Monday, March 30, 2015


        -------------------
          Client Server
               NEWS
        -------------------
        New York and London
16-20 February, 2004 Issue 535
Competitive Intelligence & Observations about Servers, Storage and related
Phenomena


HEADLINES
CSN 535-01 Mainsoft .NETs Java & Bridges the Great .NET/J2EE Divide
CSN 535-02 Yamhill, aka CT, aka Clackamas, is Nocona
CSN 535-03 Egenera Hires JD Edwards' Former CEO
CSN 535-04 Co-founder Returns to Sun
CSN 535-05 Sun Vows To Put its Shoulder to the Opteron Wheel
CSN 535-06 Solaris 10 Previews
CSN 535-07 W3C Standardizes Semantic Web Specs
CSN 535-08 HP Launches New Itanium, PA-8800 Servers
CSN 535-09 HP Says Q1 Results Are on Track
CSN 535-10 Dell Beats Estimates
CSN 535-11 Microsoft Server Unit Lost $204m in December Quarter
CSN 535-12 Microsoft, Disney Ink Digital Media Deal
CSN 535-13 Corel Dumps its XML Interests
CSN 535-14 Oracle Bid for PeopleSoft on Life Support
CSN 535-15 Budget Surplus from Last Year: Gartner
CSN 535-16 Opera To IPO

Drive Bay
CSN 535-17 After Software Binge, EMC Returns to Hardware
CSN 535-18 Brocade Losses Widen
CSN 535-19 Maranti Rakes in $26m
CSN 535-20 Storactive Upgrades LiveBackup
CSN 535-21 3Par Raises $32m; Eyes Profitability in '05
CSN 535-22 Intel Debuts New Optical Transceivers
CSN 535-23 DBassociatesIT Gets Funding, New CEO
CSN 535-24 Aplus.Net Upgrades Online Storage Service

Linux Watch
CSN 535-25 Lindows Case Halted in Mid-Stream so Microsoft Can Appeal
To Protect Windows Trademark
CSN 535-26 SCO Now Wants $5b from IBM
CSN 535-27 SCO Ignores Novell Ultimatum
CSN 535-28 Novell Seeks To Get SCO Suit Thrown Out
CSN 535-29 Linux Tax Evasion
CSN 535-30 Red Hat Taps Israeli Distributor
CSN 535-31 Evans Counts Open Source Developers
CSN 535-32 Red Hat Carts Off German Win
CSN 535-33 German Ministry Goes Linux
CSN 535-34 RTLinux Tests F-35 Fighter Engine

Mail Bag
CSN 535-35 Attention, Conspiracy Theorists

BillyGrams
CSN 535-36 Linux Rates a Tiny Corner of the Desktop
CSN 535-37 StarOffice Loses its Corner on the Office Challenger
Market
CSN 535-38 SGI in Talks To Sell Alias
CSN 535-39 Sun Debt Rated Junk
CSN 535-40 So, Let's See What Gates Learned
CSN 535-41 Sun Spent $224m on Acquisitions
CSN 535-42 Fedora on Linux 2.6 Out
CSN 535-43 MyDoom Juiced
CSN 535-44 Anti-Spam Law a Joke
CSN 535-45 Washington Watch
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CSN 535-01 Mainsoft .NETs Java & Bridges the Great .NET/J2EE Divide
By Maureen O'Gara

Mainsoft Corporation is about to show off an application development
tool called Visual MainWin for the J2EE Platform at the chi-chi Demo
2004 that's unlikely to make either Microsoft or its great enemy Sun
Microsystems very happy.

See, the widgetry, a first anywhere, makes it possible for millions
of Microsoft developers out there to create pure Java 2 Enterprise
Edition (J2EE) enterprise web applications and web services from
inside the Visual Studio.NET framework without ever touching the
decidedly complex Java programming language.

Mainsoft has basically taken the monoglot Java and made it
understand C# and VB.NET.

So Sun won't be pleased that Java is being sidestepped and Microsoft
certainly won't be pleased at the prospect of its prize developer
base writing Java-based web services and large-scale Java enterprise
applications.

Presumably Microsoft's nose will be more out of joint than Sun's
because what Mainsoft is doing solves the acute Java developer
shortage that's been afflicting the enterprise and in the process
driving down galloping development costs by overcoming conflicting
standards.

Gartner figures the Java developer shortage is bad now and is going
to get worse over the next three or four years.

There are believed to be some three million C# and VB.NET developers
in the world. There's supposed to be something like 1.8 million Java
developers, but, according to Gartner, the average developer's
skills aren't up to complex mission-critical apps.

Mainsoft CEO Yaacov Cohen claims Visual MainWin will let IT shops
make deployment decisions based on business needs rather than
resource constraints.

With Visual MainWin, enterprise CIOs with Visual Studio developers
should be able to tap into the scalability and flexibility of the
J2EE application servers without replacing or attempting to retrain
their Windows developers, he said, while large-scale IT shops with
both .NET and Java developers can accelerate the development process
significantly by co-developing Java and .NET apps.

Cohen imagines companies co-developing multi-tiered applications and
setting their VB.NET and C# developers to write the front-end of an
application in Visual Studio, while their Java developers provide
the back-end business logic and J2EE components.

Java is a new tack for Mainsoft, which is used to moving Windows
applications to Unix. It's been working on the Visual MainWin
technology, which it's got a patent pending on, for the last two
years. Along the way, it's tied up with ECMA, where Microsoft
standardized its Java-like programming language C#, and Mono, the
open source .NET project, to get a better handle on .NET, C# and
Microsoft's Intermediate Language.

Although Mainsoft was always one of those rare creatures with access
to Microsoft source code before Microsoft was forced to open up
more, there's no Microsoft code in its new product. As a matter of
fact, its ADO.NET (database) and ASP.NET (web services) components
come from Mono, whose work Cohen praises.

After a .NET developer writes code in VB.NET or C# within the
comfortable drag-and-drop Visual Studio.NET environment, Visual
MainWin compiles the so-called Microsoft Intermediate Language
(MSIL) source code and, poof, standard Java bytecode is produced.
The Visual MainWin output is fully compliant with J2EE standards,
Cohen said. It is a native J2EE application and can be deployed and
managed just like a standard J2EE program. No one can tell that it
wasn't written in Java, he said, as a developer wouldn't have to
know he was actually writing a J2EE application.

Since the complete Visual Studio development system experience is
preserved, developers can develop, run, debug and deploy their code
directly within the Visual Studio system.

Cohen says the real war zone for Java and .NET lays in projects with
50 to 1,000 concurrent users. Anything less automatically goes to
Microsoft, anything more goes to Java.

Cohen expects to aim Visual MainWin at the Fortune 500 and Wall
Street, which are presumably not caught up in the religious wars.
Visual MainWin was beta'd at Reuters, Merrill Lynch and a number of
big banks.

Mainsoft is going to charge $5,000 per developer for Visual MainWin
and won't tack on any run-time charges. Reportedly Siebel, one of
Mainsoft's existing customers, will use Visual MainWin internally
and resell it.

Mainsoft estimates that a billion dollars worth of software
applications currently run on its stuff.


CSN 535-02 Yamhill, aka CT, aka Clackamas, is Nocona

The so-called Yamhill chip that Intel is going to demo in a few days
at the Intel Developer Forum is Nocona, the server version of the
Prescott, according to sources briefed by Intel.

Intel has been telling people that it expects to productize the
thing in the third or fourth quarter.

Apparently Intel licensed some technology from AMD and expects
Yamhill's 64-bit extensions to be virtually compatible with
Opteron's.

The suggested timetable has Intel playing catch-up with AMD a lot
sooner than a lot of industry and Wall Street folk thought. There
has been speculation, for instance, that Intel wouldn't have 64-bit
extensions compatible enough with Opteron until the Prescott follow-
on Tejas next year.

It is still unclear, however, how much Intel's move will be gated by
the availability of a Microsoft operating system. Although Linux is
available for the thing, Intel sees Yamhill, and by extension the
Opteron theoretically, as a Windows play and a recent report
suggested that the server version of Windows meant to support 64-bit
x86 extensions has been slipping into Q1.

Intel is expected to low-key Yamhill as a means of damage control.
Reportedly it has yet to tell all its salespeople that the long-
rumored thing actually exists.

At a guess, Intel CEO Craig Barrett will doubtless touch on Yamhill
in his IDF keynote Tuesday and unleash a flood of negative press
about Intel's only intended 64-bit entry, the Itanium, often jeered
at as the Itanic.

Intel is likely to position Itanium for high-end servers and Yamhill
for low-end servers and express a good deal of confidence in
Itanium's future. Enterprise VP Mike Fister's keynote is Wednesday
and, for the first time, IDF has been "segmented" into the
traditional systems conference and a newfangled solutions
conference. What with Intel president Paul Otellini mumbling
recently that any prospective Yamhill would need an ecosystem, it's
likely Yamhill will turn up over on the solutions side. - MOG


CSN 535-03 Egenera Hires JD Edwards' Former CEO

Egenera, the high-end blade start-up, which said a month ago that
it's being courted to go public, has hired Bob Dutkowsky, the former
president, CEO and chairman of JD Edwards, the guy who sold it to
PeopleSoft, the move that spooked Oracle and got its march on
PeopleSoft started last year.

Dutkowsky will be now Egenera's president, CEO and chairman,
succeeding company founder Vern Brownell, who became president and
CEO again when Debbie Miller, who he previously recruited for the
job, left the company a year ago after a year of commuting coast-to-
coast. She is now CEO of SAN switch house Maranti Networks Inc.

Brownell will be executive VP and CTO again.

Dutkowsky said that he has been brought in to "take the company to
the next level" and realize its "real potential," which may mean, he
acknowledged, "going public." He has to see, but says Egenera has
all the earmarks of making it big - the disruptive technology, the
revenues, the infrastructure, the products, the marquee accounts.

Meanwhile, he'll see what can be done about growing profits,
tightening up the development cycle and improving customer service.

When Egenera took in a $30 million fourth round a month or so ago,
its CFO Tom Sheehan indicated it would take the company another
three or four quarter to turn profitable. The $30 million, by the
way, raised total investment in Egenera to $124 million,

In the most dismal IT environment known to man, Egenera grew 200%
between the end of '02 and the end of '03, making it the "fastest-
growing server-based company ever," Dutkowsky said.

Being privately held, Egenera, which identifies itself with utility
computing, likes to keep its numbers quiet, but, it says, that
compared to companies like Sun and Network Appliances and SGI and
Cisco and McData and scads of other brand names it ticks off,
Egenera is far and away ahead of where any of them were two years
into their revenue stream. Most of them were 50% below where Egenera
is now, Sun was something of an exception and was only 25% below
where Egenera is, according to Egenera VP of product marketing and
management Susan Davies.

Egenera, which runs on both Windows and Linux, claims to have more
mission-critical customers on Linux than IBM and Dutkowsky licks his
chops over that "huge backlog of projects" that were postponed with
the spending freeze. It's thawing now.

Dutkowsky and Brownell apparently became friendly when Dutkowsky was
executive VP of worldwide sales and marketing at EMC and Brownell
was CTO of Goldman Sachs and pioneered the use of Sun and EMC on the
trading room floor. One of Brownell's goals for Egenera was to
displace Sun.

While Dutkowsky was responsible for EMC's sales they went from $2
billion to nearly $9 billion a year. Before EMC, Dutkowsky was with
IBM where he was VP of product marketing for the old RS/6000, S/390
and AS/400, graduating to VP of distribution for IBM Asia Pacific
and then executive VP of worldwide sales and marketing for the Unix-
based RS/6000. After EMC he was top dog at GenRad, which merged with
Teradyne and lead him to take the job at JD Edwards in 2002.

As enamored of the Egenera move as Dutkowsky, he says his wife is
even crazier about it. They live in Massachusetts, JD Edwards was in
Colorado and he was there 108 out of the 110 weeks he was with the
company, he said. By comparison Egenera is just down the road. - MOG


CSN 535-04 Co-founder Returns to Sun

Sun CEO Scott McNealy went to a reunion-style meal with the now
scattered founders of Sun, Bill Joy, Vinod Khosla and Andy
Bechtolsheim, and when he got up from the table he had bought
Bechtolsheim's latest stealth-mode start-up Kealia Inc, a company
whose web site only gives directions to its offices in Palo Alto.

The last company Sun bought off Bechtolsheim was the German outfit
that wrote StarOffice.

Now the inventor of the workstation - for those too young to
remember Sun and Unix cut their teeth on workstations - is returning
to Sun to design boxes, both Sparc and Opteron widgets, largely
Opteron. After nearly 10 years away, his return is practically
Homeric. Like Odysseus returning to Ithaca.

Since leaving Sun Andy's adventures have included starting an outfit
called Granite Systems, selling it to Cisco for $220 million,
running the gigabit Ethernet switch piece of Cisco and leaving there
a few months ago to join Kealia, which, by all reports, was supposed
to be doing some kind of big fat convergence-style distributed video
server and storage. It now appears it may have been using Opterons.

Scott and Andy sidestepped public questions about what Kealia's been
up to at Sun's quarterly product debut on Tuesday, where Scott
paraded his latest acquisition.

McNealy raved about the "power and elegance" of Andy's workstation
and single-board designs and suggested he would produce 1Us, 2Us and
4Us and an Opteron workstation.

Sun is putting together the low-end Opteron servers that it's
supposed to start delivering next month out of "industry-standard
components." Bechtolsheim's designs will replace them. How quickly,
however, remains a mystery. McNealy credited Andy with making
"Ferraris out of off-the-shelf parts."

Andy was persuaded to scoff at Intel's Itanium "1% market share
compared to the Sparc" and Scott remarked about Bechtolsheim's
contempt for Itanium that Andy "seldom guesses wrong." Andy is
supposed to be very committed to the Opteron as are many Sun people
apparently.

Once the Kealia deal closes sometime between now and the end of
June, the 58-man Kealia, which in real life is a site in Maui, will
become the Advanced Systems Technology Group inside Sun's Volume
Systems Products unit. Bechtolsheim will become a senior VP and
chief architect of Volume Systems Products, reporting to executive
VP Neal Knox. Bechtolsheim will also join Sun's Executive Management
Group led by McNealy.

Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed but it's supposed to be
a stock deal.

With Bechtolsheim back, Opteron box designer Newisys' future
possibilities, which were once thought might include Sun, are kinda
what one might call "limited."


CSN 535-05 Sun Vows To Put its Shoulder to the Opteron Wheel

Sun CEO Scott McNealy readily admits that he treated the Intel x86
like the bubonic plague and that he was flat out wrong. To make up
for it, Sun has lined up with AMD's hybrid Opteron chip. McNealy
says he doesn't usually make the same mistake twice and that Sun
isn't "going to be six years late this time."

Sun claims to have the "premier position" with the Opteron and says
that no one else - though IBM is selling Opteron boxes and HP is
supposed to - will be as aggressive with it. The Opteron, in Sun
marketing speak, is supposed to complement the Sparc. It's still an
incremental revenue proposition although Sun claims it's an answer
to customer demand.

Sun said Tuesday that it would start selling its first two-way 64-
bit Opteron box, called the Sun Fire V20z, in April for a base
uniprocessor price of $2,795. For the money it would have 1GB of
main memory and a 36GB disk drive.

McNealy called it the "lowest-cost, highest-performance 64-bit
server on the market." The price tag, Sun noted, is lower than what
IBM is charging for its Opteron box.

There is to be an entire line beyond the initial entry and Sun is
promising to port all its software to the Opteron at the same time
it lands on the Sparc. It suggests that there are 600 ISVs porting
to the Opteron. It claims it's going to define and promote a 64-bit
Unix-Linux ABI with the Linux community. Unix and Linux applications
will be able to run natively on any that operating systems that
support the ABI.

In a world awash in free software, Sun, playing the contrarian, is
offering a free Opteron box to folks who are part of Sun Developer
Network who spend $1,499 a year for three years on its software. The
promotion, which Sun compares to the cell phones that are given away
with cellular subscriptions, will run through June 30. (See
http://www.sun.com/developers.)

The Sun Fire V20z is a 1U rack-mounted two-way server that supports
both 32/64-bit Red Hat and SuSE Linux and 32-bit Solaris x86.

A 64-bit Solaris x86 is supposed to follow along in the second half.
With Sun's employee number one Andy Bechtolsheim coming back to
design Opteron boxes Sun's schedule for adding four-ways and eight-
ways is unclear.

The new widget can support up to 16GB of PC2700 ECC main memory and
two 73GB Ultra320 SCSI drives. It has a CD-ROM. Sun will sell the
thing up against Xeon boxes claiming comparatively better
performance.

Bear Stearns is of the considered opinion that shipping Opteron
boxes does nothing for Sun's "challenged financial model." Bear
thinks that among other thing Sun has a "significant" restructuring
problem that it isn't addressing.

Anyway, also on the x86 front, Sun announced a new, albeit belated,
two-way Xeon-based blade server that it calls the B200x. It can plug
into the same 3U BL1600 chassis as Sun's existing Athlon XP-M-based
B100x uniprocessor blade. It's shipping now for an entry-level price
of $3,790. Sun claims it's 34% cheaper than a similarly configured
blade platform from HP. The thing supports both Solaris x86 and
Linux.

