You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   14-38   39-63   64-79       
 
Author Message
25 new of 79 responses total.
keesan
response 39 of 79: Mark Unseen   Oct 21 13:17 UTC 2012

Can you explain why the change?
cross
response 40 of 79: Mark Unseen   Oct 21 15:05 UTC 2012

Yes.
remmers
response 41 of 79: Mark Unseen   Oct 21 22:23 UTC 2012

Cool. I look forward to the changeover.
remmers
response 42 of 79: Mark Unseen   Oct 23 13:52 UTC 2012

(And I assume there will be a more detailed and prominent announcement in 
Agora or Coop. I've been curious for a while about what's up with the new 
hardware and the changeover to FreeBSD.)
cross
response 43 of 79: Mark Unseen   Oct 23 15:45 UTC 2012

Yes.

In a nutshell: the new hardware is at Tony's.  There was (is?) a hardware
problem in the new M-Net, and I'm trying to set up both Grex and M-Net to be
as nearly identical as possible.

Most of the work now is configuration and documentation.  Almost everything
is actually installed, however.
remmers
response 44 of 79: Mark Unseen   Oct 24 17:30 UTC 2012

Nice!
ball
response 45 of 79: Mark Unseen   Nov 4 23:41 UTC 2012

    I think FreeBSD is a good choice, especially given the
history of Grex on OpenBSD and SunOS.
cross
response 46 of 79: Mark Unseen   Nov 5 21:52 UTC 2012

Yeah.  OpenBSD was a huge mistake, and the two who pushed it so hard are MIA.
walkman
response 47 of 79: Mark Unseen   Aug 10 11:58 UTC 2013

Do any of you think Linux use (not counting devices with embedded
systems)  is on the decline with OS X and iOS everywhere? 
nharmon
response 48 of 79: Mark Unseen   Aug 10 15:16 UTC 2013

Desktops? Yes.
Servers? No.
cross
response 49 of 79: Mark Unseen   Aug 10 18:44 UTC 2013

PCs as desktop computers in general are on the decline, so yeah; I agree with
Nate.
dtk
response 50 of 79: Mark Unseen   Aug 10 20:10 UTC 2013

In the server space, I can tell you that I have seen directly in both 
industry and Gov't it is growing and is a major platform for new roll-
outs, replacing mainstays like Solaris and HP-UX (and even AIX in some 
places). 

In the desktop space, it has a moderate share of a decreasing platform, 
so it is slowly shrinking with the rest of the desktop space. 
remmers
response 51 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 24 19:25 UTC 2014

Desktop space. Server space. Hey, what about the MOBILE space?  In the 
mobile space, Linux is growing by leaps and bounds. Any of the bazillion 
folks with a smartphone running Android is carrying (a heavily Googlefied 
version of) Ubuntu Linux in their pocket or purse.

cross
response 52 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 24 20:13 UTC 2014

Android has almost nothing to do with ubuntu.
dtk
response 53 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 04:23 UTC 2014

Resp:51 AFAIK, Android is a modified Linux kernel, which bootstraps a
JVM  and a custom java-based user-space in-lieu of init. It is only
nominally  Linux-based, and has little or nothing to do with Linux,
other than  pedigree. 
remmers
response 54 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 13:44 UTC 2014

This response has been erased.

remmers
response 55 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 14:18 UTC 2014

Ah, I appear to have been mistaken about the Ubuntu part. Was looking at 
this: http://elinux.org/Android_Architecture.
cross
response 56 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 15:11 UTC 2014

I've never heard of that site.
dtk
response 57 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 26 02:13 UTC 2014

Resp:55 Interesting. I'd not seen that, though it clarifies what I 
understood of the Android architecture. 


remmers
response 58 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 26 12:39 UTC 2014

Here's a capsule summary of the role of the Linux kernel in Android, 
written by Google software engineer Robert Love. Linux kernel with minimal 
changes, heavily redesigned user space.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/quora/2013/05/13/what-are-the-major-changes-
that-android-made-to-the-linux-kernel/ (http://goo.gl/Tr9nvy)
cross
response 59 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 26 17:27 UTC 2014

Robert sits a couple of desks down from me; really nice guy.  Anything in
particular you'd like me to ask him?
remmers
response 60 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 27 10:40 UTC 2014

Please ask him if Chromecast is going to support Amazon streaming.

Oh wait, that's probably not his department. Never mind.

Anyway, the main point of my original response was that in gauging the 
extent of OS usage, nowadays you should consider mobile devices as well as 
PCs and servers, especially since smartphones and tablets are being used 
for many of the same purposes as PCs. And if you're willing to consider 
Android as a flavor of Linux, then Linux deployment is really quite 
extensive and growing.
cross
response 61 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 27 11:45 UTC 2014

I guess I've been thinking that for the last half a decade or so, so it comes
as a surprise to me that that's something people are only recently starting
to consider.
remmers
response 62 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 27 15:31 UTC 2014

Not too surprising. People are often slow to shift mental gears in the 
face of rapid technological change.
kentn
response 63 of 79: Mark Unseen   Mar 27 17:31 UTC 2014

Mobile devices have been starting to hit the business world more and
more in the past couple years.  Before that, using personal devices
for work may have been disallowed (e.g. keeping company files and
information on them, not cellphone usage which has been around for a
long time).  Now, it seems businesses are starting to acknowledge that
personal smartphones and tablets may have a place at work (maybe even
to reduce the cost of company-supplied devices).  So, that would be
why, for people who do not work at more liberal companies, it seems
more recent.  And by the way, no, I can't use my own devices for doing
work, even today.  That may change; however, for regulated industries,
the need to control company files would argue against it (absent any
security measures to ensure those files don't end up in the wrong hands
or change inappropriately when on personal devices).  So, this does not
surprise me.
 0-24   14-38   39-63   64-79       
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss