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Site dedicated to Open Source science, at the bottom of the world

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross
Managing Editor

Beyond a certain bird mascot, it’d seem that Open Source software and Antarctica don’t have much in common.

But the technology movement and the continent — at least the science that’s practiced there — operate by some of the same principals, and Brendon Grunewald has merged his interest in both topics on a Linux-run, Antarctica news Web site called 70South.

It’s a fitting combination, he says. Scientists at the South Pole have to cooperate, because equipment and bodies are often scarce, says Grunewald, who worked as a physicist in Antarctica between November 1992 and February 1994. “You share information — you collaborate,” he adds. “You have 10% of the picture, and you add three or four other people’s measuring equipment; suddenly you get to 150% of the picture.”

70South includes headlines, such as “The warming debate heats up” and “Whaling sanctions ordered’ as well as general information about the South Pole and a weather report. Wednesday’s weather at Vostok, one of the few stations open year round: minus 93F.

“It’s an incredibly beautiful and dangerous continent; it’s almost like it’s a different planet,” Grunewald says. “Antarctica is a pristine, or near pristine, environment, and it’s a great place to understand our world.”

Grunewald, who says he’s been using Linux for “I don’t know how many years,” launched the site in July 1999. He just recently added WAP capabilities to 70South, using the Open Source Zope; he’s been attracted to Open Source products because he can “fiddle and play and learn.”

The site, a sideline to Grunewald’s full-time job as business development director of a Chicago technology company, keeps his tech skills current and allows him to experiment with software that he can use in his day job.

“A lot of what I play with there, we get the benefit in my company,” he says. “There’s no better way to establish your technical skills than by actually doing it.”

The site, which gets several thousand page views a month, has linked Grunewald with hundreds of people interested in Antarctica. He gets 50 to 60 emails a month from students researching Antarctica or wanting to work there. (There are occasionally tech jobs.) He’s also offered advice to people planning expeditions to Antarctica.

He’s hoping to round up sponsors for contests on research-paper writing, and he’d like to publish articles from anyone ranging from grade-school students to college professors. “I’d like the site to become very much like the Open Source model — where people can contribute and take from it what they see fit,” he says. “I want the site to be one that mirrors both Antarctica and Open Source.”

Category:

  • News

Red Hat and NetSilicon announce partnership

Author: JT Smith

RedHat.com announces, the companies plan to demonstrate the first product to combine Red Hat Open Source Linux leadership with the NET+ARM family of networked microprocessors at the Embedded Systems Conference, West in San Jose, CA. Here’s a story from CNet.

Yggdrasil riddle

Author: JT Smith

This article from the ZDNet AnchorDesk UK looks at the past, present, and future of Yggdrasil Computing.

Category:

  • Linux

OS X: The big compromise

Author: JT Smith


MacWeek.com compares
OS X to Windows and Unix.

Here they come, and they’re not the Monkees

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPlanet warns, smarmy, glad-handing herds of scientific marketers are on the move, and they’re heading for Linux.

Category:

  • Linux

FCC’s chief techie sees a wilder Net ride ahead

Author: JT Smith

David Farber, chief technologist at the Federal Communications Commission, has a promise for those stunned by the pace of change in Internet developments over the past 10 years: In the decade to come, they will face “an even wilder ride”, from CNET News.

imici Messenger for Linux

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPlanet reviews imici Messenger 0.1.1 for Linux.

Category:

  • Linux

S3’s new arm will build appliance software

Author: JT Smith

Techweb News reports, early products will likely use a Linux operating system, possibly from Transmeta Corp., according to Ward Williams, Frontpath’s director of product marketing.

Category:

  • Linux

Perl Embedding Engine (PEE) 1.04a released

Author: JT Smith

According to Linux PR, PEE aims to solve the compatibility problem by giving full power of Perl to
the developer, while allowing them to use a standard, consistent template
format.

Via unwraps design for $199 PCs

Author: JT Smith

PC World News quotes, “One of the keys to reaching a system price point as low as $199 is to use the open-source Linux operating system rather than Microsoft’s Windows,” said Bert McComas, microprocessor analyst at Inquest Market Research.

Category:

  • Unix