulated by the DSP gadget that also does the modem. The whole mess is probably so complicated they dare not touch it for fear of breaking something else too. At least, each model has a different set of bugs, and they never get fixed, year after year.
Why do people not complain more? Maybe because very few buy it with their own money, and maybe because most who have them are managers and don't really use them, or spent so much they feel they *must* have got their money's worth; or are embarrassed not to have done their homework. Your guess is as good as mine.
Re:It won't work... (Score:1)
I ran Debian on a 760 in -96 and RedHat on a 600 in -98 Both without any install problems at all.
Sure, if I wanted to use the built in modem on the 600 I had to download a driver from IBM.
Re:Modem? (Score:2)
7IMHO, This is so fucking stupid!
Listen there is what 50+ differant winmodems on the market, everyone and there mother has a differant winmodem right? What does Lucent (IBM??) have to lose by releasing the source to this drvier?
Will other companies be able to copy there winmodem? If so, who really gives a crap, there is already 50+ modems, does lucent really care if there is 50+ modems and 3 clones of there modem? It is not like Lucent has a %100 domination of the market and the ONLY winmodem, they don't. What could they possiable lose by realeasing the source?
Second, if there winmodem was the only modem that was supported by linux, don't you think they would get a short temp sales in this niche market, before other manufactors released there source code?
Re:They have sold them for a long time. (Score:1)
Re:Tips on Buying a Laptop - My Compaq Presario 18 (Score:1)
The only thing thats held me back is battery life. Does Linux handle the normal features that say Windows or MacOS does to preserve battery life?
Re:Still waiting for Sony (Score:1)
RedHat 6.x is beautifully stable on the VAIO, and Q2 runs like a peach.
Frog51
Re:Battery Wierdness (Score:2)
Re:Big Blue has a long memory (Score:2)
I wonder if IBM could release the source to OS/2 or if they have some legally binding agreement with Microsoft?
I would of really like to see IBM kick the crap out of Microsoft with OS/2, even though I never used the OS. Let me re-phase that, for entrainment purposes, I would like to see IBM kick the crap out of Microsoft with OS/2
If OS/2 was say GPL, Microsoft won't really have any direct enemey to attack...
I have linux running on my thinkpad (Score:1)
-motardo
Re:Modem? (Score:2)
Caldera 2.3 has two really nice installation features; one, it lets you play video games while it installs. Two, once it's done installing, you don't have to reboot; just pop out the CD and go install on the next machine. Whee! Kinda cool. Witness The Awesome Power of Chroot().
Re:They have sold them for a long time. (Score:1)
Re:Mandrake 7.1 KICKS *ss (Score:1)
My only question: why such a huge install? If I hadn't edited out some packages, it would have been over 1.5gb! As it is, I was only able to get it down to 1.1gb.
Granted, hard drives are huge and cheap these days, but what about my ThinkPad P133? It only has a 2.1gb hd, and I don't want it over half full with the OS.
Yes I know that you can slide that bar during install to lower the size of the install, but who knows what you're missing then? I spent about a half hour going through all the packages and deleting what I didn't want. Since it was still 1.1gb, which ones get deleted when you lower the size?
Anywaysssss, that's my mini-rant for the day.
Cheers.......................
"Question is, why so long?" (Score:3)
I saw this, and it brought to mind just how far Linux has come. Think back a couple of years: two years ago, before Mozilla, before the "great database ports of '98", back when kernel 2.0 had been current for years, we were glad to see any mention of Linux, any hint of support. If IBM had so much as mentioned Linux on a web page, it would have rated a mention on Slashdot.
Anyone remember the "YALA" (Yet Another Linux Article) Stories? Back when any mention of Linux in a magazine other than Linux Journal warranted a Slashdot post?
Yet, today we complain when a major manufacturer is sluggish in pre-loading Linux. Not that we shouldn't complain, but I think it's an interesting contrast.
I look around, and I see a whole new band of Linux users. People who've never edited a Makefile -- who think that installing a program consists of "rpm -ivh" or, just maybe, "tar -xzvf" are becoming commonplace. Advanced users may know how to run "./configure; make; make install" -- but xmkmf (then editing the created makefile because xmkmf never worked right on any system I ever used) is a thing of the past. I don't resent these newcomers. In fact, I'm delighted to have them.
