Japan, China & South Korea May Develop OS 367
v1x writes "Reuters reports that Japan, South Korea and China are set to agree to jointly develop a new computer operating system as an alternative to Microsoft Corp.'s Windows software. It is said that if the plan matures, the three nations are likely to build upon an open-source operating system, such as Linux, and develop an inexpensive and trustworthy system."
China making open-source software !?! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:China making open-source software !?! (Score:2)
Re:China making open-source software !?! (Score:2)
Re:China making open-source software !?! (Score:3, Funny)
6a) (Japan) The init process is a god.
6b) (China) There is no init process. All processes are equals, so long as they are prepared to be killed to protect the init process.
YAW.
Strange (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Strange (Score:5, Insightful)
Why in the world would you possibly think that? There are many, many reasons why they would want to do this together. China has cheap programmers, first. Japan and China have very good computer science people. And yes, there is a purpose for that distinction. The CS people develop the innovative portions of the system, and the programmers write the code that makes it all work.
Just for the language support alone it benefits both Japan and China to work together to try to replace the buggy Chinese/Japanese character input systems available. I'm not too familiar with the Windows end, but the Linux jserver/freewnn line is good but far from perfect or ideal.
How did you get modded interesting? "I wonder who is really behind this effort?" Uhm, Japan, China, and South Korea. Take the tinfoil hat off boy.
Re:Strange (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Strange (Score:2)
My guess is that most of the people involved speak technical English. At least enough to keep the project going.
But I think you are underestimating national pride and how much everybody hates the Japanese over there. It could be a Japanese originated PR-type thing. Reading the article, I notice that it is Japa
Re:Strange (Score:2)
If you want to insult me instead of presenting a rational argument, that is fine. But get your facts straight first, you dumbass. Trade minister is a cabinet post. Hiranuma is a big-time LDP honcho.
Re:Strange (Score:3, Interesting)
This is certainly a relevant perspective. I would suspect a younger generation don't have as many wounds as the older. However, it's the older guys who run things over there.
I would suspect that any techie knows enough english to keep things humming. This would be the strongest link rather than trying to resolve the differences between Chin, Kanji, and Hang
Re:Strange (Score:2)
Re:Strange (Score:2)
Basically, the problem is that the bureaucracy that exists now is exactly the same one that existed in t
Re:Strange (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Strange (Score:2)
Re:Strange (Score:2)
Apparantly, it's "hip" to include English in local Japanese advertising, products and signage. What your probably see are indirect imports with hastily (and incorrectly) translations that were never meant for native English speakers.
The Japanese have far too much pride in their product to allow mistakes out the door.
Re:Strange (Score:2)
Re:Strange (Score:2)
Re:FRAGEMENTING THE OPEN-SOURCE MOVEMENT (Score:2)
Also, Japan has long, LONG been a "first rate" Western nation, by whatever means you might chose to rate nations. It actually performs better than the US on most indicators. Learn your facts.
translated (Score:5, Funny)
Aka: They are going to take Linux or BSD Sources, change some strings and compile them into their own kernel.
Wonderful... (Score:3, Interesting)
We'll have government beaurocracy and spy agencies trying to include sneaky backdoors!
Seriously, though, this doesn't excite me very much. Kinda like China's CPU... and DoD's Linux... although they may make interesting contributions and suggest different approaches to security. And I haven't read the article, so I'm wondering whether it'll be a joint effort with separate translations, or if they'll just go with English.
Not to mention... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes indeed!! (Score:2, Funny)
Before... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Before... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Before... (Score:2, Interesting)
Internationalisation has always been a responsibility of the application programmer (strings don't magically translate themselves, well at least not yet!) - so don't
Re:Before... (Score:2)
The same goes for Linux/*BSD's.. However, these OS's have a nice feature. The OS itself, and most applications are opensource. Hence they can add the support and whatever they need themselves. You can't do that with properitary software. This is really opensource vs properitary, not a linux vs wi
Re:Before... (Score:3, Insightful)
It is also somewhat "unfixable," except in small - individual desktop suites (Gnome, KDE) can fix it, but a lot of general system-wide improvement is unlikely.
