Requests for Linux drivers flowing in

By Victoria Ho, ZDNet Asia
Friday, August 14, 2009 07:44 PM

A steady stream of manufacturers are requesting Linux drivers for their hardware, suggesting growing adoption of Linux operating systems among enterprises.

According to Greg Kroah-Hartman, Novell programmer and Linux Driver Project lead, the group of some 400 programmers at the Project receive requests to port existing closed-source drivers to open source drivers for Linux "all the time", and has been "doing a lot of work on this over the past few years".

In an e-mail exchange with ZDNet Asia, he pointed to his blog post of June this year, which said the Project receives on average, two requests a month from manufacturers to have drivers written.

The initiative works with hardware makers to code Linux drivers for their products for free, on the makers' request.

Such drivers have been written "for a wide range of different hardware devices" and been included into the main kernel tree, he said.

Back in 2007, Kroah-Hartman requested for help finding more hardware for which to write device drivers. Some reports online suggested that this was because businesses were holding back from opening their drivers up to the community.

Today, this "problem" has been "solved quite thoroughly", he said.

"All of the major hardware manufacturers told me that there is no problem that needs to be solved in relation to device support on Linux.

"Everything they ship worked just fine with Linux back then, and continues to do so today," he said.

Several hardware makers ZDNet Asia spoke to also said they were working on maintaining Linux compatibility.

Jeff Morris, director of client product management large enterprise and public for Asia-Pacific and Japan at Dell, said in an e-mail the company provides full Linux support for its enterprise servers.

He raised the examples of several Dell consumer-oriented desktops, as well as a corporate PC line which is offered without an installed OS, so that companies can install their own.

"We also worked very closely with our hardware partners and encourage them to create driver support for the Linux distributions we support," he added.

HP's Dennis Mark, vice president and general manager, desktop systems unit, personal systems group, Asia-Pacific and Japan, also pointed to several examples of the PC-maker's products which support Linux.

He said HP would continue looking into ways to provide Linux support.

Kroah-Hartman said Linux has reached mainstream status on the desktop, at least on the enterprise space. "There are very large companies that are well known users of Linux in this manner: all of the movie companies, Ford, Peugeot, all of the Wall Street companies, almost all banks [and] the stock exchanges," he said.

In spite of this, Linux has gained a bad rap within some consumer circles for being difficult to use, or to some, a new ground that consumers are not interested venturing into.

Both Red Hat and Novell last year pulled away from the consumer desktop space.

Red Hat last month reiterated its stance on the desktop space being one that does not pose a viable business option for it.


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Requests for Linux drivers flowing in
I've spent a number of years pointing out to friends and customers that it a very bad idea to buy a device that doesn't support Linux. You can kind of assume that if it has drivers for Linux that it will probably have driver for Windows and then next version of Windows.... Think it through like this, "if you know it works with Windows 98 and it works with Linux, I can probably buy it in anticipation that it will work with Windows XP. It in 2000 was a Minolta printer that worked find with 98. Worked very badly with Windows XP and did not work with Linux. Needless to say I've avoided Minolta, won't sell them or recommend them.

When Minolta finally figures out that they can't treat their potential sales as fools they will get those open driver out. Or they may go out of business. It must be hard to explain to stock holders why their devices aren't 100 percent Linux able.
Posted by carlleigh on Friday, August 14 2009 10:22 PM

Requests for Linux drivers flowing in
It was bad enough that I had to get Windows Vista preinstalled on my Acer laptop when I am a linux user. What really annoys me is that I'd like to be able to use the built-in winmodem at times when my regular broadband goes down. Unfortunately, and so far as I know, there is only one place online offering drivers and they are not free. Laptop manufacturers should do more about providing drivers for Linux since the emergence of distributions like Ubuntu has fostered a reasonable growth in users.
Posted by slumbergod on Saturday, August 15 2009 06:41 AM

RE: Requests for Linux drivers flowing in
Winwodems are actually just sound devices set up to drive a phone line instead of a speaker. Generally, they're pretty well supported under Linux, but there's the problem that you want them to output particular sounds (that is, the sound of a high-speed modem sending particular data), and there doesn't seem to be open-source software that does that. On the other hand, it also doesn't really matter much what device you have; an open-source program to drive one winmodem would drive pretty much any one, although the closed-source programs that exist only handle particular audio formats, which means they don't work with everything.
Posted by Daniel Barkalow on Monday, August 17 2009 01:19 PM

Requests for Linux drivers flowing in
I began by using Sabayon Linux 3.4 on my HP 520 notebook PC since a year back, after I threw out Windows Vista. I then moved to fedora 9.0 early this year, then to Ubuntu 9.04

I recently completed the migration of my work from a Windows XP PC to a Dell Optiplex GX110 desktop PC with an Intel Pentium III 933MHz processor and running Ubuntu 9.04

Before I completed the swithc, I ensured that it worked with my Brother HL-2040 monochrome laer printer.

Brother has lots of Linux drivers for its printers at:-
solutions.brother.com...

I later encountered what is a known problem with the later Brother HL-2140. Namely that the print job went through OK except that the printer did not print. Using the Ubunto wizared, I installed the driver for the HL-2060 which worked.
My elderly aunt uses a PC running Ubuntu 9.04 with the HL-2140.

Linux has come a long way to be able to reach down to the consumer desktop level and I must commend the efforts of Linux developers in coming this far. Keep it up as more still needs to be done

Meanwhile, check out some stories I have written about open source software or which are related to the use of PCs running open source software.

www.commtechasia.net...

www.commtechasia.net...

www.commtechasia.net...

Cheers

Charles
Posted by Charles Moreira on Wednesday, August 26 2009 04:12 AM


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