Bossie Awards Honor Open Source Software 66
The Alliance writes "InfoWorld has announced the 2007 Bossie Awards for the Best of Open-Source Software. Awards were given to 36 winners across 6 categories. Honorees include (among others) SpamAssassin, ClamAV and Nessus in security, Wireshark and Azureus Vuze in networking, and ZFS for storage. Interestingly, they split the operating system winners across two distributions, with CentOS winning for server OS and Ubuntu for desktop."
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CentOS? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:CentOS? (Score:4, Informative)
Huh? What's so headachy about running "yum update" once in a while?
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Everything is headachy when it breaks.
I've been using RHEL at work and CentOS at home for seven and three years, respectively. Up2date (RHEL3's updater) has only broken once, and was relatively easily repaired. Yum hasn't broken on me yet.
Milalwi
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If you are forced to run a supported distro on several servers to get application support it can be nice to have a similar distro (for free) on your other servers.
It's really a pain to maintain shitloads of different distributions. RPM's are much easier to live with.
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And "yum update" breaks a lot less than "apt-get dist-upgrade" or "emerge -uavDN world". A LOT less.
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Re:CentOS? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:CentOS? (Score:5, Funny)
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"CentOS is RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux), after all, just packaged under a different name, and without any references to Red Hat. That means you can install applications for RHEL on a CentOS server without any incompatibilities, and all RHEL updates are applicable to CentOS as well. Obviously, no support contracts are available for CentOS, but that's the draw for many Linux veterans - the familiar Red Hat distribution, including updates, without the onus of having to purchase a support contract th
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I went back through this list and looked at some of the stuff that won and some of the things that didn't. I'm pretty much disappointed with the philosophy of the list. Seems that the Best of Open Source Software is not determined by any kind of technical merits but the popular opinion of the software at hand.
There are a lot of company products mentioned as winners which means they are always working under a shadow.
Fundamentally, I do not believe CentOS should be the server winner for the simple reason
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What exactly is wrong with RPM per se? The disadvantages of rpm + urpmi against deb + apt are the lack of suggests recommends functionality, and that the GUIs are not as good as Synaptic.
These are problems with the layer above (apt or urpmi) rather than the package format.
I have no idea how yum, Smart or rpm + deb compares because I have not used them, but the latter would
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Thank you. And that is one of the reasons I think Debian should have won.
At least with Debian you can readily install a Window Manager that is small and lightweight enough that it would hog up all the available resources of your machine.
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Open source awards give awards to Open Source... (Score:1, Interesting)
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Re:Open source awards give awards to Open Source.. (Score:1)
To me it's interesting for two reasons. (Score:2)
Secondly, Ubuntu lacks a lot of the real-timeness of a server, which screws with audio/video links, and won't always detect package collisions - it'll sometimes just whatever was/is already r
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[Dead Tree Magazine] Announces [Award]... (Score:5, Insightful)
In the [Dead Tree Magazine] world, you'll usually find that the number of [Award]s a product gets is related to the dollar value of ads that product places in that magazine. "Secure Computing" magazine is still today a classic example of this premise.
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I think that's a "yes".
...and don't forget the four-color printed commercial-quality cardboard boxes with ready-to-install Ubuntu disks - giveaways in an attractive package is a classic advertising gimmick.
They do have a commercial entity that accepts and disburses cash:
http://www.ubuntu.com/aboutus [ubuntu.com]
Also, there've been billboards and such...
http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-6109379-7.html [com.com]
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Nessus as open source (Score:5, Informative)
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"Deraison said the existing version 2 of Nessus would continue to be available under the GPL license and receive bug fixes and regular updates. The large library of plug-ins to the software would also continue to distributed in a way that would allow parties to examine their source code."
interesting split of winners (Score:2)
And SuSE was awarded best Linux Desktop? (Score:3, Interesting)
Best Client Operating System Award:
http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2007/09/114-best_of_open_so-3.html [infoworld.com]
Best Linux Desktop Award:
http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2007/01/29-2007_technology-7.html [infoworld.com]
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The presentation pages have errors in them on each of the last slides. Instead of linking to the current awards, they all link to the January edition!!!
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Too lazy to read "info"world.
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well, in a business setting, a program that works damn-near-identically to the one you currently use is certainly a better idea than throwing something completely different out to the masses to learn. training costs and temporary loss of productivity are important things to consider.
Wireshark and Azureus Vuze? (Score:1)
Wireshark, however, is a very nice application and I have used it countless times to troubleshoot network issues and it even as a visual aid to help people understand basic networking.
Not sure how they are even close to comparable.
Kidding aside, an application whose function is to implement a simple file transfer protocol should not be 50 megs, especially when you o
Left out in the cold.... for now. (Score:1)
Check out the article: http://www.infoworld.com/infoworld/article/07/09/10/37FE-boss-enterprise-monitoring_1.html [infoworld.com]
Full disclosure: I work for one of the, um, finalists/threats mentioned in the article. Hyperic http://www.hyperic.com/ [hyperic.com]. That said, I know they are doing a review of
Java everywhere? (Score:1)
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CentOS vs Ubuntu (Score:2)
Result? I got to about the 15th self-compiled RPM and decided that maintaining the damn thing such that all these apps were patched would be a distributor's job, and I'd never keep up. The security concerns that I raised here forced me to move to Ubuntu, where everything just worked.
Interestingly, all I was doing was rpm-rebuild on Fedora RPMs.
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I have a feeling that "You're doing it wrong".
If you want something that has all the toys ever created use Gentoo or something.
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