Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Microsoft, Turbolinux to push single sign-on

LinuxWorld

Linux & Open Source News Alert




LinuxWorld's Linux and Open Source News Alert, 10/24/07

LinuxWorld.com Feature Story

Microsoft, Turbolinux to push single sign-on October 23, 2007
Microsoft and Turbolinux, a Tokyo-based Linux distributor, are cozying up with a patent cross-licensing deal and agreement to work more closely together, the companies said Tuesday.

For users, one of the most significant elements to the deal is a pledge to work on a single sign-on system that will allow log-on to Windows-based and Turbolinux-based machines with one set of credentials. At present Windows and Turbolinux machines on a mixed network can't access a common authentication database, but their deal should change this, said Noriko Otake, a spokeswoman for Turbolinux in Tokyo.

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To further this work and other cross-platform projects, the two companies have also entered into a patent cross-licensing deal, specific details of which were not disclosed. Interoperability testing of single sign-on and other future projects will take place at Microsoft's offices in Beijing. Turbolinux is active worldwide but has its strongest footprint in Japan and China.

Turbolinux will also add Microsoft's Live Search service to its desktop operating system.

The deal expands cooperation between the two companies that is intended to remove some of the hassles of using Linux, said Otake. Earlier this year Turbolinux added Windows Media Player to its platform, allowing users access to the large amount of content online encoded in that format, and the company has also been working on support for the Open XML document format. (Read more)

More Linux news

Kernel space: Fair user scheduling for Linux October 23, 2007
A new set of Linux scheduler features would allocate CPU time fairly among the users on the system. (Read more)

Publishing High-Quality Documents with Kile October 19, 2007
TeX and LaTeX produce impeccably laid-out documents, and are the only practical way to show some mathematical equations. This GUI tool acts as an "integrated development environment" for the command-line document preparation tools.

Discerning typesetters have long relied on Tex and LaTeX for impeccable-looking documents. Now they have a front-end that works under Linux and BSD and brings control of the compilers and related utilities under the comprehensive graphical user interface. Authors and editors who use Kile can get increased productivity in the document creation business. This article will highlight some of Kile's key features which make it so attractive to newcomers to LaTeX. (Read more)

LinuxWorld.com Community

Conspiracy, or just job hunting? October 19, 2007
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols brings up the Microsoft-Acacia conspiracy theory.

"Acacia now has two new corporate officers. There's Jonathan Taub, Microsoft's director of strategic alliances for the mobile and embedded devices, who's now an Acacia vice president. And, just days before IP Innovation launched its suit against Red Hat and Novell, Acacia hired Brad Brunell, a top Microsoft executive who was formerly Microsoft's general manager of IP licensing, as a senior vice president."

Sure, this could be the mysterious anti-Linux cartel pulling strings behind the scenes, but there's a simpler explanation: Taub and Brunell wanted to create higher-profile roles for themselves at Microsoft, by getting the company into the patent troll business. Unfortunately for them, sensible execs higher up at Microsoft decided that they didn't want to take the recruiting and employee retention hit that comes with a reputation for patent trolling. So Taub and Brunell quit to find positions where their talents would be appreciated, at a dedicated patent troll firm.

That makes more sense to me. Patent trolling isn't really compatible with being in the software business long-term, and Microsoft is one of the few companies in IT that acts like it thinks further out than next quarter. (Read more)


Contact the author:

Don Marti is editor of LinuxWorld.com.



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