Lineo near Death 290
An anonymous reader notd a bit running on LinuxGram about Lineo about
ready to croak. It paints a pretty bleak view of the Linux embedded system
company. Oddly enough, I'm still not exactly sure what they were trying to
do.
Simple Explanation (Score:5, Insightful)
It's simple why this company is going bankrupt. It's poor management like in the example above. There are likely to be many others like it.
It's time business retreats from the glitz and gets back to basics: making money.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2, Insightful)
Unfortuantely, there's a bit of a bias in silicon valley. They like to do business with other local firms. And rent is expensive here. But the alternative is not being considered for certain deals. It's not outright stupid decision, except in hindsight.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:1)
Recently, my company moved to much nicer office space, and the rent per employee approximately doubled. But it's still much less than the $4,000 per employee cited above. Even with the inflated rents in that area, that seems excessive, and would not have approved such an expenditure.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:4, Funny)
I'm wondering which is a worse sign for a business -- paying $40K/month to house 10 employees or having the Penis Bird Guy as your corporate controller. ;-)
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
If you would have paid less in rent, then perhaps the company would have turned a profit and you would have gotten a chance to actually grow. That's why Microsoft is worried about the guys working out of their garage, and not the guys who have hired enough space for 30 folks despite the fact that they only have 5 employees. One of the cardinal rules of business is that it is easier to save money than to make it. Companies that can't get that little fact right are not likely to ever really be a threat.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
A solid company with a good product will have no problem making deals happen. Example: Rackspace [rackspace.com] is located here in San Antonio.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
what? you didn't get the memo [advisor.com]? I'd say these guys are like many before them.
Explain This, Please (Score:2)
Skilled Workforce
Cost of Living
Lifestyle
Geekiness
Did I miss anything?
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
Ah Utah [bbc.co.uk]! The extensive proving ground for biological and chemical warfare agents? The vast chemical weapons stockpile? The massive chemical weapons and hazardous waste incinerators? The huge hazardous and radioactive waste landfills? The bombing ranges? The magnesium plant with the record for most toxic air-polution?
This Is Still The Right Place ... for the National Garbage.
Regards, Ralph.
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
You missed the bay area weather. Seasonally it is very mild.
In your "skilled workforce" section you forgot that Stanford and Berkeley are two of the top 5 engineering schools in the country according to U.S. News & World Report.
A "few" more workers available? You haven't been out here in a while have you? You have no idea how much talent is lying around out there unable to get a job anywhere (the market *really* sucks right now). There are thousands of talented (and tens of thousands of wannabe talented) people desperate for work here. People with Masters Degrees and experience behind them are taking 60K/yr jobs, if they're lucky enough to find them.
And as someone else mentioned, companies in the bay area like to do business with companies in the bay area. Why? They have this obsession with driving and meeting face to face I suppose. I've always been bitter about this fact. I've experienced it first hand a number of times. If they don't think they can get on the phone and arrange a meeting (and they love meetings, maybe that's why the dot coms failed, too many meetings about "what are we going to do?" and not enough doing) they don't want to do business with you.
I love Utah, and if there were jobs there, I'd move there. I like big houses in low density housing communities. But it's not for everyone, and there is no Sand Hill Road. Your Rackspace argument doesn't really hold. It's a hosting company. They're providing a service completely different from what Lineo is trying to do. Heck, Lineo was based in utah but they had a bay area office because they knew if you want bay area companies to buy your product/service, you need to be in the bay area.
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
Yeah--Utah is a nasty place to live. It's illegal to homebrew, the state's run by Mormons, and AFAICT the entire place is about as dead as the rock which makes up most of the state.
I'd rather have offices in North Carolina or southern Virginia.
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
As I cited in a reply farther up the page, Rackspace [rackspace.com] has few local customers here in Cowtown, USA (aka San Antonio TX) but that hasn't stopped them from prospering.
