Linux Hardware Detection Project 70
jesus writes "The crazy kiddies over at Linux Mandrake have started the Lothar Project . The goal is to make hardware detection and configuration easy. The code is in CVS and they need all sorts of different people and furry animals, so take a gander at the page, look at the pretty screenshots, and contribute to world domination. "
Pnp isa? why PnP? (Score:1)
Why is this in X? (Score:1)
Lothar, Laetos, GTLinux, Caldera... (Score:2)
Leatos seems a bit odd as the naming suggests that it is a new OS, not a distribution, but that may be sound marketing for the French market. Still, the code is GPL, so more power to them.
LinuxGT have picked their own logo, and when it was last up the website had now infor about license or source code, but I imagine they will get round to that.
Rather than everyone creating easy-install distributions, it would be nice to see more distribution-independent tools, like linuxconf.
Delaying source releases (Score:1)
It seems like companies could (theoretically, I'm not making accusations here) use these delays to give them a competitive edge over their competition (say, Caldera and Red Hat).
I haven't read the GPL lately, but does it allow for this kind of staggered release schedule (even if it's not by very long)? Or are these companies theoretically releasing the code under two licenses (the initial binary license, and then re-releasing it under the GPL when the source comes out)?
Delayed access for others to stuff that you've done sounds an awful lot like the protection under patent law for X years. Except the time frame is greatly reduced in this case, of course.
Stuff to think about.
Why is this in X? (Score:1)
Why is this in X? (Score:1)
Caldera OL 2.2 (Score:1)
And to those that say a text mode one should be done first, it's easy to run just a VGA16 X server to do the installer. I'm not sure how OL2.2 does it, but they have a nice, graphical program doing all the installation. It's prettier to look at, but not critical. Either mode is fine by me. The actual function is more important than the look.
Just in case I'm not the only one... (Score:3)
People can commit new changes to the source tree via 'cvs commit'...
You can get a diff between your source tree and the one at the repository via 'cvs diff'...
You can update the current directory you are in via 'cvs update'.
Basic commands to checkout source are:
export CVSROOT=:pserver:user@host/directory
cvs login
[enter password]
cvs -z3 checkout tree-you-want-to-checkout
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CVS = Convenience store? (Score:1)
Shades of Saturday Night Live (Score:1)
Your not saying (Score:1)
I have nothing against RedHat, and I like the cycle you suggest, but then you aren't saying that are you?
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90% of new Linux users use RPM (Score:1)
\me puffs chest
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RPM! vroom kiddie vroom! (Score:1)
Package format really doesn't matter. Alien can convert between debs, RPMS, even Stampede's SLP's. Your out on a limb if you trust RPMs or any packaging system to manage your linux box for you anyway.
But the DeFacto standard for Linux will always be...
make
make install
thats a fact.
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Looks like they're working together. (Score:1)
Excellent example of OSS at work (Score:1)
Attitude Correction. (Score:1)
PnP BIOS (Score:1)
What's not there now (and what this project seems to be) is a database of vendor/device ID's cross referenced with the appropriate kernel module with a nice GUI on top.
Once you know what module to load, the module does all the work from there. Knowing to load module foo is the biggest problem.
Window Manager question (Score:2)
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If Bill Gates had a nickel for every time Windows crashed...
Why is this in X? (Score:1)
Go Mandrake! (Score:1)
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Go Mandrake! (Score:5)
Now that an "alternative" Red Hat that includes KDE isn't needed anymore, though, I was wondering what Mandrake would do with themselves. Well, apparently they've found a very worthy case to pursue. Even if this project doesn't suceed (and I hope that it does), it will pressure Red Hat to improve *their* hardware configuration support, just to stay up with the "competition".
I see this cycle continuing: Red Hat overlooks something that the users want, so people put together a "better" Red Hat that addresses these issues. In order not to lose users, Red Hat realizes that it must develop these features for it's release. And most will happily stay with Red Hat as a result.
This is all As It Should Be, as far as I am concerned.
--Lenny
//"You can't prove anything about a program written in C or FORTRAN.
It's really just Peek and Poke with some syntactic sugar."
Great project (Score:2)
LDAP?
Linuxconf tie-ins?
Great work guys!
like QNX boot disk! (Score:1)
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Is it just me... (Score:1)
I think it does. Sure, it makes it more accessible to the win95 crowd, but at what point do we have to start worrying about "look and feel" copyrights? I think that can of worms might be a potential backdoor for Microsoft to start taking out Linux developers with legal threats, one at a time. Lothar looks like the device manager. Lyx looks like MSWord. xs looks like Excel. aXe looks like Notepad. Sure, it wouldn't stand up in court, but who among us has the raw lawyer capacity to match the MS Legal Department (tm)?
