Intel on Linux 50
Baboshka writes "Check out what Intel has to say about Linux in the future and VA Research in the now in this informative article. Includes a short interview with Brian Biles, VP of VA. "
"In my opinion, Richard Stallman wouldn't recognise terrorism if it came up and bit him on his Internet." -- Ross M. Greenberg
Re:I thought... (Score:1)
Linux is not mainstream... (Score:2)
I dont mean to sound like a troll but linux is not (Score:2)
Problems:
1:) Linux has alot of trouble with raid because of its i/o and hardware raid can kill performance but software raid is better.
2:)Linux has trouble with smp because it doesnt support async i/o and non reepmtive cpu points. THis would bring intels 8-way cpu server to its knees and if NT was stable enough it might even outperform linux because even NT supports async i/o. I think solaris x86 would be much more preferable.
3:)The scsi module in linux has some performance and stability proeblems because 95% of all linux developers use eide because they are hobbyist and dont have the money for expensive scsi and raid controller cards.
Linux is a killer workstation and low end unix server and a ok mid-range server but if all these busssiness put mission critical stuff on them and have awefull performance and maybe some instability then solaris will seem a whole lot more viable. Remember what happened to NT after coporations believed Jess Berst form zdnet and microsoft. Texas instruments and Motorola switched form unix to NT only to switch back again and they regret ever wasting time and money on NT. Linux will have a similiar fate if its used on mission critical systems. Also if you need a high end system like a 8-way server, then its advisable to go risc with alpha or a sun box with solaris or digital vms. If yuour 2-way alpha box can perform the same as an 8-way intel box, then dunp solaris and use linux on the alpha but adding more scpu's puts stress in the i/o which is a little fragile in linux right now. Other then that linux rocks but lets hope these mindcraft and zdnet fud will help bring light and hope to linux by fixing problems and they might actually improve linux and help bring linux out of stuff where it doesn't beling (yet....).
I would trust solaris or vms alot more with an EMS app then linux right now.
What Intel should do... (Score:2)
All I'm saying is that everyone (meaning all of the big money vendors) are looking to linux to shore up margins and keep some of the money they are sending to redmond. Yet you aren't going to see compaq developing drivers for linux.
There is no reason for Intel not to help develop Linux support for evey device they build. From nic's to motherboards.
Everyone should be asking Intel:
Where is the Linux i2o implementation?
You guys invented USB, why do we have to reinvent the wheel? How bout throwing that in the pot?
Where is the VIA implementation?
If you actually want anyone to care about MMX why not patch it into the kernel to demonstrate how powerful it could be?
Standard device drivers among all intel based unices? Why not develop it, then anounnce it, and give away some code?
They released the source to their video chipset which is a good start. But we all know that they have to write drivers for their own purposes internally, how bout making linux the standard reference platform and making that software public when the device ships? Even if the code is in rough shape the free *nix communities would be more than capable of polishing it up.
Hardware vendors need to realize that using a common code base for all of their products (from printers to servers) will shorten their development cycles if they will just work with the public.
Re:Why would you need Microsoft Office ? (Score:1)
I honestly wonder how some people really do anything business-related without Office-compatibility. I e-mailed myself a Word doc a few days ago and WordPerfect for Linux was unable to open it! How many environments exist that are all Unix?
Where I work, we are slowly replacing many, many NetWare servers with NT. All new PCs that I know of have NT Workstation and older ones use Win95. There are a few Linux boxes hidden around that most people don't know about, including one I have myself. But it sits way up on a shelf running Apache, ftp, and SAMBA.
Re:I dont mean to sound like a troll but linux is (Score:1)
And what is a "non preemptive cpu point"?
Re:Then why did the editor of NT magazine deny thi (Score:1)
The 20 year rule (Score:1)
Linux in a positive light. (Score:1)
Here's My Wish List:
-Quicken Deluxe and Maybe Turbo-Tax.
-Hardware Accelerated 3D. (Open Source Drivers would be very nice)
-Media Creation tools and Viewers (BeOS users Need not comment on this one.)
-Quake 3 (already granted, I know (thanks John!!!
-More Kick-ass Games like Civilization CTP
-Bell Atlantic to offer ADSL in Queens NY. (I'm getting very Impatient...)
-Corel Office 2000 for Linux.
There's more but I'm sleepy now so I can't think....
I thought... (Score:2)
I thought the SMP support was for up to sixteen processors. Who is the one who is misinformed here?
They said "at least". (Score:1)
Re:I thought... (Score:2)
Why Intel is so hot about Linux. (Score:4)
One word: Merced.
The Intel/HP contingent has poured a nice chunk of change into the IA-64 chip. Now, what would you do if you were Intel right now, hhmmm?
Here you are. The amount of money you dumped into the chip is bigger than the gross national product of most third world nations. You are several months from shipping it. And now you ask yourself, who's going to use it?
Microsoft? Windows? HAHAHAHAHAHA. Microsoft's too busy getting their crap together with W2K. I don't remember ever hearing when MS intends to add support for the IA-64 chip in their OS. If ever.
Meanwhile, you keep reading that Linux will have IA-64 support right out of the box, for the chip. I recall that either VA Linux or Red Hat (or both) are working on porting the kernel to the 64 bit chip.