On the software side, Sun trotted out an enhanced N1 Grid
Provisioning Server 3.1 Blades Edition, the thing that's supposed to
manage physical devices such as blades as a pool of virtualized
resources. The upgrade is reportedly twice as fast as the old cut
and is supposed to reduce server deployment to minutes. It expands
support for x86 blades and the Sun Fire b10n Content Load Balancing
Blade.

Closer to Sun's heart are its new top-of-the-line proprietary
systems, due next month, that are based on the new UltraSparc IV,
aka Jaguar, Sun's first dual-core chip bring it in line with what HP
(since Monday) and IBM (since 2001) are doing with their RISC chips.
Intel, meanwhile, is working on dual-core Itaniums.

The new chip is basically two UltraSparc III cores on the same die.
Sun doesn't call the IV a dual-core. Nope. It calls it a single
processor with two threads evidently to keep per-processor pricing
down, especially since it typically takes a lot more Sparcs than IBM
needs Powers to do the same thing.

UltraSparc IV widgetry is supposed to perform 80% better than Sun's
previous generation for roughly 30% more. The chips clock in at
1.05GHz and 1.2GHz. Although the chips are not pin-compatible - Sun
would have liked them to be - UltraSparc IV boards can run in the
same box as UltraSparc III boards.

The parts are going into a Sun Fire E25K that can be configured with
72 UltraSparc IV chips and has a starting price of $825k.

Other upcoming systems will top out at 12, 24 and 32 chips priced at
between $99k and $640k.


CSN 535-06 Solaris 10 Previews

Sun is previewing Solaris 10, its answer to Linux, and Windows for
that matter. Naturally it's the next version of its Unix operating
system scheduled to hit both its Sparc and x86 boxes at the end of
the year. Early access copies are due this summer. It's supposed to
have 600 new features. The most important ones seem to be connected
with N1 Grid Containers, which is a partitioning scheme, predictive
self-healing technologies à la IBM and security enhancements.


CSN 535-07 W3C Standardizes Semantic Web Specs

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has standardized the first two
specifications connected with the next-generation Semantic Web.

The consortium is absolutely thrilled with itself.

Although the notion of the Semantic Web, a W3C hobbyhorse, has been
largely ignored by business, the organization figures the standards
milestone signals the technology's transition from a five-year-old
R&D project to a broad-based commercial-grade platform offering more
flexible access to structured data on the web.

The Semantic Web is particularly dear to the heart of W3C director
Tim Berners-Lee, who says that "It's not unlike the early days of
the web, when once people saw how it worked, they understood its
power. We're entering that phase now, where people can see the
beginnings of the Semantic Web at work at the enterprise level."

The two new standards are the revised Resource Description Framework
(RDF) and the Web Ontology Language (OWL). They provide a framework
for asset management, enterprise integration and sharing and reusing
data on the web.

The idea is to make searching and reusing information easier and
more reliable. The two standard formats for data sharing span
applications, enterprises and communities. In other word, different
kinds of users can share the same information even if they don't use
the same software.

RDF is a way for simple descriptions to be made. What XML is to
syntax, RDF is to semantics. RDF Schema then provides a way for
those descriptions to be combined into a simple vocabulary.

Use would include library catalogs, worldwide directories,
syndicated and aggregated news, software and content and personal
collections of music, photos and events. W3C says XML would be used
as the interchange syntax and RDF as the framework for supporting
knowledge exchange on the web.

The consortium's RDF Working Group anticipates users and
applications combining information represented in RDF in ways that
"until now have been inconceivable."

OWL is layered on top of RDF. W3C says it's a way to develop
subject- or domain-specific vocabularies, which is what a non-
metaphysical ontology does. It defines the terms used to describe
and represent an area of knowledge. It includes computer-useable
definitions of basic concepts in a domain and the relationships
among them. It encodes knowledge in a domain and knowledge that
spans domains, making the knowledge reusable.

OWL is the language for defining structured web-based ontologies
that deliver richer integration and interoperability of data among
descriptive communities. It uses URIs for naming and the descriptive
of the web that RDF provides to give ontologies:

· The ability to distributed across many systems;
· Web-style scalability;
· Compatibility with web standards for accessability and
internationalization;
· Openness and extensibility.

OWL also adds vocabulary for describing properties and classes,
stuff like relations between classes, cardinality (e.g. "exactly
one"), equality, richer typing of properties, property
characteristics (e.g. symmetry) and enumerated classes.

OWL is based on the DAML+OIL language developed by an international
team funded by DARPA and the European Commission's Information
Science Technologies (IST) program.

W3C's Ontology Working Group figures OWL, the maturation of the
DAML+OIL work, is a "major step forward in representing and
organizing knowledge on the web." It's supposed to strike a balance
between what industry needs and the restrictions of computer
science.

The RDF and OWL Working Groups have each produced six primers, use
cases and test suites to propagate the standards.

W3C says earlier languages used to develop tools and ontologies for
specific communities, particularly the sciences and corporate e-
commerce applications, weren't intended to be compatible with the
architecture of the World Wide Web in general or the Semantic Web in
particular.

The twin technologies, the foundation of Semantic Web applications
and built on XML, are already finding their way into mass-market
products and services such as content creation programs, tools for
web site management and cross-application data reuse:

· Adobe's Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP) is based on RDF.
· Boeing is doing R&D on semantics-based applications.
· Fujitsu Laboratories of America has made OWL an integral part of
its "Task Computing" project, which is supposed to integrate the
Semantic Web and web services.
· HP has open sourced Jena, a Semantic Web developers' framework
that implements both new standards.
· IBM has released SnoBase on Alphaworks. It's a framework for
loading ontologies from files and using the Internet for locally
creating, modifying, querying and storing ontologies. It's both a
programming interface for interacting with vocabularies produced by
RDF, RDF Scheme and OWL and a mechanism for querying ontologies.
· Mozilla uses RDF to represent the different structures it uses to
organize the various kinds of information it handles. The Mozilla
Foundation says it's important to a browser because of web logs and
news feeds based on RDF is a developing trend.
· Sun says its internal enterprise ontology management solution is
based on RDF and associated Semantic Web technologies.

The RDF Working Group includes HP, Nokia, IBM, Agfa, the ILRT
Institute for Learning and Research Technology at the University of
Bristol, the International Webmasters Association (IWA) and the
University of West Florida.

The OWL group includes Agfa, Daimler Chrysler Research and
Technology, DARPA, the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA),
EDS, Fujitsu, Forschungszentrum Informatik (FZI), HP, Ibrow, INRIA,
Ivis Group, Lucent, the University of Maryland, Mondeca, Motorola,
the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Network
Inference, Nokia, Philips, the University of Southamption, Stanford
University, Sun, Unicorn Solutions and invited experts from the
German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence GmbH (DFKI), the
Japanese Interoperability Technology Association for Information
Processing (INTAP) and the University of West Florida.

Microsoft is noticeably absence from the effort.


CSN 535-08 HP Launches New Itanium, PA-8800 Servers

Hewlett-Packard expanded its server line with a bunch of new boxes
running the Itanium 2 and its own new dual-core PA-8800 processor.

HP is also supposed to be on the threshold of wheeling out Opteron
servers that are bound to cast some doubt on what's in store for
Itanium considering HP is its biggest booster.

Anyway, on the Itanium side, HP introduced a new entry-level
Integrity server, the rx1600, and new models of the rx2600.

The 64-bit rx1600 features up to two low-voltage Itanium chips and
is aimed at clustered and scale-out environments running Linux or
HP-UX in telecommunications, commercial database, web services and
high-performance technical computing environments. It's a 1U design
that can fit up to 40 servers in a two-meter rack. Pricing for the
rx1600, which is scheduled to ship in March, starts at $2,800 for a
server with one 1GHz Itanium2 processor, 512MB memory and one 36GB
disk.

HP is now offering a lower-priced version of the rx2600 with a
single 1GHz Itanium 2 processor, 1GB of memory and a 36GB hard disk
starting at $5,700. It will also be offered as a node in HP's XC6000
Linux cluster, which scales to 512 nodes.

HP executives claim that over 1,500 applications are available for
Itanium servers and expect that number to double by this summer.

On the PA-RISC side, HP introduced 9000 Series servers powered by
the new PA-8800 chip.

The PA-8800 servers reportedly boost performance by 50% over PA-8700
servers with the same number of processors.

The 9000 Series include a 128-way Superdome, a 32-way rp8420, a 16-
way rp7420, an eight-way rp4440, a four-way rp3440 and a two-way
rp3410.

Except for the Superdome, the other servers are shipping.

The Superdome has a starting price of $309,000 with four PA-8800
CPUs, 4GB of memory, the chassis, motherboards and I/O.

The 32-way rp8420 starts at $93,000 and includes two 8800 chips, 2
GB of memory, the chassis, cell boards and I/O.

The 16-processor rp7420 starts at $40,000 and comes with two 8800s,
2 GB of memory, the chassis, cell boards and I/O.

The eight-processor rp4440 starts at $21,000 and includes two 8800
processors, 1 GB of memory, and one 36GB disk.

The four-processor rp3440 starts at $7,000 and includes two PA-8800

The dual-processor rp3410 starts at $4,000 and includes two PA-8800
processors, 1 GB memory, and one 36 GB disk.

Existing HP 9000 customers are supposed to be able to upgrade their
PA-8700 servers by replacing the processors with the PA-8800. Since
the systems share common components, customers should be able to
upgrade to the Itanium 2 Integrity servers and the PA-8900.

HP also launched a beta version of OpenVMS 8.1 for the Itanium, with
the final version slated for later this year.

Itanium-based NonStop servers that support up to 1,024 processors in
a cluster and up to 4,080 processors in a WAN are scheduled to debut
later this year. Stock exchanges, banks and telcos use NonStop
systems.

HP rolled out a pay-per-use financing program for its StorageWorks
Enterprise Virtual Array family including the EVA3000 and EVA5000
arrays for small and mid-sized companies. The pay-per-use scheme
uses metering to track capacity usage and lets customers pay for
only what used.


CSN 535-09 HP Says Q1 Results Are on Track

Seeking to end speculation about its performance, Hewlett-Packard
said Wednesday that revenues for its fiscal first quarter ended
January 31 would come in at $19.5 billion, the high end of its
guidance.

In November, when it posted its fiscal Q4 results, HP said it
expected Q1 revenues to come in between $19.1 billion and $19.5
billion with a non-GAAP EPS of 35 cents.

In line with its forecast, HP still expects a non-GAAP EPS of 35
cents. GAAP EPS is expected to be 30 cents or 31 cents.

The Street's projections were for 35 cents on revenues of $19.4
billion.

In a research note, Merrill Lynch's Steven Milunovich said that
although the results were as expected, "Investors may be
disappointed given recent revenue and earnings upsides from IBM, EMC
and Sun."

HP will report its actual Q1 results on February 19.


CSN 535-10 Dell Beats Estimates

Dell turned in a classic Dell quarter in its fiscal fourth quarter
ended January 30. It earned $749 million, or 29 cents a share, on
revenues up 18% year-over-year to $11.51 billion.

In the corresponding period last year, Dell made $603 million, or 23
cents, on revenues of $9.74 billion.

On a conference call with analysts Thursday, Dell executives said
they were seeing signs of recovery in corporate spending. "Without a
doubt the condition of the [IT] industry has improved," Dell
president Kevin Rollins said.

Overall units were up 25% in the quarter while desktop units grew
21%.

Dell said enterprise revenues were up 32% in the quarter and up 31%
for the year. Enterprise revenues accounted for 22% of total
revenues for the year.

Shipments of PowerEdge servers grew 40% year-over-year in Q4 while
storage revenues were up 47% for a $1.8 billion run rate at the end
of the quarter. Dell said storage performance was strong across all
regions and product lines.

Service revenues were up 35% for a $3 billion run rate at the end of
the quarter.

Printer shipments reportedly almost doubled sequentially. Dell said
total printer units sold since last March exceeded two million.

Dell has $11.9 billion in the bank.

In the fiscal year, Dell earned $2.65 billion, or $1.01 a share, on
revenues of $41.44 billion compared to a net income of $2.12
billion, or 80 cents a share, on revenues of $35.4 billion in fiscal
2003.

Dell CFO Jim Schneider is forecasting 28 cents on revenues of $11.2
billion this quarter. Product shipments are expected to rise by more
than 20%.


CSN 535-11 Microsoft Server Unit Lost $204m in December Quarter

It's fascinating what you can find out from reading SEC filings.

According to the one Microsoft sent to the agency last Friday, its
server and tools operations wound up losing $204 million on $2.1
billion in heightened revenues in the December quarter, a situation
it attributed to stock-based compensation costs and headcount costs
coupled with operating expenses that were up 10%. A technicality,
perhaps, but there you have it.

For the same period in 2002, the unit earned $234 million. The
unit's operating income in the first six month was cut to $166
million. It had been $526 million the year before.

Microsoft does not release profits and loss of each of its segment
until it tells the SEC.

Operating income for the client unit, which includes Windows
desktops, rose modestly from $1.95 billion to $2.07 billion during
the quarter on revenues that were up to $5.87 billion from $5.34
billion.

Quarterly operating losses at Microsoft's Business Solutions unit,
its business applications widgetry, were cut to $69 million from $87
million year-over-year on revenues up to $190 million from $135
million.

The Office unit, otherwise know as the company's Information Worker
interests, was flat at $1.67 billion in earnings on revenues up from
$2.3 billion to $2.9 billion.

MSN's operating losses dropped from $197 million to $79 million and
Xbox losses were trimmed from $412 million to $394 million.

Mobile and embedded losses were up from $75 million to $112 million.


CSN 535-12 Microsoft, Disney Ink Digital Media Deal

Fresh from a public rift with digital media mogul wannabe Steve
Jobs, the Walt Disney Company cut a multi-year pact with Microsoft
to work together on some digital media initiatives.

Money wasn't discussed. The deal sounds like the one Microsoft cut
with Time Warner last year when they settled the Netscape antitrust
suit.

The agreement is aimed at sending Disney's digital content -  movies
and TV programming - to consumer PCs connected to TVs and handheld
devices.

Microsoft and Disney have identified three areas of cooperation:

* Creation and secure delivery of high-resolution digital content.

* Overall acceleration of digital content flow to consumers over
networks and on optical media and devices.

* Ensuring the seamless flow of secure content between devices,
whether at home or on portable devices.

Disney is to license Microsoft's Windows Media Digital Rights
Management software to deliver secured content to consumers.

The agreement comes on the heels of an acrimonious parting between
Disney and Jobs' Pixar Studios, makers of some profitable animation
movies. Disney has been Pixar's distributor but Jobs, also the head
of Apple, stalked out after months of negotiations failed to produce
the new kind of deal that would have been more generous to Pixar,
which will fund its own movies from now on.

Disney has been wary about releasing its content in digital form
because of piracy. It recently set up a venture called MovieBeam to
deliver video-on-demand (VOD) to the home not by the web but by
sending video signals over the unused TV broadcast spectrum to a
TiVo-like device where the movies would be stored. Disney appears to
believe that the web isn't ready for prime time because of problems
delivering high-quality content at today's slow broadband speeds.


CSN 535-13 Corel Dumps its XML Interests

You remember when Microsoft dropped $135 million into Corel, a move
that saved its Office competitor's bacon, and how in gratitude Corel
in a very hazy charter was supposed to .NET its products and support
XML and SOAP? And then two years ago, what Corel was doing with XML
was supposed to insure its future?

Well, under the company's new masters at VC Vector Capital that
notion has disappeared. They've sold off the Corel's XMetaL Division
and with it the company's XML assets to New York-based Blast Radius,
a professional services house. Corel's XML document creation
technology is supposed to complement Blast's XML-based collaboration
products.

There's no hint of price.

XMetaL's customers include such as Continental Airlines and Texas
Instruments and Blast is promising to continue developing it and
support emerging XML standards such as XBRL. Corel acquired the unit
when it bought SoftQuad Software in 2001. It was seen as competitive
with Adobe.

Without XMetaL's web services leaves Corel with its graphics
operation, where it started, and its Word Perfect interests, which
it may wish it had never bought.

XMetaL is Microsoft-oriented widgetry that uses what it calls XMetaL
for ActiveX as an editing interface that developers can embed into
any ActiveX-compliant Windows application. An XMetaL Developer piece
is a centralized development environment for creating XMetaL
customizations and applications that's designed as a plug-in for
Microsoft Visual Studio .NET and a third piece called XMetaL Central
provides a server-based XML environment management tool that's
supposed to simplify the deployment and maintenance of customized
XML applications across an organization. It uses SOAP to access XML
customization files like style sheets, scripts, CSS and templates.


CSN 535-14 Oracle Bid for PeopleSoft on Life Support

PeopleSoft said late Tuesday that Justice Department investigators
told it that they were going to recommend to antitrust boss Hugh
Pate that the agency block Oracle's hostile bid to acquire
PeopleSoft. Pate is supposed to make the final decision by March 2.

Oracle brazened it out and claimed it still has a shot. It trotted
out one of its lawyers to say that there have been many instances of
the Assistant Attorney General bucking his staff.

Oracle spokesman Jim Finn blamed PeopleSoft CEO and ex-Oracle
executive Craig Conway.

"The initial proposal to merge PeopleSoft's applications business
with Oracle's applications business," Finn's statement said, "came
from PeopleSoft CEO Craig Conway, who proposed that he was the best
person to run the combined companies' applications business and
never mentioned any antitrust concerns. However, when Oracle
countered by proposing to buy PeopleSoft, Conway said that he
wouldn't sell at any price. He then began a long and intensive
lobbying effort aimed at persuading the Antitrust Division of the US
Department of Justice to block the deal. PeopleSoft's lobbying
resulted in complicating and prolonging the Justice Department
review of the merger. While no decision has yet been made, Oracle
believes this merger will eventually be approved."

The market thinks Oracle's dreaming. Otherwise everybody appears to
be betting that Oracle is going to arm wrestle the Justice
Department for the privilege of buying PeopleSoft or take the agency
to court.

One might at this point reflect on the fact that Oracle CEO Larry
Ellison was one of those to set the antitrust dogs on Microsoft and
that he now has to fend one off himself. Conway evidently sold the
DOJ investigators on a narrow definition of the market and the
chance of higher prices.

Right before the DOJ news, the PeopleSoft board had its usual knee-
jerk reaction to Oracle's sweetened offer of $9.4 billion, $26-a-
share, and turned it down claiming, as it has before, that it's
worth more than that and, anyway, it's anticompetitive.

Barring Pate turning thumbs down and an Oracle retreat, PeopleSoft's
unqualified rejection leaves Oracle with its plan to grab control of
the PeopleSoft board at the stockholders meeting on March 25. The
hurdle after that would be PeopleSoft's poison pill and the growing
noise that Oracle is paying way too much.

If it got the company, it would evidently have to pay, maybe, $1.5
billion to cover those refund liabilities PeopleSoft has run up so
the real price is more like $11 billion.

According to First Call, Oracle's $26 bid, which Oracle claimed last
week was the highest it's willing to go, is in line with what Wall
Street on average thinks PeopleSoft will be worth in a year. A few
of the more optimistic brokers think it could go to $30, while the
pessimistic think it could drop to $17.

Given that PeopleSoft shares haven't moved above $23 since Oracle
upped its offer, it's assumed the market figures the deal is dead.

In rejecting Oracle's bid, PeopleSoft claimed that its stock is
trading at the low end of its historical value based on forward
earnings because of the uncertainty that Oracle has created. With a
historical multiple based on its 2004 earnings, PeopleSoft claimed
the company's true value "far exceeds the offer price."

"Don't underestimate the significant additional value PeopleSoft can
create once the disruption from Oracle's hostile activities has
ended," PeopleSoft said in a statement. It didn't venture to say
what multiple its conjectures were based on. It did say that it
believed Oracle was out to damage PeopleSoft to acquire it at "an
unreasonably low price."

Oracle, in turn, defended its price saying, "Given PeopleSoft's
uncertain future as a standalone company and the fact that, for the
first quarter, PeopleSoft guided analysts below the consensus
estimates, Oracle believes that its offer is full and generous." It
told PeopleSoft stockholders to think for themselves and tender
their shares.

PeopleSoft said its bankers Citigroup Global Markets and Goldman
Sachs thought the Oracle offer was "inadequate."

An Oracle deal would be worth something like $200 million to
PeopleSoft CEO Craig Conway.

PeopleSoft's stock dropped 2% to $22 and change when the news of
PeopleSoft's continued rejection hit.


CSN 535-15 Budget Surplus from Last Year: Gartner

Gartner says that companies didn't spend their whole 2003 IT
budgets, in other words there was no budget flush, and are prepared
to spend at or above their 2004 IT allocations. It thinks this is
particularly true in the public sector, IT
manufacturing/communications and health services. It figures money
will be spent on maintaining existing software with some increases
for personal productivity and information management software. New
spending will go new versions and higher maintenance fees as with
SAP and JD Edwards. Hardware spending doesn't show much increase,
Gartner said, but unit sales will be higher. Desktop PCs and storage
spending is trending down. More ought to be spent on mobile devices
and notebooks.


CSN 535-16 Opera To IPO

Nine-year-old Opera Software ASA, the Norwegian browser house whose
small footprint is popular with mobile phones and PDAs, says it's
going to go public on the Oslo bourse. It's going to send in its
application next month. It's hoping to raise $10 million-$20
million. The company says it made about $190,000 last year on
revenues of $11.5 million compared to losing $3.1 million on sales
of $7.5 million the year before.


Drive Bay


CSN 535-17 After Software Binge, EMC Returns to Hardware

The news out of EMC lately has been dominated by software but Monday
morning it was its old self and rolled out a slew of hardware
products and upgrades spanning its high-end, mid-tier, NAS and
content addressed storage lines.

The upgrades include a new Symmetrix DMX-2 system, new Clariion CX
systems, Celerra NAS gateway and native mainframe connectivity to
the Centera CAS boxes. Everything is shipping.

EMC's executive VP of storage platform operations Dave Donatelli
boasted on a conference call that, "This is the most comprehensive
product launch in EMC's history."

In the last quarter, storage systems contributed 51% of EMC's $1.86
billion in revenues, followed by software and services with 24%
each, so hardware is still central to the business.

Describing the new products as the fruit of the money EMC has been
putting into R&D, a massive 11.5% of revenues, something like $720
million, CEO Joe Tucci claimed new product cycles had shrunk from
24-36 months to 12-18 months.

Exactly a year after the Symmetrix DMX line was introduced, EMC is
rolling out the DMX-2 series for very demanding applications. The
DMX-2 storage array is supposed to provide twice the processing
power of the DMX and 30% more performance. Global memory has been
doubled to a maximum of 256GB and the array supports faster 73GB,
15,000 RPM Fibre Channel disk drives.

The company told analysts that the gross margins on the DMX-2 were
similar to the older DMX'.

While touting the DMX-2's capabilities, Donatelli acknowledged that,
"Most customers will continue to be satisfied with today's DMX."

The DMX-2 can be had as an upgrade to an existing DMX installation.
It costs 20% more than its predecessor.

EMC also launched new AutoSwap software so mainframe customers can
redirect storage workloads without disrupting application
processing, and a RAID 5 option for existing DMX customers.

EMC is pitching AutoSwap as a lower-cost alternative to IBM's
Geographically Dispersed Parallel Sysplex application. AutoSwap
costs $200,000 per mainframe server MSU.

The Dell-sold mid-tier Clariion line got a makeover with three new
products - CX300, CX500 and the CX700 - providing 25%-100% faster
performance than their predecessors.

Targeted at workgroups, the CX300 is the new entry point and is
supposed to provide 25% more performance than the CX200 it replaces.

The CX500 is aimed at departments and is said to provide double the
performance, connectivity and capacity of the older CX400.

Targeted at data centers, the top mid-range storage system, the
CX700, replaces the CX600 and is supposed to provide up to 200,000
IOPS. The 700 scales up to 240 drives and is supposed to deliver 33%
better performance than the 600.

EMC also enhanced its SAN Copy data mobility software and added
incremental copy capabilities. IBM, HP, Sun and Hitachi already
support SAN Copy. New SnapView modules for Exchange and SQL Server
support Microsoft's Volume Shadowcopy Services for automating backup
and recovery in Windows environments.

Like the DMX-2, the new Clariions can be had as upgrades to existing
installations.

EMC expects the new CX stuff to account for half of its Clariion
sales this quarter.

Tucci said that, as expected, a low-end Clariion would debut in the
coming months but did not provide details.

On the NAS side, EMC launched a NS700 NAS Gateway to let customers
integrate NAS functionality into Clariion CX and Symmetrix
environments. The NS700G comes in single- or dual-Data Mover
configurations and is supposed to provide 33% better
price/performance than the NS600G. The company also rolled out the
NS700 with an upgrade path to the gateway.

A single Data Mover version of the NS700G costs $63,600 while a
single 2TB costs $137,500.

EMC has added native mainframe connectivity to the Centera fixed
content storage system through an API supporting IBM z/OS
mainframes. "Data is no longer tied to the mainframe that created
it," Donatelli said. In addition, an upgrade to the system's
CentraStar OS doubles the replication speeds and other enhancements
such as faster processors, 320GB ATA drives, 1Gb Ethernet and
software upgrades are supposed to boost performance by up to five
times.

The Centera, however, doesn't seem to be living up to initial
expectation. Merrill Lynch recently described it as a "bit of a
sleeper product" with a $200 million run rate.

According to Tucci, most of EMC's large customers are running at
about 70% storage utilization, up from 30%-50% a couple of years
ago.

Some Wall Street analysts were impressed by EMC's new gear. "The
combination of faster product cycles and a solutions emphasis makes
it difficult for competitors to take share, including Hitachi's
Lightning expected later this year," Merrill Lynch's Steven
Milunovich wrote in a research note.


CSN 535-18 Brocade Losses Widen

Storage switch vendor Brocade lost $36.8 million, or 14 cents a
share, on revenues of $145 million in its fiscal first quarter ended
January 24.

Revenues grew 18% year-over-year and 5% sequentially.

Excluding deferred stock compensation expenses, lease terminations
and other related costs, the company reported a non-GAAP net income
of $8 million, or three cents a share, a penny ahead of what the
Street expected.

The gross margin came in at 54.9%, the high end of the company's
guidance.

In the same period a year ago, Brocade lost $6.9 million, or three
cents a share, on revenues of $123.1 million.

"We saw revenue growth across our entire business," Brocade CEO Greg
Reyes said on a conference call.

The company claims it added over 100 new customers for its high-end
Silkworm 12000 storage switch.

Besides its old rival McData, Brocade also faces a new rival in
Cisco, which is starting to make inroads into the storage networking
market.

In a research note to investors, Bear Stearns said it continued to
be concerned about the competitive outlook and mentioned that Cisco
was beginning to show traction in the SAN switch market after a
jerky start last year.

This quarter, Brocade CFO Tony Canova is forecasting EPS before
charges of two cents to three cents on revenues of $143 million-$147
million. The gross margin is expected to come in between 53%-55%.


CSN 535-19 Maranti Rakes in $26m

SAN switch vendor Maranti Networks has completed a new round that
brought in $26 million. The Series C round takes the San Jose,
California storage networking start-up's total financing to $57
million.

JPMorgan Partners led, with participation from existing investors
Menlo Ventures, Trinity Ventures and Alliance Ventures.

The new money is earmarked for expanding sale and marketing.

In conjunction with the funding JPMorgan Partners principal Vikram
Gupta and Aristos Logic CEO Anil Gupta are joining Maranti's board.

Maranti's flagship CoreSTOR line of switches debuted in December. It
consists of the CoreSTOR 2000 16-port switch for remote offices,
CoreSTOR 3000 128-port switch for data centers, CoreSTOR Storage
Services software suite and the Storian Manager application to
manage the entire storage infrastructure from a central console.

Separately, the company also named Debbie Miller as its new CEO.
Before joining Maranti, Miller was CEO of Egenera.

Miller replaces Maranti co-founder Kuldeep Sandhu, who now chief
strategy officer.

The start-up is said to have five unnamed beta customers but doesn't
appear to have sold its widgetry to anyone yet.

Maranti's competitors include Cisco, McData and Brocade.


CSN 535-20 Storactive Upgrades LiveBackup

Storactive has enhanced its LiveBackup software adding support for
Windows Server 2003.

The upgrade also features enhanced checkpointing technology that
creates system checkpoints even if applications hold exclusive file
locks on particular system or data files.

Pricing for release 2.72 starts at $99 per client.


CSN 535-21 3Par Raises $32m; Eyes Profitability in '05

Storage start-up 3Par has raised $32 million in a fourth round.

Silicon Valley VC Menlo ventures led the infusion, with 3Par's
existing investors like Mayfield, Worldview Technology Partners,
Oracle, Sun and Veritas participating.

The Fremont, California-based outfit plans to use the money to
expand into the UK, Europe and Asia.

The new money takes 3Par's total financing to $153 million, making
it one of the most richly funded storage start-ups.

3Par CEO and HP veteran David Scott expects the new money to take
the company to profitability next year.

According to Scott, 3Par has sold scores of systems to dozens of
customers. "We have a very robust, well-proven product with strong
reference points in US and Japan," he said.

3Par claims 17 customers among the Fortune 1000/Global 1000 and
major government agencies in the US, UK and Japan. The 150-man
concern counts AIG, Hitachi ULSI, Matsushita, Merrill Lynch,
Infinity Pharmaceuticals and Veritas among its clients.

Pricing for 3Par's widgetry starts at around $100,000 and the bill
can run into the millions. Scott boasted that over half of 3Par's
customers had made repeat purchases.

Launched in the fall of 2002, 3Par's Utility Storage platform is
supposed to deliver the storage component of utility computing. The
company's products include the InServ Storage Servers and the InForm
software suite.

3Par has focused its attention on two segments - storage
consolidation and performance-intensive applications.

Scott said 3Par would roll out upgrades this half.


CSN 535-22 Intel Debuts New Optical Transceivers

Intel has introduced two 4Gbps optical transceivers aimed at
doubling the performance of Fibre Channel storage.

The new TXN31015 and TXN31115 widgets are designed to support the
emerging 4Gbps Fibre Channel specification, which is meant as a way
around the bottlenecks in 2Gbps SANs.

The two 4Gbps optical transceivers are aimed at host bus adaptors,
switches and RAID modules that provide high-speed optical
connections for the new generation of 4Gbps Fibre Channel storage
systems. Both products are supposed to be compatible with 2 Gbps and
1 Gbps in the field, providing an upgrade path.

Intel executives said the new transceivers are aimed at systems that
can meet the needs of the video and graphics-rich applications that
are driving the need for faster storage networks.

The TXN31015 is targeted at HBAs and RAID applications in SANs while
the TXN31115 is designed for 4 Gbps Fibre Channel switches.

The new parts are supposed to conform to multi-source standards that
define electrical, physical and other characteristics, providing
storage equipment vendors with compatible building blocks that cut
design time and cost.

Intel said the two transceivers are sampling now and would ship in
production quantities in the second half. Priced at $47 in sample
quantities of 1,000, they are supposed to be competitive with 2/1
Gbps prices in volume orders.

Intel also launched two new transceivers for the entry-level 2/1
Gbps Fibre Channel and Ethernet storage systems. The new 2/1 Gbps
TXN31011 SFF and TXN31111 SFP transceivers operate at 2 and 1Gbps
Fibre Channel and at 1 Gbps Ethernet rates. They are designed for
Fibre Channel HBAs and switches, and Ethernet network interface
cards. Intel said both products are shipping now priced at $35 in
quantities of 1,000.


CSN 535-23 DBassociatesIT Gets Funding, New CEO

DBassociatesIT has raised $9 million in Series A funding from
Insight Venture Partners.

The start-up plans to use the proceeds to expand its operations in
the US and boost its sales and marketing staff.

DBassociatesIT provides the SQL LiteSpeed backup and recovery
software for Microsoft SQL Server.

The company also brought in Walter Scott as CEO. Scott was
previously VP of worldwide sales at Embarcadero Technologies. He
replaces DBassociatesIT founder and CTO Douglas Chrystall.


CSN 535-24 Aplus.Net Upgrades Online Storage Service

Web hosting services provider Aplus.Net has enhanced its Web-a-File
online file storage service for small and mid-sized companies.
Enhancements include strong encryption to protect files, automated
backup, file backup for Pocket PCs, file compression and shared
access to files.


Linux Watch


CSN 535-25 Lindows Case Halted in Mid-Stream so Microsoft Can Appeal
To Protect Windows Trademark

Microsoft's dicey trademark infringement case against Windows
wannabe Lindows.com, which was meant to go to trial March 1, has
been halted in mid-stream so Microsoft can lodge a rare
interlocutory appeal before the trial court rules.

Microsoft is basically going to ask the United States Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit to find that it owns the Windows
trademark, because the trial judge basically says he won't.

The Honorable John Coughenour, the Seattle federal judge sorting out
the trademark differences between Microsoft and Lindows.com - the
turned-inside-out infringement case that Microsoft brought against
Lindows and wound up defending its own Windows mark - isn't buying
Microsoft's argument that the jury should only consider the way the
word Windows is used today, not the generic way the digerati used it
between 1983 and 1985 before Microsoft "proprietized" it.

Although Coughenour has made no explicit ruling based on timing, he
told Microsoft the other day that if it came to it he would instruct
the jury to decide whether the Windows mark was generic before
Microsoft brought Windows 1.0 to market in November of 1985 and that
he would not instruct the jury that if the word was generic that
Microsoft's trademark could still be valid.

The judge says there's a lot of room surrounding the question of law
here for differences of opinion so he's going to grant Microsoft's
motion to appeal before the trial even begins, an unusual step
allowed only in very limited situations.

The appeals court will be asked to rule on the period of time
governing genericness. The trial judge said in his decision that "a
determination on this issue could materially affect the outcome of
litigation" - could in fact terminate it - and so it is "in the
interests of justice and judicial economy to consider the issue at
the present time."

Lindows, glorying in Microsoft's "delaying tactics," while
complaining that Microsoft is depleting its resources by dragging
things out, claims victory on a key legal issue because of
Coughenour's position that once a word is declared generic, it would
stay generic no matter how much marketing Microsoft threw at it.
Lindows is telling people that as the situation currently stands it
"will be able to keep its name indefinitely or until the final
decision in the case is made."

Microsoft has had more luck in Europe where it's gotten Lindows
bounced out of Holland. Finland and Sweden and is trying for France,
Belgium and Luxembourg.


CSN 535-26 SCO Now Wants $5b from IBM

The SCO Group wants to amend its 11-month-old suit against IBM and
substitute charges of copyright infringement for trade secret
violations and up its demand for damages from $3 billion to a
minimum of $5 billion, a nice round number.

Along with the trade secrets charge goes SCO's claims that IBM
dipped into SCO's own OpenServer and UnixWare widgetry on behalf of
Linux, not only code, but also know-how, concepts, idea,
methodologies, standards, specifications, programming, techniques,
architecture, design and schematics.

The move leaves SCO down to proving it owns derivative AIX and Dynix
code that IBM claims it owns and that IBM put that derivative code
in Linux.

SCO filed the amended suit with the federal court in Salt Lake City
last week but it's unclear whether the thing's going to fly. SCO
needs the magistrate doing the housekeeping for the trial judge to
approve the change and so far she has said nary a word about it in
public, not even at the hearing she held last Friday where IBM and
SCO argued over their motions to compel evidence from each other.

At the end of that hearing Magistrate Brooke Wells threw up her
hands and said all this commotion was very technical and took the
matter under advisement, promising a written decision in a week.
Presumably that decision will include an indication of whether or
not she's going to accept the amendment.

Primarily, however, the decision is supposed to sort out IBM's claim
that SCO didn't lay out its evidence that IBM ripped off SCO-owned
Unix code and put it in Linux like the court ordered SCO to do and
SCO's insistence that it can't go further than it has until IBM
turns over, oh, all versions of AIX and Dynix along with who wrote
it all and some 50 other items.

IBM complained to the court that producing all the stuff SCO wanted
would be an undo burden on it and could take man-months.

IBM told the court that SCO admitted in a letter delivered to IBM
late Thursday, hours before the hearing, that it had "failed to
produce numerous responsive documents" and committed "to doing so at
an unspecified time in the future."

The letter left IBM to argue that "In response to the court's order,
SCO abandons any claim that IBM misappropriated its trade secrets,
concedes that SCO has no evidence that IBM improperly disclosed Unix
System V code and acknowledges that SCO's contract is grounded
solely on the proposition that IBM improperly disclosed portions of
IBM's own AIX or Dynix products, which SCO claims to be derivatives
of Unix System V."

IBM wants to know exactly what lines of SVR5 are in Linux, which, it
says, SCO must know "to allege the contributions were improper."

IBM told the judge that SCO's court filings and public statements
are at odds. It said that "SCO has identified no more than
approximately 3,700 lines of code in 17 AIX or Dynix files" that IBM
is supposed to have contributed to Linux while SCO CEO Darl McBride
told the Harvard Law School last week that a "million lines of code"
were pilfered and that SCO "basically supplied that" - in other
words the evidence - to IBM. "If the 'million lines of code' in fact
exist," IBM said, "then SCO should have identified them in response
to the court's order."

IBM claims that SCO is "hinting" that "None of the allegedly
improper disclosures made by IBM (or any of the other code in Linux
to which SCO claims to have right) derive from Unix System V."

SCO, meanwhile, is basing its copyright claims on IBM's alleged
breach of its Unix agreements and its breach of Sequent's Unix
agreements and the fact that since SCO terminated IBM's AIX license
last year, "IBM has continued to reproduce, prepare derivative works
of and distribute Unix software, source code, object code,
programming tools and documentation." SCO claims IBM infringement
has been willful.

Novell of course claims dibs on the same copyrights along with the
right to absolve IBM from any infringement or termination. SCO
claims IBM induced Novell to claim copyright ownership and the right
to waive away.

It would seem logical to conclude that the Novell slander suit would
be heard first and, as a point of passing interest, in a legal
tussle with Novell SCO loses its home court advantage.

IBM claims it has an irrevocable and perpetual Unix license.

The copyright infringement charge per se only adds a billion dollars
to SCO's list of claimed damages. SCO breaks down the damages
differently than it did last June when it amended the suit and went
from a mere $1 billion to $3 billion in damages. It now says it
wants a billion dollars for IBM's breach of its Software Agreement
and another billion for IBM's breach of Sequent's Software
Agreement, same as before, but introduces demands for a billion
dollars each for IBM's alleged breach of its Sublicensing Agreement
and Sequent Sublicensing Agreement.

These alleged sublicensing breaches are tied up with IBM flaunting
the cancellation of its AIX license.

Last year SCO got to $3 billion by asking for a billion for unfair
competition, a charge that also seems to have disappeared as a core
component.

SCO conceives of the $5 billion as only a floor. It has other
demands it hasn't put a number on that would have to be decided at
trial.


CSN 535-27 SCO Ignores Novell Ultimatum

Novell, which continues to claim that it can dictate to the SCO
Group, wrote SCO a letter last Friday demanding that SCO waive any
purported rights to require IBM to treat Sequent code as being
subject to confidentiality requirements or to restrict Sequent's
Unix license. Novell gave SCO until high noon Utah time Wednesday to
do it.

SCO didn't.

Instead, SCO said. "It is SCO's strongly held legal position that
Novell has no rights to step in and change or alter source code
license agreements that SCO owns and holds with its Unix licensees.
SCO has no intention of waiving any of its rights against Sequent or
IBM. We will deal with Novell on all of these issues in court."

According to Novell, SCO claims IBM is obliged to keep derivative
Sequent code out of Linux on the basis on section 2.01 of Sequent's
original Unix agreement with AT&T, which reads:

"Such right to use includes the right to modify such software
product and to prepare derivative works based on such software
product, provided the resulting materials are treated hereunder as
part of the original software product."

Novell tells SCO general counsel Ryan Tibbits that this means AT&T
retained ownership in its code even if it was incorporated in a
derivative work, not that it imposes confidentiality or use
restrictions on the Sequent code.

Novell says AT&T clarified the meaning of Section 2.01 (which is in
all Unix agreements) in the AT&T newsletter $echo in April 1985, the
month the Sequent agreement was signed, and said that a sentence
would be added to the codicil that said that AT&T "claims no
ownership interest in any portion of such a modification or
derivative work that is not part of the software product."

Absent an amenable answer from SCO, Novell will probably forgive
Sequent itself considering it claims to have the right "to take any
action on [SCO's] own behalf."


CSN 535-28 Novell Seeks To Get SCO Suit Thrown Out

Novell is trying to get the SCO Group's slander suit against it
dismissed claiming that SCO has no grounds.

Novell told the court that "Without conclusively establishing that
it owns the Unix and UnixWare copyrights, SCO cannot show that
Novell's statements to the contrary are false, and cannot prevail."
It also called SCO's alleged injury "speculative."

SCO retorted that Novell's motion to dismiss is based on its
illegitimate claims that the Unix copyrights are "not necessary for
SCO's business" and therefore "did not transfer from Novell to SCO."

The company reiterated that it owns the copyrights to Unix. "The
transfer of these copyrights is made plain, clear and unambiguous in
the 1995 Asset Purchase Agreement between SCO and Novell," it said.
"Amendment No. 2 to the Asset Purchase Agreement clarifies this
position and SCO will continue to aggressively defend these Unix
copyrights in our court case against Novell. In the next 20 days, we
expect that SCO's lawyers will file a response motion to this filing
by Novell."


CSN 535-29 Linux Tax Evasion

The Open Source Development Lab is passing around another paper
written by the Free Software Foundation's general counsel, Columbia
University professor Eben Moglen, to discourage end users from
paying SCO its Linux tax.

Moglen says that, since SCO sued Novell and essentially admitted
that its ownership of the Unix copyrights isn't crystal clear, no
court in the country would hold a user liable for infringing SCO
rights until somebody figures out who really owns the darned things.

Even if SCO comes out the winner, Moglen feels no Linux taxes will
be owing because SCO distributed Linux under the GPL.


CSN 535-30 Red Hat Taps Israeli Distributor

Red Hat, which is on an international expansion course, has named
Matrix, a publicly traded systems integrator with a staff of some
1,800 people set up for big projects, its main distributor in
Israel.

Matrix is supposed to dislodge the Unix installed base.

Matrix senior VP of marketing and manager of its software unit Natan
Gavish estimates Matrix will do $2 million worth of business in Red
Hat this year. The Meta Group says the Linux market is still limited
in Israel compared to other places but is expected to grow to a
volume of $30 million in 2007.

The company's other partners include PeopleSoft, BMC, Ascential and
Business Objects. It's been doing Red Hat training for a few years.


CSN 535-31 Evans Counts Open Source Developers

Evans Data Corporation has counted noses and claims that 1.1 million
developers in North America are spending at least some of their time
on open source projects. The census is found in what the market
researcher calls its "North American Population Study," which also
found a half-million developers are spending some time on 64-bit
architectures and a quarter-million are active on grid projects. It
said clustered computing developers number just under a half-million
and account for 17% of the North American development population.


CSN 535-32 Red Hat Carts Off German Win

Red Hat plucked a cheeky win right from under SuSE's nose. ISP
Telefonica Deutschland GmbH, the second largest national IP carrier
in Germany, SuSE's stomping grounds, is going to use Red Hat's
Enterprise Linux distribution as its "platform of choice" for its
business operations. It's switching over from Unix although it's
evidently had Linux in its infrastructure for a while. It's also an
early adopter of the new Red Hat Network Provisioning Module.


CSN 535-33 German Ministry Goes Linux

A division of the German finance ministry, which pays the country's
civil servants, has moved its back office operations to two
mainframes running IBM's proprietary OS and Linux ousting 30 Sun and
Fujitsu Siemens servers, IBM said.


CSN 535-34 RTLinux Tests F-35 Fighter Engine

FSMLabs brags that Pratt & Whitney is using its RTLinuxPro hard RTOS
to test the F135 engine for the US military's new F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter aircraft.

FSMLabs says that on February 2, Pratt & Whitney ran the first
production configuration engine at full power on a test stand
controlled by RTLinuxPro.

RTLinuxPro is also supposed to be the core component of systems used
for developing and testing engine control embedded software for the
F135.

RTLinuxPro includes FSMLabs' RTCore Posix PS51 robust hard real-time
kernel and an embedded Linux development system. RTCore uses a dual-
kernel method to run Linux or BSD Unix as applications.

The F-35 is scheduled for its first flight next year.


Mail Bag


CSN 535-35 Attention, Conspiracy Theorists

To the Editor:

Guess what happened after I installed the Microsoft 2/2/04 IE
cumulative security update last week: It broke my Linux-based Web
host's log-on system in not one, but two ways. First the damned
thing edited my favorites and shortcuts, inserting some extraneous
address info. In addition, it strips out needed pieces of embedded
URLs. Specifically, mydomain.com/webmail gets converted to
mydomain:portaddress/ i.e., it puts in the port address but deletes
the destination page.

A conspiracy theorist would conclude that Microsoft has figured out
that the way to stop Linux is to make IE incompatible with it.

Andrew Allison
Computer Industry Consultant
http://aallison.com


BillyGrams


CSN 535-36 Linux Rates a Tiny Corner of the Desktop

IDC is reportedly pulling together figures that say that Linux
managed to claim 3.2% of the desktop market last year passing Apple.
IDC expects Linux to represent 6% of the desktop market by 2007,
leaving Microsoft with 94%.


CSN 535-37 StarOffice Loses its Corner on the Office Challenger
Market

Demo 2004 attendees are going to be treated to a screening of
China's Office competitor Evermore Integrated Office, which was
financed by the Chinese city of Wuxi and runs on both Windows and
Linux. A US version of thing is supposed to sell for 99 bucks, a
fraction of what Office goes for. It reportedly includes a word
processor, spreadsheet and presentation kit.


CSN 535-38 SGI in Talks To Sell Alias

Perpetually down-on-its-luck SGI, the first company to observe that
there is to a United Unix and it's called Linux, is negotiating to
sell its Alias graphics unit in Canada because Alias is a remnant of
SGI's former glory and no longer a strategic fit. SGI is talking to
an unidentified equity investment house. Exclusively, it says. If
Alias goes, it will operate as an independent software company with
no change in management or product. Alias widgetry has been used to
create the special effects in "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy and
"Spider-Man." Alias, which has some 500 people, made roughly $5.7
million on revenues of $65.1 million in the year ended last June 27.
SGI bought the operation in 1995 for $440 million in stock and
merged it with Wavefront Technologies Inc.


CSN 535-39 Sun Debt Rated Junk

While Sun was busy rolling out its latest new product wave Tuesday
and telling everybody how wonderful it was, Finch Ratings was busy
lowering Sun's senior unsecured debt to the status of junk. Some
$1.3 billion worth of public debt securities are involved. Finch
said it cut Sun's rating because of on-going operating losses on top
of its losses in eight out of the last 10 quarters coupled with the
belief that the company's near-term financial and operating
performance will be volatile because of increasing competition. Even
Sun's long-term prospects are a worry though Finch is betting things
will gradually improve. It said it thinks it will take Sun longer-
than-expected to return to profitability. It imagines that Sun's
brighter side - its strong $5.1 billion liquidity position,
recurring revenue base mostly from maintenance revenues, solid
balance sheet, low debt levels, consistent Unix market share and R&D
- could become increasingly more important to customers who are
considering signing long-term contracts with Sun.


CSN 535-40 So, Let's See What Gates Learned

It looks like Bill Gates is going to be deposed for both the
Burst.com antitrust suit and the Sun antitrust suit against
Microsoft. Burst claims Microsoft ripped off its technology and is
infringing on a technique to broadcast video over the Internet and
Sun claims that Microsoft tried to turn Java into roadkill like
Netscape. Burst argued that Gates was no Lee Iacocca. The former
chairman of Chrysler got out of testifying under oath by claiming he
wasn't personally responsible for the problems in Chrysler's cars.
One wonders whether Gates learned from that ghastly deposition he
gave for the government's antitrust trial.


CSN 535-41 Sun Spent $224m on Acquisitions

According to its quarterly SEC filing, Sun spent $23 million for
Pixo, $65 million for CenterRun and $136 million for Waveset, a
total of $224 million on the three acquisitions it initiated last
year. Pixo's Java software is supposed to monetize content on mobile
widgets, Waveset is supposed to have the identity skills to take the
point on Sun's identity strategy and CenterRun the provisioning
software Sun wanted for N1.


CSN 535-42 Fedora on Linux 2.6 Out

Red Hat has posted Fedora Core 2 test1, which is based on the new
2.6 kernel. Other new technologies in the stuff include Gnome 2.5
and KDE 3.2RC1. Fedora is meant for the open source community to
play with and debug before the technologies go into Red Hat's good
stuff. It'll only meant to be used in non-critical environments.


CSN 535-43 MyDoom Juiced

MyDoom morphed into MyDoom.d or Doomjuice.b programmed to launch
distributed denial of service attacks against Microsoft after
February 12. Like its MyDoom.c, it scans for systems infected with
MyDoom.a or b and gives them new instructions. MyDoom.d is supposed
to mount an intense DOS attack on Microsoft's home page in any month
except January and on all dates except the 8th-12th of each month.
Apparently, its requests mimics IE's making it hard for Microsoft to
distinguish between them. Some IT industry watchers are speculating
that organized crime is behind My.Doom.


CSN 535-44 Anti-Spam Law a Joke

A new study by MX Logic has found that over a recent 30-day period
only 3% of sample spam complied with the new CAN-SPAM federal anti-
spam law.


CSN 535-45 Washington Watch

The FCC decided Thursday that voice-over-IP (VoIP) shouldn't be
regulated by the government like convention telephone services,
probably sealing the fate of tradition services.
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        -------------------
          Client Server
               NEWS
        -------------------
        New York and London
9-13 February 2004 Issue 534
Competitive Intelligence & Observations about Servers, Storage and related
Phenomena


HEADLINES
CSN 534-01 Marathon Stops Tripping Over its Shoelaces & Gets Back in
the Race
CSN 534-02 Microsoft Previews AMD64 Operating System
CSN 534-03 HP Acquires Novadigm, Consera
CSN 534-04 Sun Lets Early Tiger Loose
CSN 534-05 Bleeding Gateway Buys Profitable eMachines
CSN 534-06 HyperTransport Consortium Locks Down Next Generation
CSN 534-07 Google Makes Grown Bankers Cry
CSN 534-08 Prescott's Here
CSN 534-09 'OK, $9.4 billion Cash But Not a Penny More'
CSN 534-10 Oracle Prices Against SQL Server
CSN 534-11 Sun Wishes Eclipse Would, Well, Go Dark
CSN 534-12 Microsoft Countersues Teknowledge
CSN 534-13 ISA Server 2004 Beta Bows
CSN 534-14 Fujitsu Goes with Laptop Chip-based Blade Server
CSN 534-15 Oasis Kicks Off Push for Dataweb Standard
CSN 534-16 Oblix Mates with Confluent
CSN 534-17 Sony Takes Out $325m Insurance Policy
CSN 534-18 VoiceXML 2.0 Close to Standardization
CSN 534-19 StarOffice Lights On Solaris x86
CSN 534-20 Microsoft Upgrades Business Portal App
CSN 534-21 Oki Uses .NET in Newfangled Convergence Server
CSN 534-22 System X Trades Desktops for Servers
CSN 534-23 EC Watch
CSN 534-24 SQL Server 2000 Reporting Services Debuts
CSN 534-25 Servers Heated Up in Q4
CSN 534-26 Danes Go For UBL

Drive Bay
CSN 534-27 EMC Product Launch Set
CSN 534-28 Broadcom Buys RAIDCore
CSN 534-29 Cornice Raises Mega Bucks

Linux Watch
CSN 534-30 SCO Amends IBM Complaint Again
CSN 534-31 SuSE Chief Moved to Novell Job
CSN 534-32 SCO Moves Site, Microsoft Shrugs Off Attack
CSN 534-33 SCOsource Linux Tax Called a Flop
CSN 534-34 OSDL Defines Data Center Linux, Seeks Reaction
CSN 534-35 Groklaw Editor Takes Day Job
CSN 534-36 LSB 2.0 Made Public
CSN 534-37 Now There's a Thought - Free Linux
CSN 534-38 Opteron Gets Real-Time Linux
CSN 534-39 Opera Puts Internet Demigod on its Board
CSN 534-40 OSDL Snags NTT
CSN 534-41 Voltaire Hires Ex-Brocade Guy
CSN 534-42 Trolltech Adds .NET Support
CSN 534-43 TimeSys Offers Linux 2.6 IDE for the PowerPC
CSN 534-44 Desktop Linux Summit Redux

Mail Bag
CSN 534-45 Inflatable Dolls Called Mommy
CSN 534-46 Practicing Law Without a License

BillyGrams
CSN 534-47 Darl's Phone 'Slashdotted'
CSN 534-48 School Daze
CSN 534-49 Microsoft Loses China Chief
CSN 534-50 India in Line for Microsoft Code
CSN 534-51 AMD Tries To Avoid Getting Clipped
CSN 534-52 Novell Gets Equal Time
CSN 534-53 Finger Pointing at CA
CSN 534-54 First Legal Bill: $1.6m
CSN 534-55 SAP Looking To Buy
CSN 534-56 Here, Amuse Yourself
------------------
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Cliff, NY 11579, USA;
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associates, friends, family and co-workers, please know that this
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come to expect.

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publish, broadcast, post on an Internet/Intranet site, rewrite,
store in a retrieval system or otherwise distribute this publication
or any portion of this publication or any article in whole or in
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without the prior written permission of G2 Computer Intelligence.

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info?: e-mail: paperboy@g2news.com
--------------------


CSN 534-01 Marathon Stops Tripping Over its Shoelaces & Gets Back in
the Race

Fault-tolerant Windows pioneer Marathon Technologies Corporation has
been brought back Lazarus-like from the dead revitalized by an $8.8
million infusion of money from a bunch of VCs.

The last time anybody heard from Marathon its founder had been run
off in an internal revolt and it was in Chapter 11 hoping that by
reorganizing it could get the financing that it couldn't get before,
a shortage that forced it into Chapter 11 to begin with. That was
last March and apparently some court-approved debtor-in-possession
financing from Northern Technology Partners and Sumitomo Corporation
got it through (CSN No 490).

The new funding came from Atlas Ventures and Longworth Venture
Partners, with Presidio Venture Partners, a Sumitomo company,
participating. It's supposed to be used for sales, marketing,
business development and the launch of Marathon's new Endurance
Virtual FTserver software, a unique software-only adaptation of its
technology that it's been working on for ages.

The reborn company, a rival of Stratus Technology and NEC, claims
the widgetry is the only software to deliver simple, affordable,
continuous uptime for Windows servers on unmodified, off-the-shelf
Intel hardware, including the latest stuff. It also claims its fault
and disaster tolerance works on any Windows application,
shrinkwrapped or custom. The widgetry is supposed to deliver
mainframe-class, utility-grade availability better than 5Nines.

Marathon says it's got a multimillion-dollar OEM contract for the
stuff with Fujitsu Ltd and a big distribution arrangement with
Sumisho Electronics, which will handle Japan and Asia. Marathon's
also signed up 10 resellers and has hopes of more.

It made its first OEM deliveries last quarter.

It means to be indirect only. It says it intends to focus on the
entry-level and mid-level server market where fault tolerance, at
any rate, is something of an oddity. Marathon's software is supposed
to be geared to the cost-sensitive server and blade markets.

Marathon promises uninterrupted tolerance, not recovery (failover)
and says its stuff won't cause a loss of performance, state or
application context or in-flight data transactions. Systems are
repaired while they're operating and repaired subsystems
automatically rejoin their mates. There's integrated mirrored
storage and delta copy recovery.

The company claims that unlike clusters, Endurance Virtual Ftserver
is simple to specify, configure, deploy, manage and support. There's
no failover scripting, testing or expensive networked storage.
Recovery is automatic. Marathon's got a couple of patent
applications pending.

To work, the system requires two identically configured Marathon-
qualified Intel servers based on 1.5GHz Xeon DP chips, 512MB of RAM,
two logical disks (either SCSI or RAID), four network ports and a
CD-ROM running either Windows 2000 (Server or Advanced Server) or
Windows 2003 (Server or Enterprise Server)

Compared to proprietary Stratus and NEC fault-tolerant solutions,
Marathon says its stuff is cheaper because it works on off-the-shelf
hardware and most peripherals. There are no proprietary drivers and
it'll support the latest-generation chips and clock speeds. It
claims easy administration and low TCO.

Marathon VP of sales and marketing Linda Mentzer said with the
product going through resellers prices for a complete system could
range from $12,000 to $20,000 depending on server brand. Next
quarter, she said, when the Marathon software that supports a single
HyperThreaded CPU ships, the company's larger resellers are expected
to have complete entry-level solutions based on two uniprocessors
for under $10k.


CSN 534-02 Microsoft Previews AMD64 Operating System

On Tuesday Microsoft materialized a preview copy of what it calls
Windows XP 64-Bit Edition for 64-Bit Extended Systems cautioning
people that the thing is meant for AMD Athlon64 and Opteron boxes
and not Intel's 64-bit EPIC-based Itanium gear, two wholly different
architectures.

Interesting bit of timing considering Intel is supposed to demo
Yamhill, its AMD64 knockoff, at the Intel Developer Forum in mid-
February.

Chip watcher Nathan Brookwood thinks Yamhill, which is the new x86
Prescott chip with secret 64-bit extensions, isn't compatible with
the AMD64 extensions yet and won't be until Tejas arrives.

Microsoft, which only wants to deal with one set of 64-bit x86
extensions, said that the XP Extended OS is still under development
and that the preview is only intended for testing and evaluation
purposes, not production. It indicated that there will be other pre-
releases.

The final version is supposed to be available in the second half.
Sources suggest the server version of 64-bit Extended Windows may be
slipping into Q1 of next year.

Until GA, users are restricted to 32-bit Windows or Linux. Intel
won't productize Yamhill, which is apparently also known as CT,
until the Microsoft OS is established.

Rumors suggest that Microsoft may package the stuff in three desktop
flavors: a workstation, a "pro-sumer" and a general consumer
version. Different flavors of the server OS are also expected.

See http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/64bit/downloads/upgrade.asp.


CSN 534-03 HP Acquires Novadigm, Consera

Hewlett-Packard is buying two management software companies -
Novadigm and Consera - to further its utility computing push. The
two provide automated change capabilities.

HP, which already owns 5% of Novadigm, is paying roughly $116
million in cash for the rest of the publicly traded Mahwah, New
Jersey concern. Its stock was trading at $4.75 and HP is paying
$6.10. The company lost $2 million, a dime a share, on revenues of
$13 million in its second fiscal quarter.

What HP's paying for Consera is anybody's guess.

Novadigm's software automates change and configuration management to
achieve a desired consistent end state.

The company is supposed to have 500 customers worldwide including
Schlumberger, 7-Eleven and the US and UK governments.

The deal is expected to close by the end of the first half. It needs
to be rubberstamped by Novadigm's shareholders.

Bellevue, Washington-based Consera's service-modeling software is
designed to help customers build a standardized IT environment that
automatically adapts to changing business demands.

The transaction is expected to be wrapped up in 30 days.

After the deals close, both companies will become part of HP
Software Global Business Unit. The products will be offered under
the OpenView umbrella.

Management software is considered crucial for large enterprises that
make hundreds of thousands of IT changes a week driven by business
decisions (well, theoretically, at any rate). However, a systems
administrator at a Fortune 500 can manage only 20-30 servers.

"This where management software comes in," HP's senior VP, adaptive
enterprise Nora Denzel said on a conference call. "Management
software can automatically manage IT and automatically match IT
supplies to the changes in business demand."

Denzel cited IDC data that suggests HP could be looking at a $10
billion opportunity in three years. "Management software is the next
big battleground for IT," Denzel said.

Consera's technology will let HP OpenView customers create models
that represent their business services, mapping to underlying IT
components. Novadigm's automation services will then utilize these
service models to automate IT changes, such as new software
implementation, patches or upgrades.

Since HP has been using Novadigm's software internally, the Novadigm
components are already integrated with OpenView.

HP claimed the acquisitions wouldn't change the partnerships it has
through its services unit and personal systems group with Altiris
and Opsware, which provide similar capabilities.

Novadigm and Consera mark HP's fourth and fifth software acquisition
in the past six months. In September, it bought Talking Blocks for
web services management and Baltimore Technologies' Select Access
business for identity management. Two months later, HP picked up
Persist Software to add information lifecycle management
capabilities.


CSN 534-04 Sun Lets Early Tiger Loose

On Thursday Sun set out the beta of Project Tiger, its Java 2
Platform, Standard Edition 1.5 (J2SE 1.5) with Java language
updates, new application monitoring and management features and
greater performance. Sun is evidently hoping for GA this summer.

It's another attempt by Sun to take on the redoubtable desktop,
which Java has found, well, a slippery slope.

The new stuff, meant to streamline development, supports Windows,
XP, Linux and Solaris,

The language enhancements are supposed to make Java faster and more
secure. New features include generics, enumerated types, metadata
and autoboxing of primitive types. Changes are meant to reduce
start-up time and shrink the memory footprint. The Java Virtual
Machine has apparently been auto-tuned to drive greater overall
application and development performance.

Sun said the widgetry would let apps it builds be deployed into
existing SNMP-based enterprise management systems. That way the JVM
software can be monitored and managed at higher RAS levels. The
stuff also includes Java Management Extensions (JMX) for out-of-the-
box deployment to management systems that support JMX.

Sun wants developers to use NetBeans as their IDE. It said NetBeans
4.0 would be fully optimized to take advantage of J2SE 1.5 features.
NetBeans 3.6 is compatible. From Sun's point-of-view, the important
thing about NetBeans is that it's not Eclipse.

Sun is working on a tool called Java Creator that's supposed to
attract Visual Basic developers. VB with drag-and-drop is supposed
to be easier to use than Java.

Sun claims 110 million downloads for the J2SE SDK and Java Runtime
Environment (JRE) since it first appeared in December of 1998. It
says consumers have downloaded 27 million copies of the JRE, six
million in just the last 30 days.

Sun also says that - despite having been foiled in its attempt to
piggyback on Windows by getting a court order telling Microsoft it
must carry Java - the JRE is now being installed at the factory by
60% of the PC market.

See http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.


CSN 534-05 Bleeding Gateway Buys Profitable eMachines

Struggling Gateway is buying privately held eMachines in a deal
valued at about $235 million to boost sales of its consumer
electronics gear and help it return to profitability. The price
includes $30 million in cash and 50 million shares of Gateway stock.

eMachines CEO Wayne Inouye will become CEO of Gateway and Gateway
founder and CEO Ted Waitt will continue as chairman.

The acquisition will make Gateway the third largest PC vendor behind
Dell and Hewlett-Packard in the US and No 8 worldwide.

Gateway figures to leverage eMachines' retail channel and low-cost
distribution model to expand distribution of its consumer
electronics products beyond its existing direct channels. With its
PC business in disarray, Gateway has been trying its hand at higher-
margin products like Plasma and LCD TVs, home theaters, MP3 players,
and DVD players and recorders. Non-PC revenue accounted for 31% of
its total revenue in Q4.

eMachines sells its PCs through retailers such as Best Buy, Circuit
City, Comp USA, Costco and Wal-Mart. It reportedly generated about
$1.1 billion in revenues last year. The fourth quarter was its ninth
consecutive profitable quarter. By contrast, Gateway lost $114
million, or 35 cents per share, In Q4 on revenues down 17% year-
over-year to $875 million.

Gateway has had losses in 12 of its last 13 quarters and its PC
sales fell 24% last year to 2.1 million units.

Gateway-branded desktops, notebooks, servers and storage will
continue to be offered through Gateway's existing direct channel and
eMachines only through retail channels. Gateway intends to keep the
eMachines brand.

Gateway, which employs about 7,500 people, didn't acknowledge that
it was thinking about layoffs but said it expects the combined
companies to drive significant performance improvements that will
yield cost savings and margin synergies annually. eMachines has a
headcount of a lean 138 people.

Gateway is hopeful of returning to sustained profitability in 2005
as a result of increased sales, cost savings and other synergies
associated with the acquisition.

While the deal, which should close by the end of March, gives
Gateway a shot at profitability, eMachines acknowledged that it
needed a leg up to grow beyond current levels. "Gateway has the
capital, the scale, the product line and the management expertise to
help us dramatically increase our own growth," Inouye said.

However, Bear Stearns thinks that the real reason for the
acquisition is so Gateway can shut its pricey, loss-making stores
and leverage eMachines' retail channel. The broker still described
the arrangement as a solid recipe. "This deal will significantly
change the face of Gateway, most notably in its management ranks and
its distribution strategy," it said.

Expressing a similar opinion, Merrill Lynch's ace analysis Steven
Milunovich wrote, "While Gateway is acquiring eMachines, we see the
eMachines model and management taking over." According to
Milunovich, the acquisition will not impact Dell or HP materially.


CSN 534-06 HyperTransport Consortium Locks Down Next Generation

The second rev of the HyperTransport chip-to-chip I/O connectivity
specification is in the can. It's expected to last for a very long
time while the rest of technology catches up with it, according
Mario Cavalli, the general manager of the HyperTransport Technology
Consortium, the collective charged with the spec's care and feeding.
It is, he said, "far beyond known OEM plans." It's already a
"futurish" roadmap to the higher performance levels needed for next-
generation systems. It offers a 70% throughput improvement over what
exists now.

Release 2 defines three new speed levels and new mapping to PCI
Express, the emerging I/O interconnect architecture expected to
become an industry standard. It's Mario's job to make sure that
HyperTransport isn't mistaken for other technologies like PCI
Express, Infiniband or Rapid I/O. They don't do exactly the same
things. HyperTransport is unique and offers functionality other
technologies don't deliver, he says.

HyperTransport's new speed specifications define 2.0, 2.4 and 2.8
GigaTransfers/second performance levels using dual-data rate clocks
at 1GHz, 1.2GHz and 1.4GHz. Its new maximum aggregate throughput is
now 22.4 Gigabytes/second, close to doubling its existing 12 GB/s
throughput, which is already 48 times faster than PCI, 12 times
faster than PCI X and 10 times faster than Infiniband using 4
channels.

Despite the speed gulf between the first and second iteration of the
specification, HyperTransport 2.0 is backwards-compatible with
HyperTransport 1.05 and 1.1. To preserve the value of existing
investments in HyperTransport-enabled products, the electrical
protocols that support the new clock rates are compatible with
previous HyperTransport electrical specifications.

HyperTransport is the first high-performance I/O technology to reach
volume shipments. Its disciples include the Microsoft's Xbox,
Apple's G5 PC, Cisco routers, IBM servers and some of the AMD64
desktops.


CSN 534-07 Google Makes Grown Bankers Cry

Looks like there's not going to be a mammoth, awe-inspiring IPO by
Google this spring.

Evidently the company's financial advisers think it could do better
if it waits until the stars that govern the market are more
auspicious - although something more auspicious than Google's
currently rumored $20 billion valuation seems a bit vulgar.

According to the Times, as in the Times of London, Google CEO Eric
Schmidt was in the City last week and indicated that the IPO had
been postponed. When asked about going public in a series of closed-
door meetings, he reportedly said, "An IPO is not on my agenda right
now" then wouldn't comment on the remark. He supposedly said Google,
believed to be profitable to the tune of a reported $350 million on
sales of $1 billion, didn't need the money right now.

Google's primary owners are Sequoia Capital and Kleiner Perkins.
Google's investment bankers were of course expecting a windfall.

Any delay of course brings Google that much closer to becoming the
next Netscape, a role Microsoft thinks would suit the search firm
divinely. To listen to Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Microsoft is poring
over Google patents looking for the company's soft underbelly.


CSN 534-08 Prescott's Here

Intel has delivered itself, as expected, of the Pentium 4 chip code
named Prescott that is distinguished by being Intel's first 90nm
silicon using 300mm wafers and by being the first Intel x86 chip to
be secretly 64-bit like AMD's hybrid 32/64-bit Opterons.

These secret 64-bit Yamhill extensions are expected to reappear in
the upcoming Nocona Xeon DP chip and the Potomac Xeon MP and then
again in the Tejas. By the time Tejas gets here, the extensions are
supposed to be compatible with AMD's extensions in a historic
turnabout. At least that's the speculation.

Intel's got four models of Prescott ranging from 2.8GHz to 3.4GHz,
all have a 800MHz front-side bus, all have 1MB of on-die L2 cache
and all support HyperTreading. The low end goes for $178.

A top-of-the line Prescott costs $417 or will when Intel delivers
them later in the quarter. They're expected to wend their way into
low-end servers. RackSaver, for instance, bellied up to the bar in
support of Prescott.

Prescott is pin-compatible with the earlier Pentium 4 Northwood,
which ought to make upgrading a snap.

Intel lengthened the Prescott's pipeline setting the stage for the
widget's clock to ramp to maybe 4GHz later this year, 5GHz next year
at the sacrifice of some performance, even up against the Northwood.


CSN 534-09 'OK, $9.4 billion Cash But Not a Penny More'

Oracle has gone and done what it didn't want to do, but had to do if
it's going to keep on pursuing PeopleSoft. It raised its bid from
$19.50 to $26 a share or from $7.1 billion to $9.4 billion cash.

Larry Ellison, who started at $16 a share, swears the 33% sweetener
is absolutely positively his final offer.

The price on offer is probably the only problem associated with
Oracle's hostile tender offer that was easy to solve. Oracle just
had to grit its teeth.

Oracle, whose sincerity about the acquisition has been in doubt, had
to raise its price because PeopleSoft shares have been up over the
$19.50 floor for months now.

Oracle moved when PeopleSoft shares were dipping. PeopleSoft's
board, which may now be in something of a quandary and under some
pressure, has said it will meet to consider the new price.

When last spotted, however, the quarry was doing what it could to
prevent itself from being run to ground. In what it called an effort
to bring its situation with Oracle to a head, PeopleSoft moved up
its annual stockholders meeting by two months to March 25.

PeopleSoft stockholders are supposed to vote on who they want on the
board at the meeting.

Oracle of course is making moves to pack the board with Oracle
friendlies. PeopleSoft has four incumbents it wants re-elected.
Oracle, which needs the PeopleSoft bylaws changed for its scheme to
work, is fielding a slate of five alternates. If they get on the
board, the board would quit voting again Oracle's hostile bid.

Then again, at some point between now and then the Justice
Department could finally render its decision on whether it would
allow an Oracle-PeopleSoft merger. The latest speculation suggested
the agency will quash it.

Meanwhile, PeopleSoft posted its fourth-quarter earnings. Sales were
up 34% to $685.2 million and profits dropped 70% to $17.4 million,
or five cents a share, because of costs associated with its JD
Edwards acquisition. Without those costs, earnings would have been
20 cents. License revenues were up 29.5% to $185.4 million.
PeopleSoft CEO Craig Conway said, "It could have been a better
year."

The company lowered its guidance for this quarter to $625 million-
$635 million with license revenues of $130 million-$140 million and
earnings of 17 cents or 18 cents. Its year is supposed be backend-
loaded but one Wall Streeter cracked that the company didn't benefit
from the Q4 upside and is taking advantage of Q1's seasonal
downturn.

PeopleSoft's announcement gave Oracle the opportunity to wade in and
say that, "We are not surprised that PeopleSoft management wants its
shareholders to vote on its board slate before they have a chance to
see the results of the first quarter, particularly since PeopleSoft
just lowered its guidance for the quarter."

By the way, that cute little refund program PeopleSoft put in place
to ward Oracle off had a liability of $1.5 billion at the end of
December. A total price of, like, $12 billion might be a little
steep for Oracle shareholders to countenance.

Oracle has $8.1 billion in cash and a $1.5 billion credit line. The
tender offer is supposed to run till March 12. Presumably Oracle
expects a decision from the DOJ by then.


CSN 534-10 Oracle Prices Against SQL Server

Oracle can now deliver its new 10g system on Linux or Unix. Windows
will take a while longer.

Oracle is going after smaller fry because it's lost share in the
mid-market to Microsoft and IBM. Thanks to a price cut at the entry
level, it's saying the thing costs the same as SQL Server. Oracle's
Standard Edition One is now priced at $4,995 a processor. Two
processors are needed to qualify for the price. Named user licenses
are $149 a head with five seats minimum.

The regular 10g Standard Edition is still $15k per CPU and $300 per
named user with a four CPU minimum. It includes a free copy of
Oracle's Real Application Clusters (RAC) for performance and
failover. It's good for a 4p cluster.

The 10g is supposed to take 10 minutes to install off a single CD.


CSN 534-11 Sun Wishes Eclipse Would, Well, Go Dark

Sun would love to sear its brand into the flank of that headstrong
little pony, Eclipse, the IBM-organized IDE and Java tools
initiative that Sun doesn't belong to because it says it would mean
giving up its own NetBeans IDE and rewriting its tools.

Eclipse claims Sun wouldn't have to decommit from NetBeans to join.

Sun, which started what could easily be mistaken for a counter-
Eclipse movement a few weeks ago and set itself this straw horse,
thinks Eclipse is unreasonable and that Eclipse's membership rules
"conflicts with the concept of choice and diversity."

Sun says this in an odd, contradictory, part-carrot part-stick open
letter that it penned to Eclipse right before Eclipse got its
emancipation papers from IBM the other day. In it Sun says it's been
actively trying to negotiate some approachment with Eclipse since
last July and claims the sticking points have been more business-
related than technical although their designs diverge. Eclipse
allows different GUI for different operating systems. Sun doesn't.

In the letter Sun ostensibly wants to work with Eclipse in the name
of making Java a better, broader tools platform and, to persuade it,
tries spooking it with talk of "fragmentation."

On the one hand Sun exhorts Eclipse to be a unifying force for Java
technology. Then in a divide-and-conquer gambit, it tries to create
unrest with talk of the new "independent" Eclipse's director being
too powerful, the thought that IBM still controls 70%-80% of the
project's staffers, who will effectively operate outside of whatever
the Eclipse's new board says, and suggests that Eclipse is
insensitive to the business needs of its vendor members by being
interested only in technology for technology's sake.

Sun claims Eclipse needs to adopt outside IP and of course if Sun
and Eclipse could just come to terms then Sun would love to be a
Eclipse contributor and throw in, oh, say, the NetBeans IDE and its
Swing GUI components.

It tells Eclipse not to "define interoperability on [its] own
terms." There is strength in diversity, it says. It suggests Eclipse
become interoperable with the Java Community Process and the new
Java Tools Community.

"The question is no longer," it says, 'Will the Java tools industry
move to one common source base?' That's always been a non-starter
when you think about the players involved. The question is: 'Will
the new Eclipse work with tool vendors and developers to provide the
richest set of offerings and maintain the Java technology and
platform leadership in a competitive marketplace?'"

Eclipse, as expected, reorganized into a not-for-profit the other
day. Its technology and source code remain open and royalty-free. A
board of directors has been set up that includes representatives of
IBM, HP, Montavista, SAP, QNX, Intel, Ericsson and Serena Software.
The organization is interviewing for an executive director.

Eclipse is being stratified into four membership levels including
Strategic Developers and Strategic Consumers, Add-in Providers and
Open Source project leaders, who join for free. Membership of
Strategic Consumers can run $500,000; Strategic Developers can pay
$250,000; being an Add-in Provider costs $5,000. The operation has a
budget of $1.2 million, which means it has the wherewithal to get
into new areas like embedded.

Eclipse claims 19 million download requests since it started and has
close to 50 members.


CSN 534-12 Microsoft Countersues Teknowledge

Microsoft has countersued Teknowledge Corporation, the company that
charged Microsoft, AOL Time Warner and Yahoo with infringing its so-
called HotBox patent last July.

Teknowledge claimed Microsoft was treading on technology to alert
users to web page changes or the availability of software updates.

Microsoft filed suit on Tuesday charging Teknowledge with infringing
two of its patents, one on e-bill payments and the other on
information aggregation.

Teknowledge, describing itself as being 10,000 times smaller than
Microsoft, complained that Microsoft didn't give it any advance
warning or offer to license the widgetry.

According to Teknowledge president and CEO Neil Jacobstein,
"Possibly Microsoft wanted to send a message that small companies
shouldn't dare sue Microsoft. Based on our preliminary analysis, we
believe Microsoft's patent counterclaims to be utterly without
merit."

Last month, a federal court in California consolidated the
Microsoft-AOL-Yahoo suit with the suit Teknowledge filed in defense
of HotBox against Akamai, Inktomi and Cable & Wireless Internet
Service in the summer of 2002. The Markman hearing is now scheduled
for June 28. The Teknowledge patent is number 6,029,175.


CSN 534-13 ISA Server 2004 Beta Bows

Microsoft has put out the public beta of its Internet Security and
Acceleration Server 2004, which provides an advanced application
layer firewall, VPN, caching features and an enhanced user
interface. It's at www.microsoft.com/isaserver.


CSN 534-14 Fujitsu Goes with Laptop Chip-based Blade Server

Fujitsu Computer Systems, which used to be Amdahl, has unpacked a
new Primergy BX300 Pentium M-based two-way blade server that's
packaged as a 3U that can house up to 20 ultra-compact server blades
and is supposed to have low power dissipation.

Pricing starts are $6,500.

An optional PCI slot accommodates either gigabit Ethernet or Fibre
Channel. The mobile Pentium chip can support up to 4GB of main
memory.

Fujitsu says that between the chip's 1.6GHz clock speed and large L2
cache a user can get a 25% increase in output over existing 2p
blades.

Its server chassis is designed with redundant and high-plug power
supplies and fans. The system's management blades are also redundant
and hot-pluggable. The 300 provides for remote management over a LAN
or serial connection via a single dedicated interface. The company
has deployment software that fits out individual blades or clones
existing installations.

The box supports both Linux and Microsoft Windows Server 2003.


CSN 534-15 Oasis Kicks Off Push for Dataweb Standard

OASIS wants to create a standard for sharing, linking and
synchronizing data over the Internet and other networks using XML
documents and Extensible Resource Identifiers (XRIs), the URI-
compatible abstract identifier scheme OASIS also developed. The new
OASIS XRI Data Interchange (XDI) Technical Committee is supposed to
enable implementers to automatically interchange XDI documents and
to express controls over the authority, security, privacy, and
rights of shared data as XDI links.

"The goal of XDI is to do for controlled data sharing what the web
did for open content sharing," said Drummond Reed, the co-convenor
of the OASIS XDI Technical Committee. "XDI does not displace any
specialized XML vocabulary designed to support specific applications
or web services. Rather, it augments them by providing a standard,
generalized way to identify, describe, exchange, link and
synchronize other XML documents encoded in any XML language or
schema - tying them all into one global 'Dataweb.'"

The basic idea is to make the Internet more capable.

XDI will address interoperable, automated data interchange across
distributed applications and trust domains.

Committee members include representatives of AMD, AmSoft Systems,
Booz Allen Hamilton, Cordance, Epok, Neustar and NRI.


CSN 534-16 Oblix Mates with Confluent

E-business house Oblix Inc, the identity management and web
authentication people, is supposed to acquire Confluent Software,
the policy-based web services management folks.

Evidently Oblix wants to use Confluent to validate applications.

Confluent enforces policies by means of policy pipelines and pre-
packages the stuff by chaining common operational concerns including
things like QoS, security and logging. Confluent can support Oblix'
flagship NetPoint identity system as a pre-packaged policy step so
NetPoint customers, without coding, can enforce application-level
end-to-end authentication and authorization schemes that are
compliant with WS-Security and SAML.

In similar moves Computer Associates acquired Adjoin and HP picked
up Talking Blocks for Unicenter and Open View respectively.


CSN 534-17 Sony Takes Out $325m Insurance Policy

Last week IBM moved its unprofitable albeit state-of-the-art chip
unit in under the sheltering wing of its server operation. This week
IBM said that the Sony Group will pour $325 million into IBM's next-
generation 65nm/300mm process in the name of getting "capacity" for
the mysterious new multimedia-oriented Cell chip that Sony, IBM and
Toshiba have been developing at a joint lab in Austin, Texas.

IBM expects to start pilot production of the Cell and other chips
for Sony in the first half of next year.

Evidently Sony is buying a fast ramp to volume.

Sony is reportedly going to spend a billion dollars in its next
fiscal year on the production of Cell and its little friends.

Bear Stearns says Sony has aspirations to be the "Intel of the
consumer electronics world."

The Cell is supposed to be small and process 10 times the
information that current game chips do.


CSN 534-18 VoiceXML 2.0 Close to Standardization

W3C has advanced VoiceXML 2.0 to the status of a proposed standard,
what it calls a "recommendation." It is in final review.

The widgetry, a part of the consortium's Speech Interface Framework,
brings web-based development and content to interactive voice
response applications. It allows developers to create audio dialogs
that feature synthesized speech, digitized audio, recognition of
spoken or touch tone key input, recording of spoken input, telephony
and mixed-initiative conversations. VoiceXML controls how an
application interacts with the user.

There are eight known implementation of the stuff in both prototype
and released products.

The W3C's Voice Browser Working Group is one of its largest and most
active, W3C says, including all the usual suspects. The group's
royalty-free licensing policy was referred to W3C's Patent Advisory
Group where it was decided that the core VoiceXML 2.0 spec be
royalty-free.


CSN 534-19 StarOffice Lights On Solaris x86

StarOffice 7-on-Solaris x86 has reached that magic moment known as
general availability, according to Sun. That puts Sun a step closer
to porting its newfangled Java Desktop System to Solaris x86 later
this year.

Last time it counted Sun had a half-million registered Solaris x86
licenses, it said. The operating system costs $79.95.

Thanks to Sun's Project Atlas, Solaris x86 is supposed to be 30%
faster than Linux 2.4.

Sun is also bragging about United India Insurance Company tossing
Office out and substituting StarOffice 7 on 10,000 machines to save
money.

There are supposed to have been upwards of 40 million cumulative
StarOffice or Open Office downloads last month.

To amuse himself, Sun's software prince Jonathan Schwartz directed
an open letter to IBM CEO Sam Palmisano the week before last
offering him Sun's Java Desktop System for $50 per employee.
Palmisano of course had challenged all of IBM to move to a Linux
desktop by the end of the year. And of course Palmisano is dreaming.
The software's not there.


CSN 534-20 Microsoft Upgrades Business Portal App

Microsoft has upgraded its Business Portal software, the stuff that
lets organizations deploy a role-based portal that builds on their
network security schema.

Launched last May, Business Portal enables access to data,
applications and services for employees, customers and business
partners via a browser.

The key enhancement in Release 2 is the adoption of Windows
SharePoint Services as Business Portal's foundation. Using
SharePoint means Business Portal can offer users document libraries,
calendars and announcements to record activities, share and edit
documents, track meeting notes and provide links to other relevant
sites.

Business Portal is integrated with Microsoft's Great Plains and
Solomon business apps. Microsoft also enhanced the HRM Self Service
Suite in Great Plains and introduced a new Payroll Time and
Attendance module for Solomon customers.

Redmond said the upgrade would allow SharePoint Web Parts created by
other developers to be deployed through Business Portal, thereby
increasing the range of information and services that can be
delivered through the portal.

The price of Business Portal 2.0 has been reduced to $20-$40 a user
based on the number of licenses purchased, with an unlimited user
license going for $40,000.


CSN 534-21 Oki Uses .NET in Newfangled Convergence Server

Oki Electric Industry Company Ltd unwrapped a telephony server based
on .NET Tuesday that it said was the first of its kind. Officially
the thing is called IP Convergence Server IPstage SS9100 that, as
its name suggests, converges large-scale IP-PBX functionality with
mission-critical business applications such as ERP and EIP as well
as web services. (Think authentication and payment processing, for
instance.) The widgetry is supposed to enable various modes of real-
time communication such as unified messaging from inside the
business apps for improved management efficiencies. The system
provides voice mail, instant messaging and e-mail. It goes on the
Japanese market next month.


CSN 534-22 System X Trades Desktops for Servers

Apple's folks want us to know that Virginia Tech, which built System
X that amazing record-making supercomputer - the third-fastest in
the world - out of Apple desktops last fall, is going to find good
homes for all of those 1,100 Power Mac G5s as it migrates the
cluster over to Apple's now-available Xserve G5 rack-mounted 1U
servers.

The servers and desktops are based on the same 64-bit PowerPC G5
chip.

The Xserve is supposed to deliver 15 gigaflops of peak double-
precision processing power per system.

The system runs the Panther release of the Unix-based Mac OS X, the
first rev to support 64-bits.

The switchover, expected to be done by May, will cut the amount of
space Apple desktops take up, cut down on heat and power and provide
server management. The school says it's a matter of
price/performance.

Assistant professor of computer science Srinidhi Varadarajan, who
built System X, wrote a package called Déjà vu that provides a
fault-tolerant software environment so that if any one component
failed, the queuing system is alerted and a free node takes over so
calculations don't have to be restarted.


CSN 534-23 EC Watch

The European Commission may have lost its stomach for a so-called
"must-carry" provision that would insist that Microsoft include
rival media players in Windows as a penalty for tying its own Media
Player to the operating system, according to the Financial Times.

The penalty was conceived of as an alternate remedy to the EC's idea
of making Microsoft offer a version of Windows without the Microsoft
plug-in when the EC formally charged Microsoft last summer.

Meanwhile, a German magazine called Focus claims "informed" EU
sources say the EC is considering imposing a record fine of EUR
100,000,000 ($123,840,000) on Microsoft. EC spokeswoman Amelia
Torries dismissed the story as "pure and utter speculation."

The Economist puts the fine between $300 million and $500 million.
Worst case is something like $3.2 billion.

Microsoft evidently wants to cut a settlement that prevents future
run-ins with the regulators as it goes on tying new features to
Windows. "We want to find a solution that we can apply to future
situation, that can be generalized in other situations," Microsoft
deputy general counsel John Frank is quoted as saying.


CSN 534-24 SQL Server 2000 Reporting Services Debuts

Microsoft launched SQL Server 2000 Reporting Services, the business
intelligence add-on for the database, as expected.

The reporting tool, which integrates OLAP, data mining, warehousing
and data extraction, transformation and loading tools, is supposed
to provide real-time information from any data source to any device.

A SQL Server 2000 license is required for every server that
Reporting Services is deployed on.

Best Buy, Cox Communications, RF Micro Devices, ASB Bank, and Mary
Kay are among the companies that are supposed to have started
implementing Reporting Services.


CSN 534-25 Servers Heated Up in Q4

Gartner says server shipments were up 25% year-over-year in Q4 to
1.59 million units, 91% of the things x86. The numbers were the best
in three years. For all of 2003, they were up 20%. HP was first
(462k), Dell second (319k), IBM third (274k) and Sun fourth (84k),
but quarter-over-quarter HP grew the least (21%). IBM was first
(39%), Sun second (33%) and Dell third (30%). HP also lost a point
of share landing at 29% at a time when even wounded Sun and
Sparc/Solaris gained a little back and had 5.3% of the market.
Dell's share was up fractionally. IBM gained almost two points to
close at 17.2%.


CSN 534-26 Danes Go For UBL

Denmark has adopted an early version of the Oasis Universal Business
Language (UBL 0.7) as a standard for e-commerce in the public
sector. It's going to be used to integrate state systems with a
newly implemented portal for public procurement (www.doip.dk). UBL,
whose 1.0 version is in beta, is an XML library of common business
data components along with a set of standard business documents such
as purchase orders and invoices that are assembled from the
component library.


Drive Bay


CSN 534-27 EMC Product Launch Set

EMC has scheduled a conference call for Monday February 9 apparently
to unwrap new Symmetrix arrays called the DMX2s - doubtless because
they're supposed to be twice as powerful and have twice as many
drives as their predecessors - as well as new CX300, 500 and 700
Clariion widgetry. There's reportedly some low low-end CX100s and
CX150s floating around as well.


CSN 534-28 Broadcom Buys RAIDCore

Broadcom has acquired Nashua, New Hampshire-based RAID and
virtualization software start-up RAIDCore Inc and its RAID software
stack for single- and dual-processor servers.

RAIDCore's software is OS-, I/O bus- and hardware-independent and
can reportedly be used with existing and future server RAID products
including SATA RAID and SAS RAID.

Broadcom said the acquisition would give it a complete set of RAID
products for the server storage market.

Initial products from the acquisition are supposed to focus on
integrated RAID-on-chip and RAID-on-motherboard gear for entry-level
and mid-range server applications.

RAID is used for redundancy and improving data transfer rates.

Broadcom valued the deal at up to $16.5 million including cash
acquisition costs and future compensation expenses.


CSN 534-29 Cornice Raises Mega Bucks

Storage start-up Cornice has secured a whopping $51 million in
second-round funding, taking the Longmont, Colorado concern's total
funding to $81 million.

Existing investors CIBC Capital partners, Nokia Venture Partners and
VantagePoint Venture Partners as well as newcomers BA Venture
Partners and GIC Special Investments participated.

Founded in August 2000, Cornice provides a high-capacity embedded
storage device called a Storage Element for portable consumer
electronic devices such as digital music players and digital video
capture devices.

Although the Storage Element shares some architectural kinship with
hard drives such as a spinning platter and a read/write head,
Cornice executives argue that it's not a drive. Hard drive features
such as elaborate caching and buffering mechanisms, built for PCs
and servers, have been stripped out of it because they're not needed
in consumer electronics.

The 2GB Storage Element, launched last month, was designed into
products that turned up at the Consumer Electronics Show.

The first-generation Storage Element with its 1.5GB capacity was
launched last June.

Samsung, Rio, RCA, iRiver and Digitalway have incorporated the
Storage Element in their consumer electronics devices.

Texas Instruments, an early investor in Cornice, has helped the
company develop and manufacture its ICs.

Cornice is the brainchild of former Maxtor executive Kevin Magenis
and former Quantum exec Curt Bruner. Magenis is Cornice's CEO and
Bruner its CTO.


Linux Watch


CSN 534-30 SCO Amends IBM Complaint Again

The SCO Group has amended its $3 billion worth of charges against
IBM and, according to SCO CEO Darl McBride, has added copyright
complaints to its largely breach-of-contract suit.

McBride suggested that IBM was making more of SCO's original
misappropriation of trade secrets charge than SCO likes and that the
copyright issue would somehow get SCO back in the direction it
wanted to go.

In mid-January SCO was threatening to press copyright claims, but it
was assumed the company meant against end users since its lawyers
had indicated that would be their grounds. This is a horse of a
different color.

Before the MyDoom distraction, when it was turning over its evidence
against Linux to IBM, SCO was sounding a bit airy about whether
Linux was copied from AIX and Dynix or not, telling the court it was
"almost certainly" copied or derived.

Anyway, the parties are supposed to be in court sorting out all the
existing motions and counter-motions on Friday, February 6. IBM is
more than likely to come in all disgruntled with SCO's answers to
its discovery questions - SCO left a lot unsaid claiming it needs an
up-to-date copy of IBM Unix system AIX to get to the bottom of
exactly what IBM poached and depositions from Linux programmers to
learn the source of the code.

SCO of course has a motion pending to get AIX, but was ordered by
the court to make its case against Linux first. If it got AIX and
Dynix, it told the court it would need 90 days to sort through it
and give IBM its evidence.

 Doubtless IBM will try to set things up for a summary judgment.

IBM is unlikely to get a summary judgment out of the magistrate
dealing with all the housekeeping on behalf of the judge whose case
it really is.

By the way, one legal opinion claims that SCO left itself wide
opened when it filed suit against Novell. Supposedly it's dead in
the water if it doesn't come out of it with exclusive rights to the
IP.


CSN 534-31 SuSE Chief Moved to Novell Job

SuSE boss Richard Seibt has evidently gotten his reward. He's going
to run Novell EMEA as president as Novell transitions to a Linux
house. The post's former occupant, Gerard Van Kemmel, has been made
chairman of Novell EMEA.

Richard, an ex-IBMer, has control of day-to-day operations. Gerard
is supposed help with strategy and developing relationships with
government agencies, large system integrators and strategic
customers. One might wonder how long this arrangement will last.

According to a canned statement attributed to Novell CEO Jack
Messman, the Richard move is supposed to show Novell's commitment to
open source and Linux.

SuSE, a Novell business unit since it got bought, has been turned
over to Markus Rex, the guy who was SuSE's VP of R&D until this
apotheosis.

Rex will be general manager and will report directly to Novell vice-
chairman Chris Stone. Rex is supposed to develop the SuSE properties
- from desktop to server - and deliver other Novell units a complete
Linux solution stack. There's no mention of the unit having other
responsibilities.

Meanwhile, Novell is offering new certifications to promote Linux
adoption. One offers a Professional certificate in SuSE and the
other one is a Certified Linux Engineer program.


CSN 534-32 SCO Moves Site, Microsoft Shrugs Off Attack

For the duration of the MyDoom attack, now deemed the largest Denial
of Service attack in human history - SCO normally gets 600,000 hits
a day was flooded with 50 times that number - the company has
changed its web site from www.sco.com to www.thescogroup.com.

For all the warning SCO got, a lot of the new site's hyperlinks
initially took the visitor back to the inoperable www.sco.com, a
situation that was subsequently fixed.

The new site also provides links to security vendors like Network
Associates and Symantec that the MyDoom.b variant was scheduled to
try to interrupt.

SCO said moving the web site is the first step in a layered
contingency plan believed to consist largely of moving the site
around if need be. It simply pulled the plug on sco.com.

SCO repeated that it and Microsoft had posted a $500,000 reward for
the capture of MyDoom's author or authors.

Microsoft, one of the sturdier web sites, withstood the very much
smaller MyDoom.b assault - the second worm infected very few boxes -
on Tuesday although it also set up an alternate web site that
customers who couldn't reach www.microsoft.com could use. It's at
https://information.microsoft.com/. MyDoom.b was supposed to
aggravate Microsoft until the end of the month.

Virus researchers currently think that based on internal evidence
both MyDoom and MyDoom.b are the work of one hand, possibly someone
named Andy. Microsoft is expecting a MyDoom.c to be developed that
will come after it.


CSN 534-33 SCOsource Linux Tax Called a Flop

Decatur Jones Equity Partners LLC, an equity research house that
follows Red Hat, Citrix, Wind River and the SCO Group, the later
making it a rarity, has cut its projection on revenues coming in to
SCO from the SCOsource licensing effort by roughly 90%.

It figures Novell's willingness to indemnify its customers, the Open
Source Develop Labs' willingness to contribute to end-user legal
bills and Novell's claims to Unix copyrights has given companies the
Dutch courage to defy SCO and not pay the Linux tax.

Decatur's prognostication says, "We believe it is now unlikely that
SCO will generate meaningful end-user SCOsource revenues in 2004."
It figures SCOsource can only do a piddling $625,000, down from $7
million.

Decatur is also betting that SCO comes in with a loss of 43 cents a
share instead of profits of 20 cents a share thanks to its mounting
legal costs.

When it posted its October quarter, SCO confessed it wasn't
expecting much in the way of royalties in the January quarter or
that it could predict how SCOsource would do this year.


CSN 534-34 OSDL Defines Data Center Linux, Seeks Reaction

The Data Center Linux (DCL) working group over at the Open Source
Development Lab (OSDL) has released a DCL Technical Capabilities 1.0
document saying it wants feedback from developers and the industry.

The move is the step before OSDL locks down its DCL requirements
document, the reference blueprint for Linux distributions, large end
users and Linux kernel developers.

The paper defines 300 prioritized capabilities organized into seven
categories: scalability, performance, reliability, RAS (reliability,
availability and scalability), manageability, clusters, standards,
security and usability.

The idea is to ensure that Linux can support demanding enterprise-
class application such as high-end OLTP and decision support,
according to Steve Geary, HP's director of Linux engineering and
chair of the DCL working group.

See
http://www.osdl.org/lab_activities/data_center_linux/DCL_ExecSumm_Te
chCapabilities_1_0.pdf.


CSN 534-35 Groklaw Editor Takes Day Job

Pamela Jones, aka PJ, the editor of nine-month-old Groklaw.net, a
scourge of the SCO Group, although SCO's litigation against open
source and Linux gave birth to the site, is going to be director of
litigation risk research for Open Source Risk Management LLC (OSRM)
as well.

OSRM, which, as its name suggests, provides risk management to
corporate users of free and open source software, has kicked off an
Open Source Insurance Initiative that Jones' appointment is part of.
OSRM founder Daniel Egger thinks that by fostering a collaborative,
community-based model for identifying and mitigating relevant
litigation risks will allow it to offer its comprehensive insurance
at the lowest possible cost.

Jones will still manage the Groklaw site and she's supposed to have
editorial independence, but as she herself points out there's
obviously synergy between the two endeavors. She hopes the research
will "result in building a bulwark of legal protection for GNU/Linux
software."

She said that she sees "a need for low-cost vendor-neutral
protection that will at the same time make it possible to allow
continued free modification of the code. No one else has
successfully done so. I believe OSRM has come up with the right
answer."

OSRM was started last year and says it provides code-scanning and
copyright infringement detection technologies, risk assessment, risk
mitigation consulting, best practices training and certification,
vendor-neutral indemnification and custom insurance to the Global
1000.


CSN 534-36 LSB 2.0 Made Public

The Free Standards Group has put its rev of the Linux Standard Base,
LSB 2.0, up for public review. Comments will be collected until the
very beginning of March.

Critics contend that the LSB, for all the time that's gone into it,
still fails at its essential purpose, which is to make sure that any
Linux application program can run on any Linux distribution without
the ISV having to tinker with it and basically create distribution-
specific programs.

The new specification is supposed to revise the core spec to support
modules that are built on the core LSB, introduce an ABI for C++ and
support new architectures like PPC64 and AMD64. LSB 2.0 also updates
basic specifications and implementations underlying LSB such as the
Single Unix Spec.

Besides the written specification, LSB 2.0 includes test suites, a
development environment, a sample implementation and developer
documentation. See http://www.linuxbase .org/.


CSN 534-37 Now There's a Thought - Free Linux

Lindows.com is going to try to harness the power of the peer-to-peer
networks that have ripped off music and movies on a massive scale on
behalf of its Linux desktop operating system.

It proposes to give away its LinuxLive! "demo" software, the stuff
that currently runs off a CD, costs $29.95 and doesn't require an
install that messes up a Windows system, for free on some of the
popular P2P networks like Gnutella.

Call the company crazy but LindowsLive supposedly does almost
everything that LindowsOS does. It surfs the net, sends and receives
e-mail and instant messages and includes a copy of OpenOffice.

Lindows CEO Michael Robertson acknowledges the move is potentially
self-destructive but he's gambling that the exposure to millions of
people expands his customer base at a minimal cost. Or so he says.
He claims he's hoping the P2P people buy other products and services
from Lindows.

Robertson says Lindows will spend upwards of $100,000 this year on
bandwidth charges to deliver CD images of its software that people
can use to construct an installation CD for LindowsOS. He figures
the P2Ps will save him money.


CSN 534-38 Opteron Gets Real-Time Linux

Concurrent's Integrated Solutions Division has moved its very, very
serious real-time Linux operating system, some Red Hat-derived
widgetry, to the AMD Opteron taking advantage of the chip's floating
point, 64-bit processing and throughput.

As far as anyone knows, the so-called RedHawk 2.0 is the first RTOS
for Opteron, at least from a major RTOS player. Concurrent's stuff
on Xeon platforms shows up in places like FA-18 simulation systems
and THAAD missiles.

The company is expecting the thing to open doors to new markets like
medical imaging, video encoding/decoding and the financial world.

The port uses the very latest 2.6 Linux kernel.


CSN 534-39 Opera Puts Internet Demigod on its Board

John Patrick, IBM's influential former VP of Internet technology and
now president of Attitude LLC, has been named to Opera Software's
board. Patrick, an acknowledged Internet visionary, is credited with
bringing the Internet to IBM. Business 2.0 has called him "one of
the industry's most intriguing mind." He's supposed to be one of the
top 30 people in the world to drive innovation. Patrick was a
founding member of the World Wide Web Consortium and is now chairman
of the Global Internet Project.


CSN 534-40 OSDL Snags NTT

The Open Source Development Lab (OSDL) is picking up new members at
a clip these days. Its latest recruit is none other than the great
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT), which is supposed
to taking part in the lab's Data Center Linux and Carrier Grade
Linux projects. NTT, which is composed of 430 companies and 200,000
employers, will have its R&D arm NTT Research Labs take the point on
this one.


CSN 534-41 Voltaire Hires Ex-Brocade Guy

Voltaire, the hopeful Infiniband house, has hired ex-Brocade VP of
global OEM sales Mark Favreau, making him executive VP and general
manager of North America operations. He will be responsible for
Voltaire's sales and support including OEMs and resellers. Before
Brocade, Favreau was director of channel sales at SGI.


CSN 534-42 Trolltech Adds .NET Support

Trolltech has put .NET Framework and 64-bit processing support in
the latest release of Qt, its multi-platform toolkit. Qt 3.3 also
support the GNU C++ compiler on Windows (MinGW gcc), which makes
building multi-platform programs easier since developers can use the
same API - Qt - and the same compiler - gcc - on Unix, Linux, Mac
and Windows.