Re:Before... (Score:2)
The reason Macintosh completely dominated the Japanese market (until recently) is that they were the first OS to really support appropriate input methods and localization.
Re:Before... (Score:2)
What are you talking about? (Score:4, Interesting)
OS X...speaking of obvious (Score:2)
Design by Committee? That's go far. (Score:3, Insightful)
A framework for developing the system would be set up during meetings by government ministers in mid-September, followed by committee meetings involving private-sector specialists from each of the three nations in November.
1) An operating system designed by a committee is going to fail.
2) An operating system controlled by a government is eventually going to be oppressive and restrictive.
Re:Design by Committee? That's go far. (Score:3, Insightful)
2. It is not "a government", it is multiple governments which don't all always agree on everything.
Establishing *infrastructure* is beneficial for everyone, so cooperation like this should be welcomed. You might see policy development being slow because of government involvement, but that's how it is when large organizations are involved.
Too many cynics.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is it going to fail? Has a committee never worked? Isn't this what happens more or less in large companies, ones that build large software systems? For every Linus, there is probably hundreds of incredibly complex pieces of code designed by committees of programmers and managers.
2) An operating system controlled by a government is eventually going to be oppressive and restrictive.
WHY?! Please, take off your tinfoil for a while and
Re:Too many cynics.... (Score:2)
Re:Too many cynics.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Let's just take a quick flyover past the primary comme
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Design by Committee? That's go far. (Score:2)
1) An operating system designed by a committee is going to fail.
What? You mean like Multics? But that's everywhe... oh...
Right wing argument that holds no water (Score:3, Insightful)
2) An operating system controlled by a government is eventually going to be oppressive and restrictive.
Of course if this were true then TCP/IP (yes I do not it is not an OS) would be obsolete and the Internet would have long since been abandoned.
Right wing libertarians need to do better than spout this "government is evil" tripe. It's a sort of trotskyism in reverse, and it's just as boring and stupid.
The question is; (Score:5, Interesting)
Will it be an os designed to screw people over? (as in, drm, tcpa, etc)
Will they simply steal OSS and release it with few changes without honoring the gpl?
Will it be in other languages and availabe to foreigners?
These people are notorious for stealing ideas, and in most cases, modifying them into something better then claiming them as their own. I don't trust foreign companies and goverments any more, and in some cases, less, than I trust my own(US). What is the community to do if they steal it and start selling it stateside?
Re:The question is; (Score:5, Insightful)
My guess is 'yes'. Two reasons:
THey'll want business to use it. And businesses will be unwilling to use anything that they suspect has a backdoor. The source'd have to be visible for them to trust it
It's being done by three governments, not one. That makes it a lot harder for any, ahem, idiosyncratic code to make it in, and again, OSS is the best way of ensuring this.
Will they simply steal OSS and release it with few changes without honoring the gpl?
How do you know microsoft isn't doing that right now? I'm not suggesting that they are, but there seems to be a prevalent attitude during this discussion that china=evil, japan/rok=irrelevent, USA=land of free (if not Free). Japan and ROK are both WTO members, and China really wants to be. It's unlikely they're going to contravene those rules without good reason. Besides, if it's open source, the question goes away.
Will it be in other languages and availabe to foreigners?
Who cares? Seriously. If you've got Linux, BSD and Windows, you're more or less covered. Again, if it's open source, etc, etc
These People, etc
I guess we'll have to just hope that they act honorably, just like all American companies do.
Re:The question is; (Score:3, Interesting)
Hopefully it will also be distributed open source, but I guess only time will tell. It's interesting to consider how compatible Chinese Communist ideals with OSS (more compatible than Capitalist Democracies?).
