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This is perhaps the most sensational bike release in India. People are excited about the Yamaha FZ16 more than any other bike launch in the history. Why? Because it is not the big bike which a common Indian youth can’t afford. And it is not the sports bike with big flaring and sexy but unmanly looks. FZ16 changes the definition of street biking, its daring, strong, aggressive and unique. Join with me into a journey of exploring the various features of Yamaha FZ16. 

Looks and Styling: A magazine writer who has reviewed this bike tells me that this is the best looking bike in India. But I do not agree. Each kind of biker has a different taste. Some like smooth lines and big flaring, while some like the aggressive, naked and bold looks. I prefer the latter! Yes, this bike is the best looking one in the muscle segment.

Let not the pictures mislead you. The bike looks much better in real. The size of the tank looks massive. Even though the real tank hides itself from the outer make up, no one would know! When I saw the bike for the first time, I felt as if it spoke to me, “Hey, look I am here”. Definitely a head turner for sure. Even the majestic Bullet will look small near this bike. And I am sure that when you park the bike in your college parking lot, Splendors, Stars and Discovers will think twice before parking near Yamaha FZ16.

You can’t help from noticing the macho tires that add to the boldness of the bike. The 140mm rear tyre is the biggest in India. MRF has made this radial tubeless tyre exclusively for the FZ16. The front tyre is of 100mm, very impressive. The short 1.5m exhaust pipe adds to the unique feeling of the bike.

No Indian bike has a head lamp shaped like the one in FZ16. Yamaha has always tried different head lamps with its bikes, and this one is a sure winner.

The dashboard is a little disappointing for me. Muscular bikes have analog meters. This one looks as if this is a toy bike. Sorry for the FZ16 lovers, but this is the part of the bike I don’t like. It features all digital stuff including tachometer, speedometer, fuel gauge, trip and odometer.

The grip bars for the pillion does not look like one at all. Yamaha has tried something new with it, fortunately, it looks very cool! And look at the sharp edge of the tail… says something!

Performance: You cannot compare Yamaha FZ16 with the other premium bikes in India. The Karizma, Pulsars and R15s are for the long rides and sporty feel. But most of the Indians ride 90% of the time in city traffic. The 153cc engine of this bike is designed for the urban commute. The machine churns out 13.6 Nm of torque just at 6000 rpm. The broad tires, low center of gravity and high torque at low rpm makes it a celebration to drive in city traffic. I am sure that the so called big-bikers will be left behind once the signal turns green!

The bike covers the world standard 0-60 kmph sprint in just 5.5 seconds. The mid range thrust and the highly tuned throttle response are designed to give you the feel of a ultra-powerful bike in the urban ride. The maximum speed is 111kmph. As I said before, this bike is not for the long commutes. The seats are soft which is comfortable initially, but will yield and give you a pain in the ass if your drive for more than an hour. Strictly self start, no kicking anymore. I miss the kick. I used to kick my Karizma to start even though I had a self starter because I felt that only girls who do not have the kicking power would press a button with their thumb. But anyway, lets not blame Yamaha for that!

The open front gives you a good view of the vehicles going ahead and the broad tires help you twist and turn  with ease. You can easily do stunts with Yamaha FZ16 because of the superior mass centralization and broad tires. The 267mm diameter brakes assist in doing easy stoppies. Now you too can get such a pic for your online profile! The mileage figures are not the highlights, but it is still doing good. 40kmpl in city and 54kmpl in the highways.

Verdict: Throw away your sporty looking bikes which people call sports bikes. Get real, India needs a bike like this. The mono suspension is great and can be adjusted unlike R15, which helps you to tune according to the road conditions. You may not have the money to buy Harley Davidson, you may not want to work all your life to fill the tank with ever increasing fuel prices and you may not have all the strength to handle a Bullet, but you definitely have a choice of picking a red, flaming orange or black coloured Yamaha FZ16.

Pros:

  • Manly Looks
  • Broad & Tubeless Radial Tires
  • International Branding
  • Tuned for Urban Riding
  • First of its Kind in India
  • Competitive Pricing (Rs.65,000 Ex-showroom)
  • Six Free Services and 2-Year, 30,000 Km warranty

Cons:

  • Toyish Dashbaord with Full Digital Stuff. (Would have been better with dials)
  • Just three colour options
  • Could have provided disc brakes for the rear tires.

Specifications:

Displacement: 153cc
Engine: Air-cooled, 4-stroke, SOHC
Maximum Power: 14bhp@7500rpm
Maximum Torque: 13.6Nm@6000rpm
Gears: 5 Manual
Weight: 126.00 kg
Ground Clearance: 160.00 mm
Fuel Tank: 12.00 ltrs
Wheelbase: 1335.00 mm
Wheel Size: 100/60 - 140/60 mm
Brakes: 267mm Hydraulic Disc
Brakes(Rear): Drum

More Cool Stuff:

Courtesy - www.bikeadvice.in
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‘Delhi government turned Yamuna into sewer’

8 Oct 2008, 0817 hrs IST,IANS
 
NEW DELHI: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief ministerial candidate for Delhi Vijay Kumar Malhotra held the Sheila Dikshit government responsible 

for the deterioration of the Yamuna alleging that the funds meant for the preservation of the river have been embezzled. 

