San Mehat goes to work for VA Research 63
The little bird flitted in and told me that San Mehat has left Corel to go work for VA Research. One of his cool projects is getting Linux into the bios. Man, VA seems to be collecting all the fun people.
va is for lovers...err intelligence (Score:1)
VA Research is based in Mountain View California (why the heck is it called VA Research? Anyone know?)
Some tech firms actually headquartered in Virginia: AOL, Circuit City...umm maybe someone can come up with some better examples :).
More about that "BIOS" tidbit please? (Score:1)
1) VA may be thinking of coming out with a competitor to the Cobalt Qube. Think Netwinder except perhaps Intel-powered (considering VA's connections with Intel).
2) VA may be thinking of coming out with their own motherboards for (choose one) laptop, high-end server, or diskless workstation, and needs someone expert in BIOS issues to make the BIOS part work.
Please note that I have no real idea what VA is up to, for obvious reasons (I don't work for them!). Just that those would be why *I* would want to hire him, if I had the R&D budget to do so.
-- Eric
Hire A Supply-Chain Guru Instead (Score:1)
-- Eric
Yes San is in California (Score:1)
OH MY GOD... My friend Kevin from CISCO who reads this place (he's at CISCO in Ottawa) told me about this discussion. What a small world. San's like one of my best friends, he's staying with me, moved here on Wednesday. Right now he's looking for a "Melrose Place" like pad and starts work on Monday (they hooked him up with a crazy ass computer, quad proc Xeon).
For you people who don't know.. Ottawa is Canada's
capital city.. Not Toronto!! Like anyone cares
Linux in the BIOS? How would that work? (Score:1)
Chris
Evangelist, VA.
--
Grant Chair, Linux Int.
VP, SVLUG
Linux in the BIOS? How would that work? (Score:1)
"Oh C'mon", to the VA==compaq comment. Sorry if you misunderstood. And I assure you that I am a "real" Linux user.
I don't even own a mac!
It's funny that you thought I was a mac person though.
Chris DiBona VA Research.
Grant Chair, Linux International
--
Grant Chair, Linux Int.
VP, SVLUG
Better Bios tools (Score:1)
Chris
--
Grant Chair, Linux Int.
VP, SVLUG
Hire A Supply-Chain Guru Instead (Score:1)
Chris
--
Grant Chair, Linux Int.
VP, SVLUG
Hire A Supply-Chain Guru Instead (Score:1)
Chris
--
Grant Chair, Linux Int.
VP, SVLUG
va is for lovers...err intelligence (Score:1)
--
absurd? It has been done! (Score:1)
You have the nettrom+rescue image, which boots a full linux system from the EEPROM. Ok, full is a bit too much, but it is enough to do a full reinstall of the OS over a network without having to set NFS root.
I must confess I have never used it, because I had a tftp/kernel NFS/root setup already configured, but anyway, it still sounds really cool.
The netwinder can boot almost out of a used chewing gum
Linux in the BIOS? How would that work? (Score:1)
Beer recipe: free! #Source
Cold pints: $2 #Product
Netwinder has Linux in flash-mem (Score:1)
Who is San Mehat? (Score:1)
Here it is! (Score:1)
Gabor Kuti is working on a portable suspend-to-disk feature. Homepage a href="http://falcon.sch.bme.hu/~seasons/linux/swsu sp.html ">here.
ROMable kernel? (Score:1)
This brings up an interesting point: Is there a way to compile a ROMable kernel? I mean, one that can execute directly from ROM, rather than loading it into RAM? I know there are writable strings and, of course, allocated RAM, but one could move them into RAMspace.
Come to think of it, you'd have to:
Whew! That's gonna be REEEEAL easy.
Me, I'd like to see a kernel that uses kmodd to reduce boot-up time by delaying device init until the device is needed. We should see initrd bootups in the 1-sec range.