Re:The question is; (Score:2)
Actually, Chiana was admitted in the WTO recently. However I somehow doubt that for a country to be in the WTO guaranties that it will respect its rules
Oh yeah, right. The next thing you'll tell me is (Score:5, Funny)
Pull the other one.
KFG
Re:Oh yeah, right. The next thing you'll tell me i (Score:4, Insightful)
The only OS mentioned is Minix and he refers to it that if you are tired of everything just running under Minix you might give his kernel a try. Hardly a rousing sales pitch except to geeks.
That is btw Microsofts biggest problem with linux. Where MS got to meet growth targets and keep market share. Linux is free of all that. If one person still enjoys tinkering with it it has met 100% of its goals.
Remember that it is companies like Redhat and Suse that can fail. Linux cannot fail. Neat isn't it.
Disclaimer I am talking about the kernel here. The GNU part has of course always had higher ambitions according to its founders.
heh. (Score:4, Interesting)
makes sense (Score:2)
By making an OS together, they could probably build one from scratch with their native language support without English as the intermediary anywhere in the processes.
Re:makes sense (Score:2, Insightful)
An OS brough in part by Red China? (Score:2)
Whoops! (Score:2)
MS's Nightmare (Score:5, Insightful)
so when is the Redmond ligths out party?
Re:MS's Nightmare (Score:3, Interesting)
Not soon, but this will hurt them significantly. I can really see the next version of Windows coming out with some kind of linux emulator so Windows based business can have the best of both worlds. Its the same in the Mac world, they have to emulate Windows too.
Whether this kills Redmond is a tough question. Many CS/IS/IT programs here and abroad are in many ways MS proprietary based, many developers know nothing but windows, etc. I think if MS fails it will
Could we see it in the US? (Score:2)
Let's see; what was the name of that high-reliability open-source OS that that the Japanese are using for things like autos? What ever happened to the notepad computer running linux that was announced over there several years ago, but which is only available in the US with Windows installed?
(What, me paranoid?
So..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So..... (Score:2)
Look at the monkey, funny monkey, little red monkey, acting so fidgety...
Is this going to be the Eighth Wonder of the World (Score:4, Insightful)
A framework for developing the system would be set up during meetings by government ministers in mid- September, followed by committee meetings involving private-sector specialists from each of the three nations in November.
It looks like a good plan, but I hope the execution is not flawed.
Re:Is this going to be the Eighth Wonder of the Wo (Score:2)
Great (Score:2)
Unicode, Unicode, Unicode (Score:5, Insightful)
So Japan, Korea, China share the need for coherent Unicode support in their software at OS and application level. This is something missing from anything one can put together today in the West, either using Windows or Linux.
So this move makes sense, though given the history between these three countries, somewhat unlikely. Perhaps after the successful football world cup, someone has been thinking...
Anyhow, I've said several times that it seems an obvious thing for governments to do, especially ones outside the reach/grip of the US hegemony: invest in local open source, both to encourage the development of local IT and to save money by buying less American junk. China, India, Brazil: these are the countries where the likeliehood of a serious home-grown OSS "industry" is most likely.
Before the "destroying value and US jobs" mob get here, I'll just add my voice saying it's a good thing and all success to them.
Destroying Value and US Jobs (Score:3, Troll)
Yet again an Asian country is deciding to use government action to fund an attack on an existing market. Why is our government never going to do anything to respond? Why is it that we have to compete with a culture that lets its people work for 2 cents a day cloning other people's products with government money?
The US should not even trade with these people.
It's called global competition. (Score:2)
You know your computer was probably manufactured in China or Taiwan, right?
And your TV.
Maybe your car. Hell, maybe even your fucking toaster.
The point is, if you feel so strongly about this kind of thing, there are plenty of things you can be doing (or avoid doing) to vote with your wallet.
Peace,
Agree (Score:2)
The monitor is ViewSonic, which is a private label of a screen made in Japan.