“At end of Navratras, hundreds of thousands of people would be gathering at the bank of the Yamuna for immersion of the sacred idols. The Delhi government has been unable to provide a proper environment to the devotees to complete the rituals,” said Malhotra in a press statement Tuesday. 

“The Congress government has spent more than Rs.20 billion in the name of eradicating pollution in the Yamuna, but unfortunately, the pollution of Delhi’s life line has been going from bad to worse,” the BJP leader added. 

He further pointed out that the Delhi Jal Board falls under the direct control of the Delhi chief minister. 

“The Congress government” he said, “cannot absolve itself of the present unfortunate stage of the Yamuna”. 

“The holy river has been converted into a sewer.” 

“The funds meant to have been spent on the cleanliness drive of the Yamuna have gone into the pockets of those who were supposed to make the river pollution-free,” Malhotra said. 

He said if the BJP comes to power, he would take prompt steps so that “mother Yamuna” looks like a river again. 

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Linux vs Vista

Before you go for the article give a look to this video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xC5uEe5OzNQ

 
A Vista vs. Linux Matchup

Part 1: Leveling the Playing Field

by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols

So, which really is better for the desktop: Vista or Linux? 

I’ve been working with Vista since its beta days, and I started using Linux in the mid-90s. There may be other people who have worked with both more than I have, but there can’t be many of them. Along the way, I’ve formed a strong opinion: Linux is the better of the two. 

But, now that Vista is on the brink of becoming widely available, I thought it was time to take a comprehensive look at how the two really compare. To do this, I decided to take one machine, install both of them on it, and then see what life was like with both operating systems on a completely even playing field. 

My first decision was to acquire a new system. I think almost anyone — unless they have a loaded gaming system — will make the same decision. The folks up in Redmond can tell you until they turn blue in the face that Vista Premium Ready needs only a 1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor, 1 GB of system memory, and a graphic card with support for DirectX 9 graphics, a WDDM (Windows Display Driver Model) driver, and 128 MB of graphics memory. They lie like rugs. 

You can no more run Vista, with its pretty Aero interface, on a system like that than you can ride a bicycle on an interstate. Yes, you might get on the road, but you’re not going to enjoy it and you’ll be in danger of getting over run at any moment.

A modern Linux, like SLED 10 (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop) or Ubuntu 6.10, runs well on such a system. Vista with all the trimmings? Forget about it. It’s not happening.

So, from the get-go, Vista starts with a knock against it. If you own a PC that’s over a year old, and haven’t upgraded it, chances are you won’t be able to run high-end Vista. Last spring, Gartner, the research house, estimated that only half of the PCs then shipping could support Vista Premium. In other words, if you don’t have a shiny new machine, you’re not going to be running a shiny new Windows operating system.

That said, you can buy Vista Premium-capable systems now for about a grand without too much looking. I managed, I thought, to do it for only $800.

I went to a local Best Buy store after Christmas and I found anHP Pavilion Media Center TV m7360n PC floor model on sale. This high-end, for early 2006, system had originally listed for $1,200. Now, when you can find this one-time PC Magazine Editor’s Choice, since it’s no longer being made, you can pick up a brand new one for about a $1,000. 

The m7360n comes with a hyper-threaded 2.8 GHz Pentium D 920 dual-core processor, 4 MB of L2 cache, an 800 MHz front-side bus, and 2 GB of DDR (double-data-rate) RAM. It also has a 300-GB SATA hard drive, a dual-layer, multi-format LightScribe DVD/CD burner, a DVD-ROM drive. 

For peripherals and multimedia, the m7360n has six USB 2.0, two FireWire, one VGA, one S-Video, and one composite AV port. It also comes with a 9-in-1 memory card reader, 10/100 BASE-T Ethernet, 56K V.92 modem, and 802.11g WiFi. For graphics, it has an NVIDIA GeForce 6200SE video card which takes up 256 MB of the system’s main RAM, Intel High Definition audio (aka Azalia) with 5.1-channel surround sound. 

Not bad, eh?

I decided to give Vista every chance to strut its stuff, so I decided to install Vista Ultimate — the top of the Vista line — on it. For the Linux, I decided to go with SimplyMEPIS 6.01, which is 99 percent Ubuntu 6.06.

I chose MEPIS (the 32-bit version), rather than straight Ubuntu, for several reasons. The first, is that I prefer the KDE interface to GNOME, and I’ve never developed much affection for Kubuntu, the official KDE version of Ubuntu. Your Linux love affair may vary. The other reason is that the 1 percent that MEPIS adds to Ubuntu includes features that I really like a lot, such as easy interoperability with Windows domain and AD (Active Directory) networks. 