Netwinder has Linux in flash-mem (Score:1)
Linux in the BIOS? How would that work? (Score:1)
If I were working for either VA or Red Hat, I'd find these comparisons really quite insulting.
va is for lovers...err intelligence (Score:1)
UUNet
MCI/WorldCom
RoadRunner (cable modem)
PSINet
and a world of Beltway Bandits ( Governement Leeche^H^H^H^H^H Contractors, can you say SAIC?)
Who is San Mehat? (Score:1)
a bar here in Ottawa that I used to and I believe San still frequents.
San! We still didn't get together for that lunch! shoot me an email if you see this!
Better Bios tools (Score:1)
Deviations from standard hardware (Score:1)
But changing the BIOS won't necessarily mean you lose standard hardware, just that you have a custom bios in flash. And that's easy to replace.
Actually (Score:1)
Cheers,
Ben Tilly
More about that "BIOS" tidbit please? (Score:1)
mean? Hardware compatability factors? Booting
options to do away with lilo, etc? Do we even
*use* the PC BIOS after booting? (I thought we
did not...)
Getting Linux into the bios? (Score:1)
Hire A Supply-Chain Guru Instead (Score:1)
Once Dell starts shipping linux, VA is going to be in big trouble unless they become more fascist about delivering the right product on time.
Who is San Mehat? (Score:1)
The Zaphod was to be a 10 NW Beowulf system in its own case. Would have made a hell of a good ERP hardware platform with the numeric processing and network throughput. The redundancy it would have offered would have been grand too. Never really happened though.
I'll be flying my NW at half mast today.
But I'm sure San will be happy at VA.
Getting Linux into the bios? (Score:1)
A firmware Linux?
Getting Linux into the bios? (Score:1)
Instant-on Linux boxes, no more looking at clouds or little dots walking on the screen.
FlashEEPROM OS that finishes the comparison test before the 'other' OS is even done booting.
Mmmm - warm fuzzies all over.
The TRANSMETA thingie!!! (Score:1)
Ooooohh. (Score:1)
Well done, mr Natural.
BIOS clues. (Score:1)
That is certainly enough room for a decent boot loader, some diagnostics and some decent remote boot firmware. Not quite enough for a compressed kernel, I don't think, but an 8 megabit flash might be.
BIOS clues. (already done with MILO) (Score:1)
Linux in the BIOS? How would that work? (Score:1)
a file containing all of the stuff that used to be in the rom. Maybe there's a convergence here... the traditional PC BIOS is too brain-dead, and the Mac had too much stuff (GUI code) in the ROM.
Va is good stuff (Score:2)
what about the "suspend to HD" feature.. (Score:1)
Oh, and then there's the point that BIOS functionality is pretty much controlled by MS now, at least for the big OEMs, since a decent MS discount structure is contingent on PC9x compliance - if you haven't looked at these standards lately, it's an eye-opener to see what MS is dictating to the PC OEMs. They will not hesitate to use this power to make life very difficult for Linux or any other challenger.
San did a great job on the NetWinder BIOS kernel - I wish him well at VA - we are all saddened by the demise of CCC, but it will be interesting to see if his Linux kernel boot monitor/BIOS can make the transition into the x86 world.
MCI in Virginia??? Try IA!! (Score:1)
Getting Linux into the bios? (Score:1)
I had no idea who he was, then it clicked (Score:1)
I must have been chatting to him on IRC on and
off for a year or two. It only clicked once I
saw the COMDEX reports on NetWinder who he was.
I still have yet to see Linux actually running on
StrongARM. I believe it's quite smart.
San! Please! A little modesty! (Score:1)
-russ
p.s. I *still* owe San lunch.
Netwinder IS Intel Based. (Score:1)
1) VA may be thinking of coming out with a competitor to the Cobalt Qube. Think Netwinder except perhaps Intel-powered (considering VA's connections with Intel).
Unless something has radically changed, the Netwinders are Intel based, running on the StrongArm chip, which Intel got as part of its massive settlement with Digital before Digital was bought by Compaq.
Never mind then. (Score:1)
Thanks for taking it in good humor. I did rest well that night!
va is for lovers...err intelligence (Score:1)
Yes San is in California (Score:1)