The car is a Chrysler, but my next car will be either a Ford or a GM.
I avoid buying things made in China. However, since Walmart has no problem waving the flag while it subdizes the export of US jobs, I guess sometimes I do get stuck.
I vote with my wallet, and I vote with my vote as well. Free trade is a joke.
Re:Agree (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Unicode, Unicode, Unicode (Score:2)
How about MacOS? I've heard it's built to support Unicode from the group up. I don't know about input support, but anyway, may be Asian countries should just Switch [apple.com]?
Hiragana not Hirigi (Score:3)
Thank you for pointing it out.
Sounds like a mafia swindle to me - Apple/Sun??? (Score:2)
Why wouldn't they even consider Mac OS X? The Xserve is a very cheap solution to deploy. eMacs are sub $800 iMac CRTs (still made for edu & gov) are sub $700 iMac LCDs are sub $1000 - G5's are looking like they will be the 4 year without obsolescence computer and could possibly be a long term 7-8 year solution - as most Macs are.
This sounds like to me that some "out of work linux" lobby has managed to hoodwin
Re:Sounds like a mafia swindle to me - Apple/Sun?? (Score:4, Interesting)
To control their destiny? To not have their infrastucture held hostage to foreign export controls? (Can we say PS2/PGP/Supercomputer/Clinton/USA? There, I knew we could.) And since when did American hardware/software (less than 1/20th the world's population) define 'standards'? Standards should be in the data, implementation is still free and open. That's why we have Macs, Suns, StrongArm and PCs. Right?
A 1995 Mac is still a viable platform? Slowly backs away, smiling and nodding, making no sudden moves.....
It's offical ... (Score:2)
Cooperation is good (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the OSS movement should get nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize - getting China to cooperate with Japan is not easy.
I spent some frustrating months trying to swap files back and forth with a Japanese company. If we had been able to convince our respective corporate IT departments to use Linux, it would have been a lot easier.
Re:Cooperation is good (Score:2)
China has RedFlag Linux (Score:2, Interesting)
Given that we have GNU/Linux..... (Score:3, Insightful)
They are allowed to do such a thing, or at least try.
It is possible that they start from scratch but can avoid all the hard lessons learned by others. And they don't seem to have political constraints to deal with as TinyOS did.
The Japanese are well known for their technical abilities and expertise and long term perspectives. China is known for their numbers of people that can follow direction. And South Korea is known for their ability to imitate product look and feel.
Is it possible that such mindsets can produce a rock solid OS that is easy to use and safe from attack?
Probably! So lets how they are open source, so we all can learn from them.
China and OSS? (Score:4, Insightful)
In my opinion, they would simply make it so that they (the govt.) are the only ones who handle security etc, so no outside info can get in.
Apple could make a big win here (Score:3, Insightful)
Also for Linux, it is somewhat dated already and I sincerely believe that. But I mean this more in a sense of desktop Linux vs server Linux. The X Windows system is lacking in many areas and other efforts like the open source Berlin or Apple's Quartz is a big step forward. The constant duality of KDE vs Gnome is always an issue. Sure it is nice to have options, but it can also be difficult to understand for new users. When MacOS X came out I was a little upset that there was no theme support, but I quickly accepted it and realized that I should be using the applications instead of making the display look different every other day. And changing the look and feel only serves to confuse users and make tech support more difficult.
Apple was bold enough to scrap OS 9 and move forward with OS X (based on NextStep) because they knew it was a better starting point. I hope China, Japan and South Korea decide they want something better than what Linux and X11 provides.
No justifications given (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No justifications given (Score:3, Interesting)
For Linux, it sure can do server-based services, but it does not make it automatically a perfect OS for the d
Can Theo Speak Chinese? (Score:2)
This is old news (Score:2)
It is Linows for the far east.
