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Comment Re:HP is trying to compete with Acer (Score 3, Informative) 236

On Palm/BeOS: No, Palm/HP doesn't own BeOS.

At the time that BeOS was sold to PalmSource, there were two Palm companies: The hardware (called PalmOne at the time - later renamed to Palm) and the software (called PalmSource).

PalmSource (the software behind PalmOne, Sony, Dana, Tapwave, and other PalmOS 5.x devices) bought BeOS assets for $12m, PalmSource eventually was bought by Access Software, a Japanese company. They used Be technology to create PalmOS 6. It never shipped in a device.

Access eventually sold rights to PalmOS 5.x back to PalmOne (the hardware company). PalmOne renamed themselves back to Palm and shipped PalmOS and WinCE devices until the Pre and WebOS. Now Palm is being sold to HP. I'm not sure what Access is doing with the PalmSource software. I know they ship an emulator for Nokia's Maemo devices, such as the N810/N800.

So, HP/Palm/PalmOne own rights to PalmOS 5 (and all of PalmOne/HandSpring's IP), Access owns rights to BeOS and PalmOS 6 (and 5, I think.)

What a tangled web this is.

Comment Re:The Sony - The best option at the moment (Score 1) 684

I'd also opt for the Sony.

A friend gave me his PRS-505. I find it to be fine. Not great but fine. No doubt the newer ones are nicer. The 505 reads ePub very well, handles PDF, works with the pilot Digital Editions Library service offered in my municipality (borrow eBooks for two weeks at a time.) It works well in Linux and Mac OS. Getting books on and off is a snap, just using drag and drop. Battery life is good. The Sony Reader store has a reasonable collection of books at a decent price. It's generally not cheaper than a print book from Amazon.ca but the format and selection is convenient for me. The old Sony eReader Store used a proprietary locked-down format that nothing else could handle. Thankfully, the new Sony Reader Store now sells books in ePub format.

Now, the ePub books sold at the Sony Store are DRM-encumbered. This, of course, is very bad. (See other comments for good examples of why.) Having said this, if you live in a country with sane fair dealing/fair use laws, you can, with a little work, find reasonably straightforward ways to remove the DRM from the books sold at the Reader Store.

Piracy is bad, so is treating your customers as thieves by default. I won't ever pirate a book; nor will I invest in a locked format that I can't use as I'd like. I buy almost all of my music on-line now because I can finally buy MP3 and AAC files without DRM. I won't buy into digital movies or Blu-Ray because of the DRM. I was very reluctant to buy into electronic books until a I had a good source of DRM-free ePub books.

Thankfully, publishers seem to be getting this faster than the music and movie studios. Pretty much all O'Reilly books are now available as ePub. The Sony Reader Store sells ePub that you can eventually turn in to standard DRM-free books. The situation appears to be getting better. One can now read books purchased through the Sony Reader Store in Linux and with ePub software for phones. The situation with Sony reminds me of iTunes pre-M4A. Yes, you could buy an album electronically but you had to burn it out and rip it back to side-step the DRM. Not terribly user-friendly but not horrible.

To me, the worst thing about eBook readers is that vendors are locking customers in to closed silos. A Nook can't read Kindle books, Kindle can't read the ubiquitous ePub format. All the while, you can walk down to the store and buy the print version without any of these limitations for about the same price. This is madness.

Privacy concerns are also a problem. The thought of a device, with an always-on wired connection, allowing companies to remove books post-purchase scares me. The thought of Amazon knowing what page I am on of every book they sell me also bothers me. In all of this, Sony, of all companies, looks the least bad. Go figure.

No doubt it's early days. I think you'd be nuts to buy anything that can't handle ePub and PDF. I also wouldn't buy anything that locks me to a single supplier of books.

Comment That's not a netbook, this is a netbook (Score 1) 323

As far as I'm concerned, this is the pinnacle of netbooks:

http://www.futureshop.ca/catalog/proddetail.asp?sku_id=0665000FS10128254&catid=27003&logon=&langid=EN&dm=DEBUG

Intel Atom, 9" 1024x600 matte screen, 2lbs, thin, runs Linux perfectly, decent battery life, perfect keyboard, $200.

