Turbolinux Joins OSDL | Internet News

Turbolinux Joins OSDL

Written By
Thor Olavsrud
Thor Olavsrud
Aug 27, 2003
2 minute read

Japanese Linux firm Turbolinux, a founder
of the UnitedLinux group and provider of one of the most widely-used Linux
distributions in Asia, Wednesday added its support to the Open Source
Development Labs (OSDL) consortium.

OSDL is a non-profit consortium of IT industry leaders dedicated to
furthering the growth and adoption of Linux in the enterprise. The addition
of Turbolinux — which helped drive the development of double-byte
character support for Linux — to its member companies strengthens OSDL’s
bid to become one of the guiding bodies behind the development of
enterprise Linux, adding expertise in the Japanese and Asian markets.

“With Turbolinux joining OSDL, we have assembled almost all the world’s
leading Linux distributions serving every geographic market,” Stuart Cohen,
CEO of OSDL, said in a statement. “Their technical expertise in Asian
language support, enterprise focus and local market experiences are
important additions to the Lab’s membership, and we look forward to their
contributions to our Linux initiatives in Japan and Asia.”

Koichi Yano, president and COO of Turbolinux, echoed Cohen’s sentiments.
“Turbolinux, from the beginning, has driven the use of Linux in Asia,
making major open-source contributions to improve the software for use by
corporations and government agencies. In fact, we just had a customer win
with Carrier Grade Linux technology on Turbolinux in China. We look forward
to working closely with OSDL to advance the Linux operating system
globally, as well as in Japan, China and other key Asian markets.”

OSDL’s members already include Alcatel, Cisco, Computer Associates, Dell,
Ericsson, Force Computers, Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, Hitachi, IBM, Intel,
Linuxcare, Miracle Linux Corp., Mitsubishi Electric, MontaVista Software,
NEC, Nokia, Red Hat, Sun Microsystems, SuSE, TimeSys, Toshiba, Transmeta,
Ulticom, Unilever and VA Software.

In past months, the consortium has been adding to its credibility in the
Linux community. In June, Linux creator and development kernel maintainer
Linus Torvalds left
his position
at Transmeta to work on the Linux kernel full-time at
OSDL.

OSDL is sponsoring him to work exclusively on leading the development of
Linux, guiding a team of thousands of developers around the world.

Shortly afterward, in July, OSDL announced that it was bringing Andrew Morton, one of Torvalds’ chief lieutenants
and maintainer of the stable Linux kernel, on board as well.

Under an agreement between OSDL and Digeo, where Morton serves as principle
engineer and senior architect of the firm’s Linux efforts, OSDL is
supporting Morton’s role as maintainer of the stable Linux kernel while he
continues in his official role at Digeo.

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