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
Come on, if you've EVER seen a western movie (and there are lots of good ones, so start renting), you know that Cowtown is Fort Worth, not San Antonio. It shouldn't take a Texan to point this out...
San Antonio, by the way, is hardly a "cowtown", anyway: It's the 9th largest city in the US, ahead of Detroit(10), San Jose(11), Indianapolis(12), and San Francisco(13), and it's the center of a lot of interesting telecom activity, including, unfortunately, telemarketing. (Source: http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0763098.html [infoplease.com])
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
Actually, Utah really does have an abundance of tech workers. Novell, American Express, and many others are based there. eBay has one of their major datacenters there. University of Utah and Brigham Young University both have well-reknown CS departments. Utah State in Logon isn't bad, either. It obviously has something of a tech community because both Lineo and Caldera are based there.
SLC is pretty damned "major" if you ask me. It's well over several million in population. It's a Delta hub, so you can pretty much fly to any decent sized city in the US without having to change plains. By Air, it's about 90min, IIRC, from SFO.
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:3, Funny)
I would agree with you, but I've actually seen SLC.
Re:Explain This, Please (Score:2)
How would this compare with the need to pay EVERY one of your employees an extra 40% just to PARTIALLY accomodate the increased cost of living?
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, a close friend of mine was working for a company working on PKI stuff. They had hundreds of millions in funding from a prominent international investment bank. They were told repeatedly that they were not spending fast enough! There were some suggestions that subsequent rounds of funding hinged upon meeting a specific burn rate. Obviously this all changed very quickly and all funding dried up and so did the company.
So who is to blame? Yes management is ultimately responsible and no excuse is going to bring the company back but it should be noted that the decisions that were made were not as irrational as they seemed.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
From the article, I say Harris is the kind of guy that's doing the latter. Letting time run out, and having paychecks bounce, is utterly irresponsible, and grossly immature. If the investors let people like that run a 100-person company, they deserve to lose their money, and Harris deserves to be in hall of shame.
No excuses accepted.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
Agreed. But remember that the
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
A company can be only an hour or 2 out of the "premier" tech areas in CA and spend 1/4 of the amount on rent. Why a startup would even think about office space in San Jose or San Diego is totally beyond my comprehension.
Re:Simple Explanation (Score:2)
We live in the computer age. Videoconferencing, e-mail, cvs, IM, Talk, god dammit! Why spend $40,000 for an office? Tell the bastards to stay at home until you turn a profit.
Yes, odd indeed (Score:4, Insightful)
Which pretty much explains why they are going under, doesn't it? If you can't get your point across to those that are interested in what you are doing, you have no hope when it comes to the rest of the world.
Re:Yes, odd indeed (Score:2)
Well, I always just assumed they were doing custom builds of linux for the embedded market. It's not that much of an intelectual leap. The fact that CT didn't know what they did may very well have stemmed from the fact that he was a moron... (or not intrested at all)
Re:You mean like OSDN? (Score:2)
Unfocused (Score:1)
Hmm (Score:1)
Maybe they weren't either?
Silver Lining (Score:1)
BEOS will be their first choice... (Score:1, Interesting)
2) Palm is moving to the StrongARM platform for high end units (i.e. corporate apps). I have a Zaurus SL5000D (206Mhz, 32MB of Ram, 16MB Rom) which is a good example of what this architecture can do with a more functional operating system like Wince 2002.
3) Beos was an incredibly fast OS which ran in a very small footprint, so my guess is Palm will introduce it as PalmOS 6 or 7. When that happens, I'll go buy the Clie clamshell version of it.
What they were doing (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, if you read the article right at the end, they made / participated in the Embedded Linux for Sharp PDAs.
Of course, bad management is what causes bankruptcies like this. 70 staff and only Sharp on the books, with royalties coming in a year later?
I bet they were all screwing around with cool Linux kernel stuff and forgetting to sell it to anyone as a practical application. Hehe.
