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Feature: Linux

Trustix looks for expansion in United States, China

By on November 01, 2002 (8:00:00 AM)

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-By Grant Gross -
Trustix, a Linux company based in Norway and Indonesia, is now aiming for larger markets -- the United States and China.

Trustix announced this week a strategic partnership with Langchao, the largest server manufacturer based in China (number three in server sales in China behind IBM and HP), and the company has been quietly pushing its proprietary add-on software to Linux in the United States in recent months. Last week, Trustix formalized a long-standing distribution deal with IBM that would allow the two companies to jointly market the secure Linux OS on IBM hardware in the United States, in addition to Europe and Africa, where Trustix had worked with IBM previously.

Trustix's main product, besides its Trustix Secure Linux distribution, is the Trustix Linux Solutions (TLS) suite, a new line of back-office productivity software designed to work with Linux and be easy-to-use GUIs for Linux non-experts to deploy. The TLS suite includes Trustix Firewall with VPN, Trustix Proxy Server, Trustix Mail Server, Trustix LAN Server and Trustix Web Server.

Trustix opened a U.S. office in San Jose about six months ago, but is now ready for a big marketing push in the United States, says Havard Wollan, Trustix president and CEO.

Trustix is aiming that suite at small- and medium-sized businesses, and Wollan believes that business model can be successful in the United States. "We're addressing the market of ... all the companies that don't necessarily have in-house Linux experts and maybe cannot afford or will not have in-house Linux experts," Wollan says. "We still think that Linux is a very attractive value proposition to those companies, but Linux solutions have to be provided in a slightly different way."

Trustix tells customers new to Linux that it has Microsoft-like look and feel. In addition to its security focus, the company also emphasizes turn-key solutions with hardware partners like IBM.

Trustix's long-time emphasis has been on security, and all its products are focused on its hardened version of Red Hat Linux. Trustix Secure Linux also includes an Open Source automatic updating tool. "The solutions will update themselves as soon as a package is made available, so they will be always up to date, an important aspect of security," Wollan says.

Wollan argues that Trustix's graphical administration tools, which offer guidance for inexperienced administrators, both aid security and make Linux attractive to new users. "This is very important for the mainstream small- and medium-sized enterprises," he says. "This is essential for them to deploy Linux solutions."

Dave Markus, a geophysicist and part-time IT guy at oil R&D company 4th Wave Imaging, says that ease of use was a big reason why his eight-person company went with Truxtix's firewall, Web server and mail server products.

Markus says he looked at other products, including other Linux companies and one Windows-based solution, but found that Trustix best fit the company's need for high security and easy administration. Although Trustix wasn't a household name for the Aliso Viego, California, company, Markus did a lot of research and testing before making the decision.

"The product that looked like it was going to be easiest to use was Trustix," he says. "It had a really nice-looking GUI."

Because 4th Wave Imaging is dealing with "highly proprietary" information such as new oil fields, the company needed an assurance of security. In the eight months the company has been using Trustix products, it's had no security lapses with the Trustix software, although its non-Trustix software has picked up worms.

"From my own experience, so far it's been secure enough," he says. "I don't have an incredible amount of time to be chasing after this stuff. I want something that's industrial strength but is easy to use."

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on Trustix looks for expansion in United States, China

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hmmm

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 01, 2002 08:10 PM
Seeing all these gaudy M$ ads....gives me an idea!
Why doesn't OSDN advertise in MSN<nobr> <wbr></nobr>.......and their other affliated sites<nobr> <wbr></nobr>;)

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Re:hmmm

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 01, 2002 10:40 PM
Hmm Yes
MSN is losing them money hand over fist so everybody get HotMail addresses and help them to lose more.
And buy a XBox for $199 then install XBox Linux Mandrake 9. This is the first full Linux distribution for the XBox and is 100% compatible with Mandrake Linux 9. The 350 MB installation CD includes Gnome, KDE and OpenOffice.org and installs in 10 minutes.
See http://xbox-linux.sourceforge.net

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Re:hmmm

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 01, 2002 11:02 PM
Yes, that would make sense.

Lets have OSDN give money to Microsoft, instead of just taking money from Microsoft. I wish that everyone here who bitches about MS adds would install some add blocking software and shut up. Open source and Microsoft are not mutually exclusive (though they do rarely intersect). MS advertising on tech sites (such as OSDN) is not at all ironic, nor is it wrong for OSDN to advertise for them. Now as to whether MS is wasting their money advertising to this audience, well that is their decision, not OSDNs. I personally don't think Visual Studio adds right next to the Borg Gates icon on Slashdot are all that effective, but it pays OSDN's bills so what the heck, keep 'em coming.

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Re:hmmm

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 01, 2002 11:09 PM
Hrmm, just noticed you're not an MS add troll, at least not as much as others. So I guess my earlier response is kind of flaming you. Here is a response more fitted to you (all of you MS trolls can still go simmer in my previous post)

I think it would be a neat idea to advertise open source products or OSDN products on MS sites, but I doubt that they'd run the adds. If they did, it would be intersting to see which generated more interest - adds for SourceForge on MSDN, or adds for Visual Studio on OSDN.

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Re:hmmm

Posted by: roblimo on November 01, 2002 11:25 PM
The MS sitess would accept the ads. You can have legal problems if you turn away legitimate advertisers who pay their bills and are willing to pay the same rates as everyone else.

If you want to place ads on MSN boosting Open Source, go right ahead!<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:)

- Robin

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Cool

Posted by: Joseph Cooper on November 02, 2002 03:58 AM
Of course there will be a need for some funding...

If Lindows, Microsoft, AOL and many other
companies have taught us anything, it's that
advertising works.

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Stop saying M$

Posted by: Joseph Cooper on November 02, 2002 03:55 AM
It doesn't make you sound any more intelligent.

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Re:Stop saying M$

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 02, 2002 04:47 AM
Look you fagazoid, using M$ is standard now and nothing you or any other moron says is going to change that.

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Re:Stop saying M$

Posted by: Joseph Cooper on November 02, 2002 05:05 AM
Fagazoid.

How clever.

You were calling me the moron, AP?

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geographic stuff

Posted by: MikeX on November 02, 2002 12:30 AM
Indonesia and Norway? What is going on here?

--Mx

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