Or maybe I'm just being overly paranoid.
Another point, I saw someone else make a comment in the direction that a console-only utility would be more useful for the original install process; I think that should be more important than a user friendly GUI to play with. Personally, I already know what's inside my box, so "cd /usr/src/linux; make xconfig" works for me.
Leapfrog, the mediocre.
Sort of ironic (Score:1)
It's sort of ironic that you "can't remember atm" since if it were truly "Plug 'n' Play" you wouldn't have to remember.
So what you're saying is... (Score:1)
BSD has had autoconf for YEARS... (Score:1)
Wow... I'm impressed...
Perry
Why is this in X? (Score:1)
Why Lothar? (Score:1)
Anyway, the Lothar project seems to be quite interresting and a good effort to help the new generation of linux users.
What the hell does package format have to do with? (Score:1)
I've never been happier with a box. Just be happy and ignore all the hate.
Sounds great... (Score:1)
Hope it fulfills my expectations...
What about USB? Just a thought...
Window Manager question (Score:1)
Could be wrong...
Lothar is distribution independent... (Score:1)
Pnp isa? (Score:1)
The world will be a better place anyway when ISA is dead and gone.
Pnp isa? (Score:1)
Just my $.02
Natas
http://natas.kfa.cx/~civ -Civ: CTP for Linux!
Go Mandrake! (Score:1)
Just in case I'm not the only one... (Score:1)
Go Mandrake! (Score:1)
This is simply putting money in places where it will improve Linux as a whole. After all, anyone can download KDE, neh?
Window Manager question (Score:1)
PnP BIOS (Score:1)
Attitude Correction. (Score:2)
Why make the statement about 'contributing to world domination', when this makes you sound terribly like Microsoft? I really don't understand how one can be against a certain train of thought, yet pronounce the same desire...
No matter how much I wish to see everyone putting the right OS in the right solution, there are still comments like this. When will people realise that the world needs more than one OS?
*Flame shield off*
Besides that, I can't wait to see better PnP in Linux...especially with the amount of PCI / USB devices that are reliant on this. PnP would boost even more interest in Linux in more situations, all that's needed then is a little more help from hardware makers.
Qt the kink in KDE went OSS months ago! (Score:1)
Sarcasm (Score:1)
Look and Feel Lawsuits (Score:1)
Who's on top now?
bKernelGuiMode ? "Microsoft was here" : "Saved"; (Score:1)
Linux isn't/shouldn't be made to be the perfect OS for servers, workstations, $1500 recipe books. Linux shouldn't be caught in the Microsoft balancing act of sometime down the road saying... Well we put the X11 library in the kernel mode because Quake users wheren't able to get the same performance that they can in Windows 2000. Making a H/W detection/PnP managment program in X11 is already going that road. UNIX doesn't have a windows mode. X11 happens to be a nifty program added onto UNIX to give it a window look and feel. Because that is true, hardware config shouldn't rely on this non-essential package being there.
Linux is just an open source Microsoft if it continues down the path of trying to be everything. State what Linux is and make it the best whatever it is.
I'd truly like to see this project done in a platform/OS independent architecture. Why not first create the software by laying out the specs and then let people implement those specs for different OSes. (Say using a unified fingerprint DB and a set of API's to speak to the configuration/detection program.) Then you could write a unix/windows/solaris/SCO/BeOS/JavaPC... Interface to this project. If all the program did was report the current configuration and allow you to change it in hardware then you could have a different program for different OSes to use this same data to modify their system configuration files.
Why is this in X? (Score:1)
The project is to attract the masses to Linux.
The masses want a GUI.
Simple enough
The battle between Software and the Universe (Score:2)
They combine h/w and components to defeat most programmers. Plus, put s/w thru torture tests that cant be imagined.
Finally, what about the idiot factor? The old line about the struggle between software trying to outsmart the biggest idiot and all that...
Why is this in X? You cant assume to have a vga! (Score:1)
so i think it's a must to have a console version of this tool.
Center Of Attention! (Score:1)
At The moment Linux is in The Center Of Attention, I Don't Know about other countries but here in Finland Linux is in almost every computer magazine.. and seems like the magazines are getting interested in Linux too.. but almost every Magazine is saying that Linux needs a User Friendly Configuration tool.. which we have.. Linuxconf (well closest one i think). But most of the problem is in The Hardware... if This project goes on as it should.. i think it just make a BIG difference in Linux!
now We Just have to stand up to The commercial Operating Systems.. and Show What the Linux (Community) is ready for!
WAY TO GO Mandrake!!