Re:What they were doing (Score:2)
Re:What they were doing (Score:2, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:How can this be? (Score:1)
Re:How can this be? (Score:5, Insightful)
But you see, they wern't selling free software. They were trying to sell closed source software leveraged off of free software, and (more importantly) the expertise to combine the two.
They failed because of their they way they ran their business, and many, many management missteps along the way.
If Redhat goes under, then you might question the intellegence of selling free software, until then, don't give the Lineo management so much credit. Put the blame where it belongs: not on "free" software, but rather really bad business.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Re:How can this be? (Score:3, Insightful)
As did every failed Windows-centric company, and every failed Oracle-centric company, and every failed Solaris-centric company.... Failure is not exclusive to the Linux world, though, the media may make you feel differently. This is an unfortunate side effect of being a media darling. They love you when you are doing well, and love you even more when you are failing.
And the reason is simple: Linux is viewed as "free software." And by "Linux", I mean the OS, the tools, everything. There is an entire subculture that finds the notion of paying for software offensive (though many of them want to get paid for writing it at their jobs).
But there also another entire group of large corporations that doe not want to pay thousands of dollars for propriatary operating system licences, not to mention costs for customized applications. If I can deliver the same application, minus an expensive licence for the operating system, wouldn't that make some sense?
Nobody ever said that Lineo was selling to the average Linux affcionado. Nobody, and I mean nobody will ever make money doing that. I would rather chew off my left arm than buy something from a company like Lineo, especially when I can write it myself.
Lineo was selling to the big boys, corporations who see the value in paying $20 an unit for an solution, instead of $120.
Re:How can this be? (Score:2)
Re:How can this be? (Score:2)
Re:How can this be? (Score:2)
***
I don't think we are going to see ANY software companies become HUGELY successful ever again. Why were they that successful? Because they had complete control of their customers. And customers are much smarter these days.
Here's another question - name a software startup (ANY PLATFORM) after 1999 that was hugely successful.
Um, what about redhat? (Score:2)
Re:How can this be? (Score:2)
Cygnus, before being bought by Red Hat.
Ada Core Technologies
Many, many, many local consultants
Hardware companies (though these tend to not be solely Linux-oriented, you would think that if the Linux options weren't generating profits they would be cut, wouldn't they?)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:New Coke (Score:2)
Nevermind the (subtle) difference in taste. When you pour Coke that uses corn syrup over ice, it builds an obnoxious head. At least, that's a problem that seemed to develop for no good reason that I could think of, other than a change in Coke. Maybe our water quality changed. Possibly, your ice cubes got rougher which caused more bubbles. Either way it's a moot point because I can't drink Coke any more. Too much acid. Too much sugar. Too much caffeine.
I think both of you are wrong (Score:2)
new coke [snopes2.com]
Re:I think both of you are wrong (Score:2)
I am waiting for sugar beet coke. mmmmmmm..... beety!
Re:I think both of you are wrong (Score:2)
That is what I have been saying! Have you been reading my posts?
Other countries that seem to have better Coke, at least according to my taste buds: Brazil, Taiwan, France.
I would guess that in most places cane sugar is less expensive than in the US. The price in the US is artificially high due to import restrictions meant to protect the corn market and the inefficient cane growers in Florida (who happen to be big polluters). I would guess that Hawaii benefits as well.
The US is trying hard to import more and more HFS (high fructose syrup) into Mexico. Mexico is responding by putting a 20% tax on all soft drinks that have HFS instead of cane sugar. This has been reported in the USA as a tax on ALL softdrinks, which is simply misinformation meant to serve US interested. I also think that the Coke in the USA doesn't want people to realize that a switch was pulled on them. Most of the Coke in Mexico is HFS-free still.
Re:New Coke (Score:3, Informative)
Re:New Coke (Score:2)
Re:New Coke (Score:2)
Best Quote of the Article (Score:3, Insightful)
It's said a lot of embedded engineers regard Linux as "that operating system for pimple-faced computer science nerds dressed in T-shirts they brought at the last 'Star Trek' convention."
