Canopy Dumps Top Execs

Two top executives of The Canopy Group, the parent company of Unix firm The SCO Group Inc., have unexpectedly left the firm. Two snippets from the article:
SCO spokesperson Blake Stowell confirmed that Canopy had ousted Ralph Yarro, president, chairman and chief executive of the Lindon, Utah-based business, and Darcy Mott, chief financial officer of the company. He was unable to explain why the pair of veteran Canopy managers had been let go. “I honestly don't know,” he said. Calls to Canopy were not returned.
Yarro was a graphic artist who worked for Ray Noorda, founder of Novell Inc. and Canopy. Yarro gained Noorda's trust and rose to Canopy's top position in February 1996. Mott had served as Canopy's vice president, treasurer and CFO since May 1999. Before joining Canopy, Mott worked as vice president and treasurer for Novell.

“It is worth noting that SCOsource [SCO's Unix intellectual property division] revenue has declined significantly from a year ago. If SCO is unsuccessful in its efforts to sue IBM and Novell, the share price of SCO stock will fall further and then a shareholder lawsuit becomes a strong possibility,” Quandt said.
When officers that have been around for almost 10 years get ousted and talks of shareholder lawsuits start, there are only bad things ahead. Should be interesting to see how the new management handles the pending IBM case. One can only hope that this silly charade is almost over.
–jeremy

Happy Holidays…and My Apologies

First, I'd like to wish everyone a Happy Holiday season. I hope whatever you choose to celebrate goes well. Secondly, I'd like to apologize for being so behind. Between the holiday season and a little sickness I am way behind, not only on this blog but in general. Things should be settled down now and I'll start catching up ASAP. If you sent me an email and I didn't respond yet, I haven't lost it and I should be getting back to you “real soon now”.
–jeremy

150,000 LQ Members

As I posted here, LQ just passed 150,000 members. Another milestone that I am quite proud of. As was pointed out to me in a recent review, we now have more members than are registered at the Linux Counter. Thanks again to each and every LQ member. Without all of your support, we couldn't be where we are today.
–jeremy

Scoble asks Gates: can we create an interesting music player?

Brian Scoble has written an open letter to Bill Gates about “Open Sourcing” the product development for an iPod competitor. He outlines an interesting plan that would compete with the grass roots Apple culture head on. Will MSFT listen? We'll see. I think it would be difficult for Microsoft 1) to get into the hardware mp3 business as it would upset some of their OEM's and 2) generate the same buzz that Apple has due to their size/reputation/etc. The post seems to have drawn a lot of heat for some reason, though.
–jeremy

Patrick Volkerding Back to Work

Good to see that Patrick is back and feeling a bit better. Hopefully the health issues are all behind him and he can get back to happily hacking on Slack. Welcome back Pat.
–jeremy

Firefox Ad Runs in the New York Times

Been a busy week, but I'm back ;) The full page ad (which ended up being two full pages) that was coordinated by the Spread Firefox team has been run. You can view a small PNG or a large PDF. Congrats to the whole Firefox team, this was a milestone achievement for an Open Source app. I'm happy to say my name was in there, was yours?
–jeremy

LinuxQuestions.org Podcast – 121404

This LinuxQuestions.org Podcast includes more LQ Podcast and LQ Show updates, our participation in the LinuxWorld expo in Boston, a flurry of Linux expos and LQ being reviewed at NewsForge.
–jeremy

NewsForge Site review: LinuxQuestions.org

Tina Gasperson recently reviewed LQ for NewsForge. I have to admit that I had absolutely no knowledge at all that the review was coming, but I am extremely pleased with what was said! Thanks for the kind words Tina, and I'm glad you found the site useful.
–jeremy

New Option for Oracle on Linux

In a move that makes this a bit more interesting, Oracle announced that its key wares for business data centers – database software, clustering tools and collaboration apps – will now run on Novell's SuSE Enterprise Linux 9. Red Hat had been the only certified option for Oracle on Linux until this announcement and the Oracle space had been one of Red Hat's key strengths. The Enterprise Linux market is really heating up and it seems Novell is entrenching themselves for the long haul.
–jeremy

iPod and FC3 Now Working!

I am happy to report that this issue seems to be fixed as of the latest 2.6.9-1.681_FC3 FC3 kernel (although I don't see a specific mention in the Changelog). This means that I will no longer have to build RPMs for this. Yah!
–jeremy