But it's definitely a totally different world from the Bad Old Days when I first ran Linux by booting from a floppy, then switching over to a root disk! (This was before lilo). No hard drives, no nothing. Anyone else remember SLS?
*sigh* I guess I'm getting old.
--
Re:I have linux running on my thinkpad (Score:1)
Cheers.............
Re:Some more good news. (Score:1)
I don't run Windows but I sometimes help fix it and OS/2 v2.0 had a better desktop then todays Windows. It did need a Program Manager(Explorer) file browser for those used to it. Last I knew, OS/2 ran circles around NT v4. Is it still true for NT v5 (Win00)?
cheaper? (Score:2)
Re:cheaper? (Score:1)
Modem? (Score:1)
Some explantaion of what IBM's up to (Score:1)
I'm being late in the day here, as this story is dropping down the front page. But several posts have complained as has The Register [theregister.co.uk] in their coverage [212.113.5.84] of the same, that IBM aint been up to much recently.
No I hate to say it but ZDNet [zdnet.com] has been a little more thorough.
What intrigued me was th ehint in the linked article that IBm was going to release some office products for Linux at the same time. ZDNet's coverage [zdnet.com] of the same story is more enlightening. In fact better than IBM's linux home [ibm.com] IMO.
It's going to take some time to bring Linux into the support levels and consistency that IBM's corporate customers want. But Thinkpads to AS400 and CICS or whatever else is IBM's game. Not one individual product offering or another.
Sometime soon the floodgates will burst and CIOs will *need* to evaluate enterprise Linux solutions seriously. IBM plans to be right there. Check out the links (including a promise for AS/400 port :)
Coming out? (Score:4)
blah (Score:1)
__
Re:Buggy as Hell (Score:1)
It's entirely possible that my experience is different than anyone else's, but I have nothing but good things to say about my ThinkPad 390E, which has run only Linux since the first day I got it.
I don't have the sound problems you describe -- a simple rmmod and insmod after resume fixes sound for me. I am running the commercial OSS Solo driver, so maybe that's the difference, but it works like a charm.
I also haven't had any problems with APM. All events work, and scripts run fine. Network card and all other devices continue to perform as expected after APM resume.
The WinModem is annoying, but that's probably my only gripe. My ThinkPad has travelled with me everywhere, and aside from needing a new keyboard after a mishap with spilled liquid, it has been operational 24/7 for me. It continues to be a great little machine today.
I bought mine, and would definitely consider buying another one. I'm not embarrassed at all. I consider it to have been a very solid investment.
They have sold them for a long time. (Score:3)
Re:Transmeta/Crusoe news (Score:1)
Given this, I see no strong evidence the Crusoe at 1 GHz will be necessarily slower than a PIII at the same clock speed. Anybody can comment on this?
Timeframe (Score:2)
It's most likely taken so long because official support costs money - you have to have a bunch of people able to deal with questions. Presumable IBM have only just reached the point where they feel the cost of offerring Linux as a supported OS is worth it.
another company, tuxtops (Score:1)
This really makes my day... (Score:2)
Now, it looks like all I have to do is wait one to three months.
Transmeta/Crusoe news (Score:5)
Too bad there won't be any machines like this based on Athlons anytime soon. AMD is having some serious problems with power consumption.
Re:cheaper? (Score:1)
1) I believe that leading Windows OEMs such as IBM still have to pay Microsoft a royalty for every desktop and notebook system shipped, regardless of the actual OS installed. Therefore, the system prices will still include the now-infamous "Microsoft tax", even if IBM does not actually ship the Windows software with the systems.
2) If IBM preinstalls a major Linux distribution on the Thinkpads, it may have to pay a per-unit royalty to the supplier of the distribution as part of the OEM agreement, which may or may not be less than what Microsoft charged.
--Loge
3rd Mouse Button (Score:1)
Although I'm on a Toshiba right now, I've had the privilege of being assigned three ThinkPads over the course of the last two years. They are far and away my favorite laptops.
It's not glamorous, but one of the most useful features of the ThinkPad line is the third "mouse" button. In its default configuration, it allows you to scroll windows vertically or horizontally by holding down the third button and moving the TrackPoint. It's great for those situations where you don't want to pound the Tab key a hundred times so you can use the arrow keys to scroll, and you don't want to mouse over to grab the scroll bar.