This, coupled with "Embedded experts claim the embedded space is practically impossible to play in these days if all you have is an operating system, especially when the OS is basically immaterial to the embedded designer. The fact that Linux is ostensibly free is also reportedly a hurdle to design-wins in view of Lineo's royalty proposition." would seem to indicate what I had thought all along..."Linux is not the be-all and end-all"
Thought they were all gone by now (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing too surprising or new to read here, just another technology company that was riding the tech boom and investor ignorance.
Bankruptcy. (Score:5, Funny)
If only they'd changed their focus in time. They could have been a survivor, like VA Ice Cream And Adult Novelties.
--saint
Lineo's mission (Score:2, Troll)
First, the particle reconfiguration matrices were hopelessly complicated to calculate using their UI. Second, the phase-alignment eigenvalues they used as defaults were circa 1974. But worst of all was the induction shielding--we had bitflips left and right including one memorable occasion when we lost a whole night's processing.
I'm not sorry OR surprised to see them go under.
Re:Lineo's mission (Score:2)
Funny, maybe. But about as informative as trying to learn physics from Star Trek.
This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:5, Insightful)
The people in charge know long before all the money runs out that things are in bad shape. It doesn't sound like they notified any of their employees or gave them any warning so that they could look for other jobs.
Cripes. People have bills to pay and families to feed. Doesn't anyone have a shred of decency anymore?
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2)
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2)
Because as investors with a significant stake in the company they could share in the liability.
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2, Insightful)
Makes you appreciate disgruntled employees' actions more when it happens to you.
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:4, Interesting)
From my experience I can give a resounding 'no' to that. There is no decency unfortunatley. I was a research devloper at a Canadian University [www.wlu.ca] in the dept. of physics and computing. Our research group is/was a "Center for Excellence" and we developed two fully functional laser simulators of the Quantum Well and VCSEL variety. Things were progressing for 2 years, and the projects both reached decent beta stage.
Our entire research group was summarily laid of on a lovely friday afternoon at 5:30. No warning, no heads-up, no consideration.
Personally I was insulted but I can tell you, I am not the first, nor the last that this has happened to...
Mind you the educational institution referred to here had no problem highlighting our research group and some of my other research projects in glossy fliers in order to attract attention to new students and the general populace.
Oh the irony of being highlighted in promo material by the marketroids and concurrently bitchslapped by the accounting dept. in one fell swoop.
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:3, Funny)
And would probably have waited until the next friday, to "avoid incidents"; if you had left early then too, and every friday since, I bet you'd still have a job.
The moral of this story is obvious (
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2)
Also, since I was a lowly RA, no automatic paycheques into said bank account, had to have time sheets signed with work logs as well....
I am fairly sure you are glad you don't have my life :)
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2)
What surprises me is that a University would behave like that. In my current job working for the University of Central Florida, I have never seen any faculty laid off without first receiving a one-year "terminal contract". There is always at least a one year warning - much more civilized than the private sector.
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2)
This is fairly easy for them to get away with as many of RA's do it for love and fun rather than financial gain (read: we are easy to mess with). I think most institutions might class RA's as 'staff' which would entitle them to normal staff treatment. But as it stands, we are essentially a group with no rights and no benefits. It's for that reason I have decided not to purse it as a 'career' (if you could call it that) any longer and am currently consulting and looking for a (preferably) research job in the private sector.
I have no idea what may come of it, and I continue to work on my own research at the school (grid, beowulf, distributed computing) but it's my own research , no pay , only for the love of the work.
