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To: The Duke of URL© who wrote (169270)8/12/2002 12:40:38 AM
From: The Duke of URL©  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
THIS JUST IN.

Dow Jones, Reuters
Sun Adopts Intel Chips for Line
Of Servers Using Linux, Solaris

By DON CLARK
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Sun Microsystems Inc., taking another step away from its hardware heritage, is adopting Intel Corp. chips for a low-end line of server systems that will run the free Linux operating system or Sun's Solaris software.

The announcement, pegged to the LinuxWorld trade show in San Francisco that begins Monday, is the latest sign of standardizing forces causing manufacturers to reduce their reliance on proprietary technologies. Sun, which is bundling several programs along with new machines, is trying to outflank hardware-rival International Business Machines Corp. while helping to prevent Microsoft Corp. from establishing a dominant position in Internet software.

"IBM is the air war and Microsoft is the ground war," said Jonathan Schwartz, Sun's executive vice president of software.

Much of the action is being prompted by Linux, a variant of the Linux operating system that has become a rallying cry for many programmers and cost-conscious corporations. Linux, besides being available at little or no charge, can be freely modified by programmers and can run on very inexpensive server systems.

Sun, Palo Alto, California, was later than rivals such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard Co. in making a big marketing push around Linux. But it is trying to make up for lost time. Its chief executive officer, Scott McNealy, will deliver one of the first keynotes at the LinuxWorld show.

Microsoft for the first time will also have a booth at the trade show. The

rest at wsj



To: The Duke of URL© who wrote (169270)8/12/2002 1:06:21 AM
From: kapkan4u  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
<For a state to prohibit purchase of any copyright protected product, which they would have to do to comply with the equal protection clause, would violate the schema of federal copyright protection and therefore violate the Supremacy Clause of the US Constitution.>

So in your expert opinion the Equal Protection Clause of the US Constitution protects people and bits. Who would have guessed that the Founding Fathers were computer geeks.

Kap