I assume that this feature will be supported in the new Linux boxes?
Re:It won't work... (Score:1)
I must've missed something somewhere.
Re:Modem? (Score:2)
but will they, like, work? (Score:2)
I have a Thinkpad 770ED, and man, it sucks.
It's been relegated to a sad life as a desktop machine, because any time I try to do anything even remotely laptop-like with it, such as:
I did get sound working eventually, but not well enough to run Quake. And I was never able to get VMware to talk to the serial port or network for some unknown reason.
So does the fact that IBM is going to ship Linux on these laptops mean they're going to actually make the features of these laptops work?
Another problem with Thinkpads is that their BIOS is secret and weird, and the only way to manipulate most of it is via a Windows configurator program: so you can't delete Windows; it is your BIOS. I guess they'll have to solve this by porting their configurator to Linux...
The damn thing also eats batteries: three times now it's gone from "100% charge" to "0% charge" overnight, while plugged in to wall current, and from that point on, the battery won't take a charge at all: it becomes a $300 paperweight. This isn't some battery-memory situation, it just dies all at once, not gradually.
(PS: after that glowing review, anyone want to buy my Stinkpad?)
Re:It won't work... (Score:1)
Re:Forget IBM, Dell has 1400 x 1050 display (Score:1)
'ultrabook IIi' notebooks (Score:1)
I've been drooling over those UltraSPARC notebooks for a long time. Lately I've been thinking of getting a quote on a refurbished one here [rave.com]. I'm a little afraid at what they'll tell me. My guess is $7k, minimum, for one of these babies new. The guy who recommended these people to me said that you can save %40 off list from them, but since RISC notebooks are a niche of a niche market, I think I'd be lucky to get %20 off list.
Apparently the manufacturer [tadpolerdi.com] also sells refurbs.
This is the stuff that dreams are made of. [tadpolerdi.com] Or this [tadpolerdi.com], if you're an HP-UX guy.
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tadpole sparcbook (Score:1)
Battery Wierdness (Score:2)
Re:they bought it from IBM (Score:1)
As a dual boot box (Win 98 and Red Hat 6.2) it works great. Better still I can watch *my* selection of movies on long plane rides (why else get a dvd :-).
I've even had win 98 running under vmware on it.
Big Blue has a long memory (Score:1)
Re: Clock speeds and consumers (Score:3)
Re:Transmeta/Crusoe news (Score:2)
This all reminds me of Intel's recent promise of a 1Ghz laptop processor "blitz" (their word) before Christmas. Scorched thighs! I will not put a 60watt light bulb on my lap what makes them think I want a 60 watt processor there?!?!
Re:Modem? (Score:1)
It is compiled against kernel 2.2.12, but I use it with 2.2.14 [insmod -f] and didn't notice any problem (apart the modem itself :-) ). Oh, and I use Debian, so the module does not seem to be distribution-dependent.
I imagine that when I switch to 2.2.4, the module will break. For then, I hope the people working on open-source linmodems will have something workable for me (thanks in advance, guys!).
If some company officially supports Linux on a laptop with lucent winmodem, maybe they will keep the module up-to-date. Well, until they think it is profitable, that is.
Anyway, I kept my old external 33.6K, just in case ...
Re:Tips on Buying a Laptop - My Compaq Presario 18 (Score:2)
LL
Re:They have sold them for a long time. (Score:1)
The operating system is not the kernel
Perhaps you should tell Dell as well, cause that's where he got it from :-)
Re:blah (Score:1)
Well... if I read the article correctly it said that:
The laptops are aimed at computer professionals and scientists, two groups that have embraced Linux, said Irving Wladawsky-Berger, the head of IBM's Linux group.
Hmmm.. doesn't sound like they are trying to target my Grandmother here..
Not to bag on Caldera here, I've never tried it so I would be remiss to do so, but
Stickers (Score:1)
--
RedHat Linux runs just fine (Score:2)
The "problem" with the WinModem is best solved by not using the WinModem at all. It doesn't even work quite right under Windows, and I think it was altogether a bad idea.