Funny thing is, it will work and will allow other countries to compete against the near monopoly that the USA has on software unless the US software companies start moving to Linux. But MS is trying to stop that with help from a number of friends in high (or low ) places.
progress (Score:2)
Will this really work? (Score:2, Interesting)
Bill Gate's Response (Score:5, Funny)
An all-Unicode Gnu/Linux? (Score:4, Insightful)
OS sucks (Score:2)
Great... (Score:2)
Well good news however it works out. (Score:3, Insightful)
Please understand that I do use windows and think it to be a wonderful OS, for certain tasks. As a game machine it is without equal. Sure games crash but then they push the system to its limits and lets face it game producers are hardly know to produce bug free code itself.
For every other task I have gotten fed up with microsoft. I am now running a 2003 machine and it is just as crash prone as xp as 98 as 95 as 3.11 and as dos was. My linux desktop has not had single crash. Oh opera crashes all the time but I do a "killall opera; opera" and it is back exactly where it crashed. Try that with IE or for that matter with Mozilla.
I don't want to see MS fail or driven into the ground. I want market forces to force them to stop adding eye candy and now fix the bloody core itself. Has anyone else noticed that 2003 wich supposdly should have new buffer overflow protection has so far been affected the same as all the other NT's out there?
Perhaps you can compare it to the american car industry wich kept making its cars flashier with more and more chrome attached while they became less reliable and ever greater gass guslers. Enter the japanese with tiny boring cars that worked and they forced the americans to finally change.
So the east to the rescue again. I will belief it when I see it, they haven't even gotten a logo yet everyone knows opensource needs a cute logo, but for now I prefer to be positive.
mmm What about the penguin from Evangelion, Pen Pen as the logo? Pen Pen [k12.pa.us]
OS is good (Score:2)
But Linux is obsolete... (Score:4, Interesting)
Joking aside, I hope they don't use Linux - it would be good to see this scale of effort into something new, hell maybe even a microkernel based OS.
Linux is doing fine without them, and maybe they could increase the competition...
Re:What's a little monopoly to do? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hopefully they will write it in a better langua (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hopefully they will write it in a better langua (Score:4, Interesting)
their design paradigms need to be re-evaluated...every language you program has the SAME end result...machine code. programming in c or c++ is not going to make sofware less secure if you KNOW WHAT THE "F" YOU ARE DOING.
bottom line, c and c++ provide the flexability for system programmers to control every aspcet of thier code...if a routine call is flawed...then write a new one that isnt...or learn to program better...dont blame it on the damn language.
Re:Hopefully they will write it in a better langua (Score:2)
Please.
Yes, the world would arguably be a better place if applications were written in higher-level languages. But system-level stuff like operating system kernels? A relatively low-level language is required. Heck, some of the stuff that operating systems do requires assembly.
Re:Hopefully they will write it in a better langua (Score:3, Insightful)
They could write it in Ada or Modula-3. I can't think of a reason why you couldn't write 99.9% of an operating system in Ada. Compiler and computer technology has advanced quite a bit since the days of UNIX V7 and the Portable C Compiler.
Re:My Develop OS? (Score:2)
Bubba Thinks Audio Video (Score:2)
The article states they might build on Linux. That would make alot of sense. The guts of Linux are solid, it's the user experience that is weak. Laying a 21st century Audio/Video/UI over Linux to create a new OS would le
Re:Maybe Linux isn't Free enough (Score:2)
Re:License (Score:2)
Only if they give a damn about US copyright law. Which is probably not the case for at least one of the aforementioned parties.
"0h nos! China h4s st0le our sourze!"
Re:License (Score:2)
Why should any country other than the US have to give a damn about US copyright laws ?
Do they care about our (i.e. other countries') copyright laws ?
Re:License (Score:2)
Re:License (Score:2)
That would be Bern, Switzerland ?
It's an internation treaty that signatories to it must comply with, not "US copyright law".
Re:Sushi Linux? (Score:2, Funny)
Unagi isn't served raw.. it's deliciously braised.