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- > The facts of the matter are somewhat different.
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The facts of the matter are somewhat different. 09 September 2008 19:04
Back in early May of this year I suggested that we, Blastwave, begin
to give some serious consideration to performing our software builds
on a more modern Solaris revison. At the very least we should be
doing all builds on Solaris 10 with the objective to test and QA on
OpenSolaris. This is because Solaris 8 will drop from its final state
of support in March of 2009 and we should ramp up starting now BUT
not drop Solaris 8 until then, no matter what. Philip Brown made
strange phone calls to the CEO ( as well as to multiple executive
level people ) of Sun Microsystems Inc. He also sent in various
eMails with complaints about the direction that Blastwave was going.
Blastwave is an independent vendor of open source software and not
related to Sun Microsystems Inc. in any way. I received a concerned
phone call from a representative of Sun Microsystems Inc. and was
informed of the behavior of Philip Brown. I was, quite frankly, asked
to fix the problem. Philip Brown is an employee at the University of
Southern California ( USC ) and does not hold a position, nor shares
nor liability within the corporate structure of Blastwave.org. He is,
quite frankly, a community user of the infrastructure. Like many
people in the open source world, perhaps somewhat free wheeling and
perhaps a wild card.
You can read the entire status report at my blog at
www.blastwave.org/dclarke/blog but make no mistake at all that
interested parties ( Baltic Online and CND AG )in Germany simply
lifted everything of value out of Blastwave.org and they did so
quietly, secretly and when they announced their new site they had
already taken everything of value. That includes all email traffic
and email addresses from Blastwave going back six years.
This was all done while the Solaris 8 infrastructure at Blastwave was
being upgraded to handle future concerns and we have since used that
infrastructure to build more software packages. In fact, a detailed
conversation was had with Jeff Jackson ( EVP ) at Sun as well as
others inside Sun simply to assure them that we saw the value in the
Solaris 8 user base even if that user base is vanishingly small. See
blastwave.network.com/testing for the most recent software package
list in the release queue. See my blog for some more info.
All of the software packages in the release queue at Blastwave are
built on Solaris 8 ( with the exception of a new libxine and kdelibs
for our upcoming KDE4 release ) and being tested. The new GCC 4.3.2
was even tested on a SparcStation 20 just to be sure that it ran
flawlessly on old Sparc v7 processors. You can see the x86 testsuite
report from Blastwave.org for the new GCC 4.3.2 at the gcc.gnu.org
site. In fact, an entire modern toolchain from the GNU world is being
released and ALL of it is built on Solaris 8 and tested on old Sparc
and Pentium hardware. The same is true for Samba 3.0.32 and Samba
3.2.2 built on Solaris 8 and tested in enterprise class environments.
Philip Brown would never release these sort of packages and he
controlled the release process exclusively because he had seized the
release key for dm@blastwave.org. His pkg-get tool is closed source
and copyright Philip Brown. These are not open source nor community
values that I support. Thus we are working to release a new package
management tool that is based on the GPL and it will handle software
installs from Blastwave.org. In fact, it is the team in the BeleniX
project that are doing all of the really great work with this new
package management tool and we hope to see software going into
BeleniX and SchilliX and Solaris with ease. We also continue to work
with teams at Sun to publish software to the OpenSolaris users via
the IPS repository at blastwave.network.com:10000 and you can see the
entire published software list from the community at
library.network.com. Simply search for Blastwave as a keyword or
click on the Blastwave tag on the right hand side of that site.
The software is available for free. Always was. Still is. No one ever
took anything away from the Solaris 8 people and, quite frankly, most
of what has been said in the press has been knee jerk reactions from
people that have no long term stake in providing services to the
Solaris user base. They also have no long term investment in the
Solaris or OpenSolaris user base. Having said that, don't hesitate
to make a donation via the DONATE link at www.blastwave.org. We can
always use the donations because this is community based after all.
So having said all this, you should conduct yourself accordingly and
perhaps visit the new wiki at wiki.blastwave.org and look into the
public forums there. Nothing is kept secret and we aim to provide a
service that is not controlled or choked by one man. That is why the
new GPG key for Blastwave.org is in the hands of multiple people in
two continents. Community people ( see BeleniX ) are also working to
release a software package management tool based on the GPL. We value
collaboration and community and that is what Community SoftWare was
all about.
Dennis Clarke
-
09 Sep 2008 19:04blastwave
The facts of the matter are somewhat different. -
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