Allen,
For multiple times, Fidler said that he didn't think Linux was fitting in the embedded space, because it was designed to run on standard PC hardware. While this statement is valid, he didn't mention the time-to-market, upgradability, and application support advantages that Linux-based designs enjoy. For some of VxWorks' vertical markets such as switches, RTLinux will not compete in. Where RTLinux shines is the (almost) PC-like consumer appliances such as STBs and WebPads. What is your take on the general threat of Linux, and what do you think is WRS' strategy going forward to battle Linux?
A second question, have you gotten a chance to look much into Transmeta's Crusoe chips? Do you think Transmeta's Crusoe dream can be realized? If not, what do you think about its technologies in emulation and power control?
Thank you,
Khan
----------Article from EETime on Leneo's aggressive moves in to the embedded space-------- Lineo snaps up two more to realize Linux plan
By Craig Matsumoto EE Times (04/21/00, 11:01 a.m. EST)
SAN MATEO, Calif. ? Linux vendor Lineo Inc. added two more acquisitions to its roster this week, continuing on a quest to become an embedded-software player on par with Wind River Systems Inc.
The company announced it has bought Fireplug Computers Inc. (Vancouver, B.C.) and Inup (Saint-Ouen, France). Inup has expertise in CompactPCI and clustering, while Fireplug has developed ThinLinux, a version of the Linux kernel tailored for very small, Intel-compatible embedded systems.
Lineo's strategy mirrors that of the vendors of embedded operating systems that are trying to work Linux into their own plans. But Lineo is convinced it holds the upper hand by going in the opposite direction ? turning itself from a Linux distributor into a real-time OS vendor. Vice president of marketing Lyle Ball claimed that the company's Embedix software platform is "very comparable" to Wind River's VxWorks, just not as widely deployed.
Lineo, based in Lindon, Utah, and originally named Caldera Thin Clients Inc., was created out of business-software provider Caldera Inc. in 1998 with the intention of providing the Embedix kernel and related tools under a royalty business model. Caldera's other half, Caldera Systems Inc., continues to sell Linux to businesses.
Since February Lineo has announced acquisitions of six private companies, aiming to expand its offerings both in technology and support.
Because Linux wasn't created with real-time applications in mind, "we knew we would have to acquire companies," Ball said. Specifically, for real-time expertise, Lineo snapped up Zentropix Computing LLC (Herndon, Va.) and RT-Control Inc. (Toronto), both of which had worked on adapting Linux for real-time environments. Lineo also picked up Moreton Bay Ventures (Brisbane, Australia), a specialist in virtual private networks, and the engineering firm United System Engineers (Shiojiri, Japan), which has worked with a variety of processor platforms and will become a part of Lineo's support services team.
Questions have arisen about Lineo's ability to juggle so many mergers, but the companies involved are small and in some cases have worked together before. Both Moreton Bay and RT-Control share expertise with Motorola Inc.'s ColdFire processors, for example, and "they actually had many shared customers before we brought them together," Ball said.In part, Lineo's overall strategy depends on Linux's open-source nature. One selling point is that the Embedix platform can draw from ? and sometimes share work with ? the army of ad hoc Linux developers around the world, Ball said. Perhaps more important, Lineo is counting on being able to offer embedded Linux for less than the price of a standard RTOS. Systems companies working with vendor OSes "have been paying through the nose for proprietary systems that don't have the ability to keep up technically with where Linux has gone," Ball said.
Ball said customers sometimes complain that some OS vendors will use a recently developed Linux offering to attract business while really pushing a different, proprietary OS.
However, executives at Lynx Real-Time Systems Inc. (San Jose, Calif.) said Lynx customers prefer a dual offering of the LynxOS real-time operating system and Blue Cat Linux, the company's Linux distribution.
In fact, the combination is a blessing, partly because of the limitations that still haunt Linux in a real-time environment, said Bill Hogan, president of Lynx. "There are a number of our customers wanting to have the choice of either an open-source Linux OS or a real-time OS for their more demanding applications," he said.
Hogan said that Lynx plans to offer a binary interface allowing Linux application binaries to run on either OS. "LynxOS really is Linux, in the sense that you can run Linux applications on LynxOS," he said.
Still, Lineo executives believe theirs is an easier path. RTOS vendors "have been charging customers for something they say meets all their needs. But they're diluting their offerings by offering Linux," Ball said. |