Linux

Upclose with Linux

13 December 2009


Month of December is shaping up to be a very eventful month, whereas normally you would expect things to wind down by holiday season. Nope, not for me. A storage product on Linux we have been working on for a long time is finally seeing the light of the day. We are very excited to release this cutting edge product to the market place. I have mostly worked in proprietary technologies- Microsoft, IBM, Novell, NetApp, EMC and so on. No wonder the move to the open source world of Linux was initially fraught with uncertainties, but actually turned out to be a pleasant experience. Most of my fears, of sitting through endless development cycle, marathon testing, rework , customer criticism etc turned out to be unfounded :-)

I can’t believe how far open source movement has come in the last few years. Working on the Linux environment , all my apprehension about not finding the right tools, right documentation, turned out to be untrue. It is pretty well documented for the most part, albeit some projects which I really needed to draw inspiration from where abandoned in 2003, which left me scrambling for answers. Anyway, we survived through all this and now can stake our claim in the Linux’s world!!

of all the Linux variants, Ubuntu Linux had the best desktop experience, whereas SUSE Linux (SLES) and OES2 from Novell gave me a good taste of Server class Linux. Needless to say, the developer community has really pulled together very well and I see good future ahead for this Technology. In fact some of the hottest gadget of 2009 run on Linux- think Kindle, Tivo and so on.

Our new storage product leverages the web services architecture – SOA (Service Oriented Architecture), scales very well and virtualizes Tera Bytes and Tera Bytes of data… where is Peta Byte..bring it on :-)

>Upclose with Linux

13 December 2009

>
Month of December is shaping up to be a very eventful month, whereas normally you would expect things to wind down by holiday season. Nope, not for me. A storage product on Linux we have been working on for a long time is finally seeing the light of the day. We are very excited to release this cutting edge product to the market place. I have mostly worked in proprietary technologies- Microsoft, IBM, Novell, NetApp, EMC and so on. No wonder the move to the open source world of Linux was initially fraught with uncertainties, but actually turned out to be a pleasant experience. Most of my fears, of sitting through endless development cycle, marathon testing, rework , customer criticism etc turned out to be unfounded :-)

I can’t believe how far open source movement has come in the last few years. Working on the Linux environment , all my apprehension about not finding the right tools, right documentation, turned out to be untrue. It is pretty well documented for the most part, albeit some projects which I really needed to draw inspiration from where abandoned in 2003, which left me scrambling for answers. Anyway, we survived through all this and now can stake our claim in the Linux’s world!!

of all the Linux variants, Ubuntu Linux had the best desktop experience, whereas SUSE Linux (SLES) and OES2 from Novell gave me a good taste of Server class Linux. Needless to say, the developer community has really pulled together very well and I see good future ahead for this Technology. In fact some of the hottest gadget of 2009 run on Linux- think Kindle, Tivo and so on.

Our new storage product leverages the web services architecture – SOA (Service Oriented Architecture), scales very well and virtualizes Tera Bytes and Tera Bytes of data… where is Peta Byte..bring it on :-)

Platform Independent Development

30 November 2007


In one of our re-engineering projects we came across this nice library called Boost. Although for most part our development uses Win 32 APIs or Microsoft Platform SDK, we saw some value in going through the Boost libraries. These libraries can help make your application platform independent. The advantage is, do it one the hard way using boost, but then the same code works on Mac, Linux,Microsoft and Unix.

We are going to keep Boost on our radar for some time, and see if we can leverage it in our development projects.

>Platform Independent Development

30 November 2007

>
In one of our re-engineering projects we came across this nice library called Boost. Although for most part our development uses Win 32 APIs or Microsoft Platform SDK, we saw some value in going through the Boost libraries. These libraries can help make your application platform independent. The advantage is, do it one the hard way using boost, but then the same code works on Mac, Linux,Microsoft and Unix.

We are going to keep Boost on our radar for some time, and see if we can leverage it in our development projects.