If you get a modem PCMCIA card (maybe a combo with Ethernet), you end up with a nice, fast, reliable, standard modem that works from both Linux and Windows. If you need your PCMCIA slots for something else, could go with a USB or serial port modem.
Does Linux Compatibility Work Retroactively? (Score:1)
Now, if I already have an IBM Thinkpad, acquired in the pre-Enlightenment era when win-doze contaminated your hard drive when the laptop arrived, where most things work under Linux, but not quite everything I would like, it seems that if IBM has to solve these issues for future Thinkpads with Linux pre-loaded, these solutions can also be applied retroactively to my little laptop.
Does this seem reasonable, or am I living a pipe dream?
Donny
Re:blah (Score:1)
Mmmmmmmmmm...RedHat anus...
Re:Thinkpads for "Penguin Lovers" (Score:1)
mount: Only root can mount pengiun.
#]root penguin
...
"pengiun?" is that anything like "penguin?"
8-P
Re:Modem? (Score:1)
Re:Some more good news. (Score:2)
Yes, yes I do remember OS/2. Ever try and get an IBM-brand laptop or desktop computer with OS/2 pre-installed? Lots of them, right? Plenty of choice?
someday this won't be news (Score:4)
that, will be the day we know linux has finally arrived.
Hats off to IBM! (Score:2)
We are now offering the same kind of operating system support for Linux as we do for AIX, OS/2, OS/390, OS/400 and NT.
Way to go IBM!
Re:cheaper? (Score:3)
Wonder if it'll REALLY be Linux compatable (Score:2)
Not too compelling when you can get approximately the same level of Linux Compatability from a Sony VAIO and it's a much nicer computer. The IBM Thinkpad was the best laptop out there and as usual IBM rested on their laurels and were passed by other faster, smarter companies. They should just give up at this point and completely leave the PC market, since they can't build a good quality part that won't cost thousands more than anything their competitors put out.
Re:Transmeta/Crusoe news (Score:2)
Re:Some more good news. (Score:2)
Been There, Done That.
It was called OS/2, perhaps you remember it?
Anyway, as others have pointed out, this isn't really news, we've been shipping preconfigured machines with Suse, Caldera, Turbo and Redhat for some time now... all you have to do is place your order by phone and ASK for it. (assuming it's supported hardware.) There's a guy down the hall at work that just got a 600E preloaded... personally I'll wait for the a20's price to come down... or for a cruesoe based system... 'cuz I'll bet that 700Mhz mobile PIII will heat up a bit on ac power on your lap, I've already burnt my leg with an old 770... and that was just a 266 Pentium!
Re:Modem? (Score:2)
Seriously, I never saw any advantage to using Caldera. It doesn't really offer any special features that other distros don't have. They hype the Caldera Open Adminstration System, their configuration tool, but at least on 2.2 that program failed to do important things such as actually change configuration - most of the time it would just disappear without changing anything. They've got an X configuration tool that only works on installation and never works again - I was stuck in a painful, shimmering screen mode until I figured out how to change the Modeline. Their RPM system fails most of the time, unless you're using RPMs designed specifically for Caldera.
So I'd assume IBM's porting their winmodem driver to Caldera as well. That would just suck, because it means you can't switch to a decent distribution.
--
No more e-mail address game - see my user info. Time for revenge.
Re:Battery Wierdness (Score:2)
Microsoft still has major copyrights (Score:2)
What'd be much more interesting would be if IBM ported its PM desktop to Gnome. Most of the underlying archetecture is already in Gnome, so it'd mostly involve porting the huge batch of desktop components they wrote.
Re:Modem? (Score:2)
Re:but will they, like, work? (Score:2)
How's your XF86 4.0 working out? Does it improve performance at all over the previous release?
D
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Re:Buggy as Hell (Score:2)
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Thinkpads for "Penguin Lovers" (Score:5)
Some more good news. (Score:4)
Do you think that even Big IBM would have done something like this before Microsofts business practices came under carefull eye of the US Government? Nope, not at all. MS would called them up and said, "I think your OEM contract is going to increase ALOT unless you dump Linux".
Now with MS under control and getting punished for their past business practices we will now see more thing like this. More companies saying, "Hey! we can release products and hardware that dont support MS products only".
I dont know about you, but I think this is a good thing.