Right now, it looks like Linux would be the only OS that can actually support the 64 bit architecture of the Merced chip. I may be wrong, I don't read the trade press much, but for the life of me, I can't think of anything else other than Linux that has announced actual Merced support for the chip, when it ships.
Looks to me like Intel's putting all of its eggs in the Torvalds basket. Linux stands to be the only thing that can actually sell Merced chips for Intel.
Re:I thought... (Score:1)
UDI in Q2 of 99? (Score:1)
the nice thing about Linux (Score:1)
Re:Server busy error (Score:1)
(insert smart-ass comment here)
Points well taken, but... (Score:1)
I hardly see that as a failure for Linux. What shortcomings will people be able to point to in another year or two?
Re:Why would you need Microsoft Office ? (Score:1)
You obviously haven't worked much in the real world. Everything is written in Office and everything is distributed in office. 99% of all companines require documents in office format and 99% of evey attached document you will recieve will be in Office. And until Microsoft releases the specs for their file format filters will not be good enough to handle everything.
I used to work in a pure Unix (well excpet for one Mac that did Photoshop and video editing) work place, yet we still had two Win95 boxes just so that we could run Office.
Re:That would be worse then were at with windows n (Score:1)
What you mean like M$ supports DHTML, JavaScript, Java, CSS and all those other open standards?
Finally you can read data no matter which platform its used
You mean kind of like M$ Java?
I know Office 200 is supposed to do XML and I know how XML is supposed to be the ultimate answer to cross platform apps, but judging on M$ pervious record with open standards I'm not too optimistic. I just know they will find a way to break it in an unfixable way. Let's face it M$ has never shown any interest to support a cross platform anything, so why are they going to start now?
Re:Linux in a positive light. (Score:1)
Search for Logical Volume Manager Linux on
any search engine....
Re:I thought... (Score:2)
Its not the fact that Linux SMP scales to 16
namely VA Research, have to do some tuning and benchmarks to make it a reality.
I'm tired of seeing MS proxies wave their 4 processor benchmark resultss without a response from VA Research which
has the test hardware capability for 4 processors (and 8 processor in the future) to prove the validity of these well
pubicized tests.
MS is trying to leap-frog over their weak performance in single and dual processors, while setting up the conclusion that if
NT Server is best in the 4 processor config it's best in all other configs. Secondly, I expect to see in the near future some
MS PR about Windows 2000 beating NT 4 Server (in some special contrived situation) and therefor is the top performing
OS server for Intel based systems.
Right now, MS is in the 'discredit Linux' mode of their PR campaign, in an attempt to turn off the medias love affair with
Linux
Re:Why Intel is so hot about Linux. (Score:1)
Not only Linux. I have heard that Intel was discussing with the major Unix vendor to port their OS on the Merced. And if this wasn't for the Merced to have many OS soon after he his chipped why would Intel push toward a compatible binary device drivers format that would allow hardware companies to make one driver for every Unix supporting this feature??
Re:Server busy error (Score:1)
Re:haha ya right. (Score:1)
we have a number opinion oriented moderators (Score:2)
"News for Nerds, stuff that Matters" != Linux is the best thing ever.(period)
Before you flame think....games!
(my attempt at moderation without actual jurisdiction)
Re:XML can be read by humans and understood by hac (Score:1)
Hmm... I'm getting a bit tired of seeing this line trotted out all the time. The Microsoft Office file formats (for at least Word and Excel) _are_ documented; the documentation is available in certain MS Press books; you may even be able to download it from msdn.microsoft.com.
The issue which makes these file formats so difficult to replicate on other platforms is the concept of object linking and embedding. When you insert a foreign object into a Word document, that object is stored as a binary OLE link in the Word file. The foreign object's parent application is used to edit the embedded object. This binary OLE representation makes the binary Office formats necessary.
I think Office 2000's Export to XML feature (note "feature" - Office 2000 _does not_ save as XML by default, it continues to use Office 97 binary formats [with the exception of Access 2000]) is great - but I don't see how they're going to be able to include these binary OLE objects in an XML document. Until that's done, I don't see how XML can be a true 100% compatible replacement for binary Office file formats.
Cheers
Alastair
Re:Why would you need Microsoft Office ? (Score:1)
Re:Quite good informative article (Score:1)
And if the constructor such as Dell or Gateway, tries to put anything else, well MS will tell them that they won't give them the right to install W95
This was particulary true two years ago, when Linux and wasn't so famous. And also when Microsoft wasn't yet confronted to justice
Another issue is the quality of their software: excuse me, but Word sucks because it's awfully too heavy for the system
Well that's all I have to say
Quite good informative article (Score:2)
Well, I think it a good introduction to Linux from an entreprise point of view although I think it may be too short.
I think the conclusion is quite realistic : 20 years to get rid of Microsoft ;-)
Overall it gives to Linux what it deserves right now: a very good alternative
Re:Why Intel is so hot about Linux. (Score:1)
SCO/IBM [sco.com], and Sun [sun.com], to name two more...
Adam
Why such support for servers? (Score:2)
Ohwell, Server market is good, but I think Linux could make better in roads into the Workstation market.