Any available positions at the University of Florida? (much nicer climate than waterloo)
=)
*sighhhhhh*
Some companies do the decent thing. (Score:2)
Some companies handle this very well. In early 2001 I was working with RJ Mical at a company called Red Jade [digitalgamedeveloper.com]. We had a decent business model and a good start on a compelling product but launching a new game machine to compete with the GBA is a very expensive and risky proposition. When Ericsson decided to pull the plug and we couldn't find alternate funding due to the dot-com collapse, we had a big company meeting. There was a month's warning before the company officially shut down during which everybody got their expense reports and final paychecks paid and we got severance pay after that in proportion to seniority - I got a month of severance.
Coming back to pick up my check I found RJ had had some shirts made; they said "I joined a startup and all I got was this lousy T-shirt!" :-)
It was sad to see the company disappear, but as such things go, it was handled very well.
System doesn't work that way. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not just employees that get screwed, of course.
Don't feel too bad (Score:2)
Re:This is just flat out *wrong* (Score:2)
(This is not an anti-US flame, just an observation...)
Well, the "hire and fire" business paradigm actually enforces this management style...
Many industrial nations have laws against this type of abuse and/or effective unions that are well respected and have a real force in protecting workers against this.
Just look at Europe.
But whenever Americans are pointed to this, they shake their collective heads and denounce this as modern-day communism...
But I have to admit that I certainly prefer living under my "oppressive socialist governemt" (quote from an US reader) than in a work environment where I can get a pink slip out of the blue and be told to leave the building within 15 minutes, guided by security guards.
Things aren't all peachy here, of course. The
-1 Flamebait (Score:2, Funny)
Taco still says the same thing about the night he walked in on "those gross naked people"!
Sorry, it was too easy a softball to leave alone...
Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:3, Insightful)
Is there anyone out there in the OpenSource Business World that is doing it right, making a profit and kicking corporate butt? The Mandrake Club sounds like a glimmer of hope. It would be interesting to read of stories where code freedom equals profits.
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:2)
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:3, Informative)
That doesn't seem that healthy to me, especially since 1 year ago the net loss was $-62,495,000. And Open Source Services only counted for $13,641,000 of the revenue.
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:2)
When you buy a company for stock, the cost of that transaction is based on the value of the stock when you bought it, and it gets depreciated over a few years. When Red Hat bought Cygnus, it's stock was worth around $300/share. So, for the next several quarters, Red Hat had to expense off that transaction, resulting in a paper (not real) loss. Had Red Hat made the purchase when their stock was worth $10/share, over 100 million of those "expenses" would not have been recorded.
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:2, Insightful)
Is there anyone out there in the OpenSource Business World that is doing it right, making a profit and kicking corporate butt?
No Linux companies are, and Mandrake Club won't survive much longer either. BSD companies can because they have the ability to add value above and beyond the standard product to differentiate themselves while not having to give away their source code to their competitors just lying in wait for a code drop. If you're thinking about starting a company that's going to produce GPL'd software, please just give your money away to a decent charity so that at least some good might come of it before it's all gone.
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:2)
See, the thing is that the Open Source and Free Software developers don't care that much about your company if you take in BSD-licensed code and sell it closed-source, such as Microsoft and Apple have done. This practice does little benefit the the OS and FS communities, and so these communities see little reason in promoting or helping such companies.
With companies like RedHat, however, I feel great about paying them money for their RedHat Network service, and providing code for the OS/FS community RedHat participates in, since I know that I'm helping the community in the long run.
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:2)
That said:
Would you, the one who must answer to your shareholders and their families and dinnertables, rather feel good about what you're doing for the GPL community and see how long you can tread water, or bring home a few dollars selling BSD?
Re:Any Open Source/Linux/BSD Companies doing well? (Score:2)
I'm not trying to say what companies should be doing, but trying to point out that once you start selling proprietary software (e.g., originally BSD-licensed), you will lose community support.
The reason that we have good, free bazaar-model-developed software is because the code is OS/FS. Once it is 'taken out of the loop', as a community we start losing. Personally, I don't see any benefit for the community writing or promoting BSD-licensed software, unless you don't see anything wrong with things turning non-free.
