Letters to the Editor
What's Free?
For several years, my son has been telling me about free software, and I have failed to understand completely what he meant. I associate "free" with "without cost", and since I spend very little on software anyway, I have felt no need to use "free software". I did not until recently understand that the freedom to change the software, which access to the source code provides, is far more important than lack of cost.
This misunderstanding is widespread. Therefore, I would like to propose an
alternate term for software with source code--"liberated" software.
Liberated software liberates the programmer.
--
Daniel L. Johnson, M.D., F.A.C.P
johnsond@uwstout.edu
Usefulness
Once again I'm at work in front of my HP workstation, about to request more
information on a software product I noticed in an LJ ad, that just
might solve a problem a co-worker asked me about last week. A few months
ago my system administrator bought BRU (from an LJ ad I gave him)
for an HP workstation headed to a tele-commuting co-worker's house. I
occasionally daydream about having time to explore my Linux system at home,
but I consistently read LJ because its columns, articles, and
advertisements give me information I use at work.
--
Greg Deitrick
deitrick@shell.com
Thanks!
I would like to say that I was absolutely impressed with the May issue of the Linux Journal, especially with the articles which dealt directly with system administration such as how to set up a WWW site, the article of an ISP using Linux, the Majordomo setup/configuration article, etc.
Keep up the good work. Now I remember why I subscribed to this magazine in
the first place!
--
John Coy
jcoy@magic.yournet.com
PVM
Several times your articles have mentioned a guy from NASA who uses PVM instead of supercomputers, and that he gave a talk on it at a conference, etc.
Please have him, or someone in attendance, paraphrase what he is doing, and perhaps speculate that nnn Pentium 90's equals such and such Supercomputer, at so many gigaflops, etc.
Please also consider a `Porting Corner' article every month to summarize
the progress of ports to other computers (i.e. Alpha, MIPS, PowerPC, etc).
Only a quarter page or smaller would be required, with a line or two on
each port.
--
Doug Fortune
LJ Responds:
In response to your first point, we do intend to have an article on this
system. However, there is no way to say that nnn Pentium 90's is equivalent
to any supercomputer; a loosely-coupled parallel system like that works
well only on certain problem domains. We intend to have an article on the
Beowulf system, but it is currently an ongoing research project, and is not
ready for an article at this time.
The architects of Beowulf are about to build a second-generation system
based on their current experience and research with their first system, and
the results from that system will be more interesting and worthwhile to
readers with a serious use for the technology. All the software that they
are using will be released as a package, and when it is, we will certainly
pursue an article.
In response to your second point, progress on the ports to various
architectures does not progress in a way that facilitates monthly
reporting. We will report on significant progress on the ports. In
particular, our "Stop The Presses" article in this issue mentions that the
Linux/Alpha port is now self-hosting. We will also report on the state of
all ports from time to time, as we did recently.
Corrections