Qt-based applications can now live inside or co-exist with the .NET
Framework. Qt apps can either interoperate with .NET via ActiveX or
manually through Microsoft's managed C++ extensions.

Qt 3.3 also supports Internet Protocols v4 and v6 so applications
will be Internet-aware.


CSN 534-43 TimeSys Offers Linux 2.6 IDE for the PowerPC

TimeSys, the embedded folk, has sent its TimeStorm Linux Development
Kits for the PowerPC to a public beta.

The stuff bundles an Eclipse-based TimeStorm IDE with a beta of what
is thought to be the first commercial port of Linux 2.6 to the
PowerPC chip. The company anticipates a full release by the end of
the month at a royalty-free price starting at $995 per developer
seat.

See http://www.timesys.com/2.6.

Timesys has the first Eclipse embedded development tools for Linux
2.6. The IDE is its flagship tool and now sells for $795 per seat.


CSN 534-44 Desktop Linux Summit Redux

The Desktop Linux Summit that exhibitors and even the organizer
dropped out of last year because it was nothing more than a
Lindows.com commercial, is back for a second time. According to
Lindows, Red Hat, Seagate and Sun are going to sponsor the thing.
It's set for April 22-23 in San Diego, California, Lindows'
hometown. See www.desktoplinuxsummit.org.


Mail Bag


CSN 534-45 Inflatable Dolls Called Mommy

Hope this article ("Huge MyDoom Zombie Army Wipes Out SCO") isn't
your last word on the MyDoom virus. Hope we can expect an editorial
in CNS and Linuxgram STRONGLY condeming it.

You could point out that it's a proven fact that guys who write
viruses suffer from a medical condition - microphallus - and
probably own an inflatable doll they call Mommy.

Interfering with SCO's free speech is bad enough, but to use
zillions of innocent people to do it, and bog down the whole net in
the process is just plain vicious.

Next time, maybe the Linux hacker who did this will hijack and
airliner and fly it into the SCO buildings (oh, I forget, hackers
are cowards).

Somebody in the Linux community knows who did this, and they should
turn that person over to the FBI. If they don't, then the denials of
the Linux bigwigs will sound as hollow as the PLO's.

Rather than focusing on the legal issues, many of these same Linux
bigwigs found it expedient to demonize SCO - admittedly an easy
target because nobody likes the company - and whip their followers
up into a frenzy. SCO has become a scapegoat for every IP law that
the Linux community doesn't like, and for their nagging collective
doubts about the originality of Linux. The present act of terrorism
was an entirely foreseeable consequence of this strategy.

The Linux leadership needs to act responsibly and immediately tone
down its anti-SCO rhetoric.

Mark Ryan


CSN 534-46 Practicing Law Without a License

The letter from Daniel Wallace, a retired physicist we misidentified
as working for Insight Communications, that we ran last week created
a little firestorm judging from the calls and e-mail we got. The
following letter, which came in at press time, is indicative of the
reaction.

To the Editor:

I am an Adjunct Professor at Duquesne University School of Law
teaching upper-level intellectual property law, former director of
legal affairs for TimeSys Corporation (an embedded Linux developer),
and former vice-president of technology asset management for PNC
Bank. In addition to teaching, I currently advise a number of
corporate clients regarding information technology matters with
related intellectual property issues, and, in particular, risk
management issues related to Linux and other open source programs.

I was disturbed to read your recent posting of a letter to the
editor authored by Daniel Wallace. I was equally disturbed by the
lack of legal expertise reflected in most of the posted comments. I
feel strongly that a proper legal response is required, and needs
and deserves equal exposure in your paper - not a buried posted
response.

So - I am requesting that you publish the following response to Mr
Wallace's letter in the next available issue.

Most sincerely,

Celia Santander Esq


Mr Wallace correctly describes a number of different legal
principles, including a fair description of the rights involved in
derivative works. However, his key assumption - the foundation of
his entire argument - has absolutely no basis in case law, statutory
law or even reasonable legal analogy. His argument is based on one
key principle: That in order to grant a unilateral license, the
licensor may only impose conditions to the license that involve the
licensor's exclusive rights, and that the licensor may not impose
any conditions that involve any of the licensee's rights.

He cites a Supreme Court case (General Talking Pictures Corp v
Western Electric Co Inc) for this principle. There are a number of
problems with this case and Mr. Wallace's interpretation.

Firstly, as a threshold issue, you cannot analogize patent law to
copyright law. It is like comparing apples to zebras. As just a
couple of the many examples of why this is true, consider some
fundamental differences between the two bodies of law: patents allow
each co-inventor to exercise her exclusive rights without any
accounting to the other(s) while copyright law requires co-authors
to report to and compensate as appropriate their fellow co-authors
for any exercise of rights that results in revenue generation;
patents cover ideas while copyrights cover expressions of ideas;
copyrights arise naturally - they exist without the author taking
any formal action at all, while patents involve formal processes of
application and prosecution via the US Patent and Trademark Office
to have a patent granted. These are just a few of the many, many
differences that make patent case law wholly inapplicable to
copyright law.

We could stop right here on solid ground that Mr Wallace's arguments
are without merit, having been based entirely on patent case law.
However, just for the sake of argument, let's analogize anyway, and
see if we can follow Mr Wallace's train of thought.

So let's look at the patent case that Mr. Wallace relies on -
General Talking Pictures Corp v Western Electric Co, Inc., 305 US
124. This case does not discuss in any detail whatsoever the scope
or nature of permissible conditions to unilateral license. The case
merely cites another case (United States v General Electric Co) to
affirm that a patent license may be require, as a condition of the
license, certain performance of the licensee provided that such
performance reasonably relates to the benefits that the patent
holder can expect to receive from his patent. The case cited (United
States v General Electric Co) has since been called into question by
the Supreme Court and its holdings are no longer good law.

Moving right along -

The other lines of patent cases that Mr Wallace refers to (aside
from being patent cases and therefore not applicable to copyright
law) merely reinforce that licenses can be conditioned on the
performance of the licensee; still other lines of cases discuss the
principle that once a tangible commodity is produced from a patent,
the patent holder's ability to control what happens with that
tangible commodity is greatly diminished and eventually disappears.
The only thread of reason from all of these cases is that a
condition imposed on a patent license by the licensor must have some
relationship to the rights of the patent holder. For example, if I
license my patent to ABC Manufacturing, I can make the license
conditional upon ABC using only top-grade materials, conforming to
ISO standards, selling only to Australia, etc, but I cannot make the
license conditional upon the president of ABC standing on his head
for one hour every Tuesday morning at 9:00 am. Why? That condition
has no relationship to the benefits I can expect to gain from my
status as a patent holder. I suspect this is the principle that Mr
Wallace grossly misconstrued as "the conditions he places must
involve only his exclusive rights and not the exclusive [rights] of
parties involved..."

If we take this principle and apply it to the GPL, the original
licensor is conditioning his license to the world at large on one
simple condition - "If you want to copy and make derivative works of
my code, you have to license those derivatives under a license like
this one...." If Mr. Wallace insists on analogizing to patent law,
there is nothing wrong with this condition. It relates directly to
the benefits the copyright holder can expect to obtain. A copyright
holder benefits by having sole control of his copyrighted work, to
do with as he sees fit, including, if he so desires, to donate the
copyright to the public domain, a common practice of universities
and government entities. The copyright holder in this case is merely
conditioning his license to create derivative works on the condition
that such derivatives be licensed under similar terms, to prevent
the licensee (for example) from copying his code and incorporating
it into a proprietary product for which she can then charge money,
competing with the original copyright holder, and denigrating the
benefits the copyright holder derives from his copyright. This is a
direct correlation to the rights of the copyright holder - a perfect
example of exactly the type of condition that is appropriate for a
licensor to impose on a licensee. This is no different from a patent
licensor conditioning manufacture of his surgical device being
restricted for sale in the US and/or manufactured only from surgical
stainless steel.

Now let's look at the common sense definitional view. Mr Wallace
states that for a licensor to place conditions on a licensee that
involve the licensee's "exclusive rights" falls "outside the
definition of a unilateral permission." However, nowhere does Mr
Wallace attempt to define a "unilateral permission" nor does he cite
any support whatsoever for this statement. So let's take a look. A
unilateral permission is a permission granted by one person that a
second person can choose to accept or not accept. I realize that
"unilateral" signifies one person only, but simply because I give
you my unilateral permission to swim in my swimming pool does not
mean that you have to or that you will. You can choose to do so or
not, and your actions do not make my permission any less
"unilateral."

Unlike a contract, a unilateral permission does not require the
second person (accepting the permission) to do anything to signify
acceptance. In a contract, the second person would have to sign his
name on a document, click a web site icon, begin performance, send a
check, or any other number of acts that signify acceptance. It is
this performance of an act signifying acceptance, and the first
person (offeror's) awareness of this act (acceptance) that concludes
formation of the contract. What makes a unilateral permission
different is that the second person does not need to do anything to
accept the permission - he does not need to perform any act
signifying acceptance, and the first person (offeror) does not need
to ever know if the second person accepted the permission or not.
That is the difference.

When a unilateral permission is conditioned upon something, however,
the condition must be fulfilled in order for the license to be
valid. This means the licensee must do something to fulfill the
condition. However, the licensor does not ever need to know about
it, and doesn't care. Either the condition is fulfilled and the
permission (license) is valid, or the condition is not fulfilled and
the permission is not valid.

Now here is the key point and a basic fact of law - Anytime a person
does something that they are not legally obligated to do, or
voluntarily refrains from doing something that they have a legal
right to do, they are acting in a manner that affects their personal
and exclusive "rights" - they are giving up one of their "rights."
Therefore, anytime a person voluntarily fulfills a condition in
order to obtain a unilateral permission (license), they necessarily
are performing acts that involve their own personal exclusive
rights. After all, they don't have to fulfill the condition - there
is no legal obligation to do so - but they choose to give up a right
that they have in order to receive the benefit of the unilateral
permission that was so conditioned. It matters not one whit that the
exclusive rights we are talking about here are copyrights.

So - Mr Wallace's basic premise - that the GPL is unsound because it
requires the licensee as a condition of the unilateral permission of
the licensor to do something affecting the licensee's "exclusive
rights" is an impossible assertion. He concedes that unilateral
permissions can be conditional, but ignores the fact that you cannot
fulfill a condition without affecting your rights (copyright or
otherwise)(your right to free speech, your right to seek employment,
you right to go or not go to the supermarket, your right move to
Alaska, etc). We all have innumerable rights and have to exercise at
least one of them to fulfill any condition.

Perhaps what is confusing Mr Wallace is this: It is true that you
cannot interfere with the rights of a copyright holder without
his/her permission. Mr Wallace, I believe, views the GPL as
interference by one party (the licensor) with the copyrights of
another party (the licensee) because the license is conditioned upon
the licensee taking certain actions regarding his copyrights. He
presents the following alleged conundrum: Either the second party
(licensee) is agreeing to this interference, in which case the GPL
cannot be a unilateral permission since now we have two parties
agreeing with each other (sounds like a contract); or, the second
party (licensee) is not agreeing to this interference in which case
the GPL is not valid because it is a violation of copyright law. (Mr
Wallace ignores the issue of whether or not a valid contract has
been formed under the first scenario.) The answer to Mr Wallace's
purported conundrum is this: The second party is  consenting to the
interference by fulfilling the condition of the unilateral
permission, but merely fulfilling such a condition does not change
the nature of the unilateral permission as unilateral.

Re: Mr Wallace's quotations from IBM's amended counterclaims, IBM's
reference to the GPL as a "public agreement" cast in a "binding
legal form," has nothing to do with the characterization of the GPL
as a unilateral permission. It has been a common and unchallenged
legal practice for countless years for copyright holders who wish to
donate their copyrights to the public to do so by unilateral
permission, generally in the form of a notice contained in the
copyrighted work to that effect. Members of the public can "agree"
or not "agree" to accept the permission by copying or not copying
the proffered work. This is what IBM is talking about when it refers
to a "public agreement" cast in a "binding legal form" and, yes,
they are talking about copyright permissions. That is the subject,
is it not?

Finally, Mr Wallace's discussion of federal preemption is not
applicable. Certainly, federal law preempts state law if there is a
conflict.  However, there is no conflict here, and the FSF's use of
a euphemism "copyleft" does not somehow create a conflict in laws
where one does not otherwise exist. The GPL is founded and can only
exist on the basis of copyright law and the rights of authors to do
what they want with their own work and to condition licenses to
others as they see fit. There is no conflict, merely the fear of the
uniformed when encountering a new exercise of freedom and rights
granted by the same laws that have governed us for almost a century.

As an aside to Mr Wallace's comments, I believe that the GPL
functions as either a unilateral permission or a contract, depending
upon how it is being implemented by any given party. So, for
example, if a company offers you an online download of Linux and
asks you to click an "I agree" button acknowledging that the
download of Linux you are about to receive is subject to the GPL
(and you have been given an opportunity to read the GPL before
clicking), and you click, seems to me you've just entered a binding
agreement called the GPL no different from a Microsoft EULA effected
in the same way. By contrast, simply placing the GPL in a tarball
with the code in my mind falls squarely into the category of
"unilateral permission." I see no conflict here - merely a
difference in administration, both equally effective.


BillyGrams


CSN 534-47 Darl's Phone 'Slashdotted'

On Sunday while MyDoom was overwhelming the SCO Group's web site,
the home phone of SCO CEO Darl McBride was being overwhelmed during
the Super Bowl by prank calls, most of them rude and insulting, put
in train by the Linux-leaning Slashdot site, which posted his
unlisted number and thought it would amuse itself. "I know this is
cruel," a ringleader who calls himself "boy afraid" wrote, "but it's
fun."


CSN 534-48 School Daze

The University of California at Berkeley has a stake in whatever
Eolas Technologies can get out of Microsoft for patent infringement,
and it appears that the University of Rochester has a similar
interest in the Blue Noise Mask infringement claims that Research
Corporation Technologies (RCT) appears to be successfully pressing
against Microsoft. RCT is the one that got a summary judgment
against Microsoft last week and like the Eolas case hundred of
millions of dollars of Microsoft's money is at stake. Also like
Eolas, Microsoft claims the RCT patents are invalid. The University
of Rochester earned $42 million in royalties in fiscal 2002 and,
while it doesn't value the technology exactly, it indicated that the
Blue Noise Mask patents were among the most lucrative in its
portfolio. RCT, to which Rochester assigned the patents in 1991, has
previously sued HP, Lexmark and Seiko Epson and they all agreed to
pay royalties to settle.


CSN 534-49 Microsoft Loses China Chief

The president of Microsoft China Tang Jun has been poached by
China's biggest online game house Shanda Networking to be its
president in its run-up to going public on the Nasdaq, an IPO
expected to raise maybe $1 billion. Reuters says Tang was expected
to leave since a reorganization left him reporting to Microsoft
China CEO Tim Chen.


CSN 534-50 India in Line for Microsoft Code

India is reportedly negotiating to become one of the countries that
get source code from Microsoft under its year-old Government
Security Program.


CSN 534-51 AMD Tries To Avoid Getting Clipped

AMD has gone to court to get a declaratory judgment saying that it
doesn't infringe on the Intergraph Clipper patents that Intel had to
pay Intergraph a tidy packet over. Intergraph also picked up $18
million from Texas Instruments and is still suing Dell, HP and
Gateway.


CSN 534-52 Novell Gets Equal Time

SCO Group CEO Darl McBride got to lay out his legal cases and his
views on intellectual property, the GPL and the profit motive for
the benefit of the Harvard Law School and the Harvard Journal of Law
and Technology on Monday. We gather Novell vice-chairman Chris Stone
demanded equal time because he's going to speak at the same venue on
Monday, February 23 at 6:30 pm. He'll probably get a friendlier
reception from the fashionably PC audience. One thing Darl said that
we hadn't heard before was that Novell's rights shrink because it's
gone into the direct competition with SCO by buying SuSE. See
http://jolt.law.harvard.edu for the webcast.


CSN 534-53 Finger Pointing at CA

Computer Associates hosted an analyst day the other day and wouldn't
say whether it's responded to the Wells Notice the SEC slapped it
with last month. BusinessWeek has picked up on the feuding Wang-
Kumar factions at CA where one side is blaming the other for cooking
the books from 1998 to 2000. The magazine says it might be hard to
pin the shenanigans on founder Charles Wang, who was clearly
omnipotent when he was there, because he never used e-mail or left a
voice message. Wang's supporters say CEO Sanjay Kumar was
responsible for sales and accounting.


CSN 534-54 First Legal Bill: $1.6m

RealNetworks posted a fourth-quarter loss of $5.3 million, on three
cents a share, on improved sales of $54.1 million. It said
attributed $1.6 million of its losses, or a penny a share, to the
private antitrust suit that it lodged against Microsoft right before
Christmas.


CSN 534-55 SAP Looking To Buy

SAP has been talking about making a small acquisition.


CSN 534-56 Here, Amuse Yourself

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