"Community support" won't put food on the table (Score:2)
Just ask Indrema, Loki, or VA Whatever. In fact, of the main Linux distributions, Red Hat is way up there in terms of being criticized by the Linux community ("The Microsoft of the Linux world," and other such charges), yet they've been the most prosperous of all of them.
Canopy Group == Kiss of death (Score:2)
Maybe I'm wrong, but that's how it seems to me.
Capitalize? (Score:3, Funny)
Sharp ships Linux PDA... (Score:1, Informative)
As seen here:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor
Life after death effect (Score:2)
There are a surprising number of dot-coms in that situation. If the web site was outsourced, it can outlive the company by months, until the hosting service gets around to deleting it.
My old BWUNN [bwunn.com] web site, which was a takeoff on the promotion for the movie "AI", is still up, even though I closed the account with the hosting service long ago, and they stopped billing me. The labor time to flush accounts may be more than the cost of keeping them up until the equipment gets retired.
Are there co-located servers from dead dot-coms still in place and running? Those might survive, forgotten in some hosting facility, for years. See if you can find any.
In other news... (Score:2, Funny)
$ spell
An anonymous reader notd a bit running on
notd
$
How hard can it possibly be?
Poor business model (Score:3, Insightful)
I used to work for one of the biggest technology companies, and one of the projects I was working with was a device that was used an imbedded OS. WindRiver was used at first, then after their licencing became far too expensive, they went to Linux. Not having the expertise themselves to develop everything, they went to Red Had. I am not trying to say that RH is everything, but they offered everything this project needed, and at a decent price. If RH didn't get our account, that's OK, as they have other businesses to keep them going.
Lineo does not have that kind of diversification. They are/were far to specialized for their own good.
when will they ever learn? (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux shows so much promise in the embedded market, but it will never get there until companies wise up and start using sound business practices. I am so sick and tired of seeing companies with great ideas and talented people fail because they have incompetent management with poor spending practices.
Having millions of dollars in venture capital funding does not mean your company is "successful" or "wealthy". It means you have been trusted with money to make your idea work. Don't go out and blow the money on Aeron chairs, fancy offices and glitzy parties. Spend it wisely, and use it to get your product out the door. When your company is generating REAL revenue and profit, THEN you can consider celebrating.
Blowing venture capital on stupid things is about the same as maxing out a personal credit card on luxury items in my book. It's just plain stupid.
I feel so passionately about this issue because I've seen so many companies go under, where the workers suffer because of poor management. Enron is a really big example, but there are hundreds if not thousands of "dot-coms" that did the same thing to their workers.
I hope TUXIA [tuxia.com] is still doing well, and I hope they learn from the mistakes of others in the marketplace.
Problem with Making Money with Linux Services (Score:5, Funny)
Having to keep finding new customers is a royal pain in the ass. You're much better off with Windows, where they keep coming back...
Re:Problem with Making Money with Linux Services (Score:2)
You have to sign them up for a support contract. You simply tell your customer that for a modest monthly fee you will monitor the machine, make sure the backups are running, etc. You can also throw in a limited number of "free" emergency service hours or whatever it takes to hook them into signing up.
You then write a cron job that does all of the actual work and sends you an email with a nice report on the overall status of the box. Once a month you forward some of these reports on to your customer along with a little message telling him that everything looks good. You might try to use the information to sell him more hardware or software. Phrases like "disk space is getting low," and "your machine spends a lot of time under heavy load" are very useful for selling these types of added services.
If you are careful with this kind of customer and don't gouge them, you can guarantee a steady income. And since the amount of work required is fairly low, you can have all sorts of customers, all of them completely convinced that you are the most competent computer expert on the planet.
If you are selling Windows solutions, on the other hand, you constantly have to worry that one of your competitors will sell him a solution that actually works. Get a reputation as a hack, and then it becomes impossible to find new customers.