That's a netbook. 12", dual-core, 3+lbs, $500 isn't a netbook, that's a decent 12" laptop without an optical drive.

The thing is, you can pick up much better used 12" 3+lb laptops for $500. Heck, I'm typing this on an HP 2710p tablet I picked up on ebay. It is a 12", dual-core, can take 8GB of RAM, and is a TABLET and it cost me as much as this Asus "netbook" after taxes.

The only reason you need dual-core ION and a big screen on a netbook is because Windows demands it. My HP netbook (linked above) runs like a dog in Windows by the time you add virus scanners and all of the associated baggage. However, Ubuntu 9.10 NBR runs brilliantly. I upgraded the RAM to 2GB and put it back down to 1GB and haven't missed it.

Sadly, with the onslaught of Windows 7, it appears as though the nascent netbook market, which began with affordable computers running Linux on small SSDs, is in the process of dying. Such is life. Pick up your 2lb 9" Linux wonder while supplies last.

Comment Re:I really like Solaris but... (Score 1) 226

Sun is an interesting company, Solaris is an interesting OS. There was a time when I would have completely agreed with your above statement. I work for a CS department at a Canadian university. When I started in 2003, the last of the Sun workstations were on their way out, replaced with a mix of Windows and Linux boxes. (Mostly Windows.)

Fast-forward almost six years, most labs are looking for a combination of Windows and Ubuntu. Linux is especially popular for number crunching where 32bit OSs can't go, and suddenly Sun servers and workstations are looking good again. We recently purchased three X2200s. They came with 16GB of RAM and can be easily and cheaply upgraded to 64GB RAM. I cannot get this from clone makers and Sun's prices were spectacular. The three systems will be running Linux, Windows X64 and Solaris X64.

Of the three, I will be using the Solaris server. I consider myself a Linux guy first, but Solaris is an incredibly stable OS and even Ubuntu LTS and RHEL aren't as reliable where I need them to be. I _need_ the NFS server to be perfect. I find every release of a Linux OS, even "enterprise" versions, to be a little strange in this regard. Ubuntu 8.04.1 LTS has odd autofs bug that interacts strangely with NIS and NFS and may or may not be realted to udev somewhere. It's an aknowledged bug, the workarounds (one of which I suggested) are just that. Cannonical doesn't seem to be quick to fix the "problem" and why should they? I haven't paid for it, and NIS/NFS/autofs isn't their focus. Fine, but I need it. Sun does this right, every time.

I was rather shocked when I read about Toshiba preloading OpenSolaris 8.11 on some laptops, but I've used OpenSolaris. It's a nice OS. It doesn't have all of the bells and whistles of the latest version of Ubuntu, but in typical Sun fashion, what it does, it does well.

I administer servers, some Linux, some Solaris. It is very convenient for me to have a well-supported laptop running the same OS as my servers. I, for one, will be quite interested in a Solaris-based Toshiba laptop. Sun doesn't sell laptops and their customers need something. While this seems a little odd, both Sun and Toshiba have much to gain with this announcement.

In the past, I have been worried about Sun's long-term prospects, but OpenSolaris looks like a huge step in the right direction, they've finally opened Java, they own MySQL, OpenOffice is the only viable MS Office competitor, and now they are on the cusp of having a decent laptop option. And this is just on the software side. On the hardware side they have very competitively priced servers (never thought I'd say that) with great expansion options, their support and build-quality are worth at least the small premium they charge, and if you need SPARC (it still happens) they are the only game in town. On top of this, they run Solaris, Windows and Linux with full driver support, guaranteed.

"At my company the last enterprise Sun box went away almost 18 months ago. We're pushing Linux to supplement our AIX systems now. And Linux excels. It's stable. It's supported. It's cheap. And it's doing what the Sun box did for $50,000 more."

This is great, but you should check out Sun's x86 servers, run Linux if you prefer, have Solaris as an option for free. The website prices are not even close to what they offered us. Much to my surprise, I think that anyone buying anything that will be running as a server should check out Sun's prices. Seriously, we just bought 2xquad-core servers with 16GB of RAM for a quarter of what we paid for a V440 four years ago, and that was a 2-for-1 deal at the time.

Honestly, Sun seems pretty well positioned to me, and this is a very interesting announcement.

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