Most small businesspeople have no problems paying for solutions that work. With Linux you can easily undercut your competitors and still make a nice profit.
I've got some lineo products (Score:5, Informative)
The big problem with its design is, I don't think it scratches a big itch. Its primary useful application is for prototyping. Any company that makes embedded products might want to develop their software using such a device for testing, but if they plan to produce anything remotely resembling significant quantities, they'll lay out their own embedded design to better fit the application at hand.
Also, except in the tiny portable computer market, extremely low power doesn't make much sense. If the product being developed has no power restrictions tied to it (it gets power from the outlet for instance), then the entire advantage of this device is thrown out the window. I've done an analysis of the chips on their board, and it could be built for 1/4 the price if more power hungry versions were used instead. Also, if this
device will be primarily used for prototyping, and there IS a market for such devices, there's no reason to make them work off solar cells. As long as they remain compatible with low power models, they'll be just as effective, and a whole lot cheaper in the long run. And if they're less expensive people will purchase a LOT more of them.
Even the hobby market could support them if only they were priced more reasonably.
But regardless of all of that, face the fact, Lineo is a legacy dot com company. They spend more money than they have, and it shows.
-Restil
embedded linux is dead:long live emblinux (Score:2)
I have better stability, results and faster development with building the whole embedded OS by hand for each project. My projects have a similarity (slackware based filesetup... the only correct filesystem structure) but each is completely custom. from the robot-cam I am chasing the final bugs out of (and to prove to alot of "engineers" at work that you can do amazing things with a 386 + linux that cannot be done with windows) to the amateur rocketry ground control telemetry system I made for the local highschool.. all custom made.
If I made a product that I was going to market I surely would have never bought lineo or any pay-for product.
Re:embedded linux is dead:long live emblinux (Score:2)
The point of free software is you can easily cut out the blood-sucking middle man.
Power migrates in the direction of the end-user. Lineo tried to be a blood-sucking middle man, just like so many other failed companies.
It's the big end-users who are willing to say "We can support this ourselves, we don't need third party services" who could provide a niche for GPL'd software. There's not many around just now, they need to wake up and employ a couple of C coders.
Lame insults in the article (Score:2)
It's said
By whom? Microsoft spekeperson for Windows CE, that is trying to pretend to be an embedded system for many years already?
a lot of embedded engineers regard Linux as "that operating system for pimple- faced computer science nerds dressed in T-shirts they brought at the last 'Star Trek' convention."
There aren't "a lot of embedded engineers" in the whole world -- even though, embedded systems are widespread, designing them is a relatively rare occupation, just like while plastics are everywhere, chemists and companies that develop them aren't that numerous.
So what happens to DR-DOS now? (Score:2)
It's too bad that Caldera caved in to Microsoft and settled instead of holding their feet to the fire - the DR-DOS suit evidence that was buried by that settlement would have made the antitrust case far stronger than it was anyway...
Lineo obtains $1M additional funding (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS4958883656.htm
What does(did) lineo do? (Score:2)
WTF? I realize that slashdot editors aren't known for being well-informed, but doesn't it bother anyone else that they seem to be flaunting their ignorance on the front page?
CT doesn't know what Lineo did. So what? He doesn't own an embedded systems company does he? He wasn't exactly their target market. What Lineo did is quite clear from their website [lineo.com], they were a service company that would help you put Linux on embedded systems.
So if you designed pda/mp3player/gps/whatever hardware and thought putting Linux on it would be a good idea, you would go to these guys and get them to hook you up for a fee. A couple years later, when you came out with a new model or something else or whatever, you'd go back. It's not that fucking complicated. And the fact that the 'average' slashdotter might not know what they do didn't matter, because they couldn't give a shit about you either.
I know ONE thing they did (Score:2)
Lineo spun off [lineo.com] their hardware operations late last year, though, so that they could more easily do... uh... whatever it is that they now do.