You see, I run my computers on a business network that includes the Windows networking infrastructure, as well such old Unix standards as NFS (Network File System) and LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol). So, I prefer operating systems that can plug and play with Windows networks. Home users, who don’t need to worry about such issues, will probably find genuine Ubuntu or Kubuntu fine for their purposes. 

So, now it was time to rip out the m7360n’s Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005, Update Rollup 2. This was no great loss. But, the story of what happened next will need to wait for Part 2 of my series.

 

A Vista vs. Linux Matchup

Part 2: Dual-Booting Vista and Linux

by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols


Last time around, I described the HP Pavilion Media Center TV m7360n that I’m using for myVista vs. Linux shootout. Getting the PC was the easy part. Getting Linux and Vista to live together on the same machine turned out to be a bit harder.
On XP and earlier Windows PCs, making Windows and Linux live together was almost automatic. Any of the major distributions made it easy. With Vista, things have changed. Microsoft has deep-sixed its old boot.ini bootloader in favor of a new bootloader. 

The new bootloader, BCD (Boot Configuration Data), is designed to be firmware-independent. It also comes with a new boot option editing tool, BCDEdit.exe, which isn’t so much user-friendly as user-hostile. I’m not, by the way, talking here as someone whose chief concern is dual-booting Linux. BCDEdit is a pain to work with no matter how you’re modifying Vista’s boot behavior. Unfortunately, though, you’re going to have to work with Vista bootloader, because Vista doesn’t deal well with being installed on a system that already has an operating system on it that you mean to keep. 

In my case, I had already decided to blow away my system’s existing Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005, Update Rollup 2 operating system. I could have “upgraded” this system to Vista, but I really do want to give Vista its best chance to shine, and upgrading an existing Windows system appears to be an almost sure way to find trouble

Unless you have a lot of time on your hands, you don’t mind running into incompatibility problems, and you knowexactly what you’re doing, do not “upgrade” to Vista. Do a clean install, instead.

In the case of a dual-boot system, you’re almost certainly going to need to do a clean install, anyway. You see, if you “upgrade” a system, you have to do it from within Windows XP or 2000. And, if you do that, you can’t repartition or reformat any of the hard drive. The only way you can work on your drive fundamentals at the start of a Vista install is if you boot from the Vista DVD. So, unless you already have a big enough partition on your drive for another operating system, you’re better off with a clean install.

With all that in mind, I did a clean install of Vista Ultimate on my system. I divided my system’s 300GB SATA hard drive into two equal partitions. On the Vista side, I had the option of using BitLocker Drive Encryption, but I decided not to use it.

BitLocker actually makes a good deal of sense. In particular, if I was planning to lug around a Vista-only laptop, I’d like knowing that if anyone swiped it, they wouldn’t be able to easily get at my data. 

For me, though, that has two problems. The first is that it requires a TPM (Trusted Platform Module) 1.1 chip or a USB drive. While the HP doesn’t have a TPM chip, it does have six USB 2.0 ports. But, if I use a USB drive to keep my BitLocker encryption key on, isn’t it always going to be on my machine anyway? Now, this doesn’t really matter with this hefty tower system, but if I were using a notebook, anyone who grabbed my laptop bag would also be likely to get my USB BitLocker key at the same time.

The real problem for dual-booting with BitLocker is that it blocks Linux from accessing any data in that partition. Security guru Bruce Schneier thinks ”You could look at BitLocker as anti-Linux because it frustrates dual boot,” but I don’t think it does. Even with BitLocker installed, Vista still needs an unencrypted partition to boot from, so dual-booting should still work. It’s just that getting at data on the BitLocker-protected NTFS partition will be close to impossible for Linux users.

One final thought on BitLocker before I go. Microsoft has only made it available on its Enterprise and Ultimate editions. Enterprise is only available to volume buyers, and Ultimate’s the most expensive Vista of them all. I find it more than a little annoying that small business users will have to upgrade to Ultimate to get what I think of as one of Vista’s best points for business users.

As for Linux and disk encryption, this functionality has been baked into Linux using the CryptoAPI since version 2.6.0 first appeared several years ago. For detailed instructions on how to use CryptoAPI, see, A Structured Approach to Hard Disk Encryption. If you don’t want to get your hands dirty with this do-it-yourself approach, you can use a GUI-enabled open-source program, TrueCrypt to get the job done.

Now, I started to install Vista. One of Vista’s better points is that it will alert you when it runs into hardware that it hasn’t a clue on how to handle. On the down side, it will also, like all operating systems, run hardware that it thinks it knows how to run, but it doesn’t really have a clue. 

With the m7360n, I quickly found that neither Vista nor Ubuntu nor MEPIS could run all of the system’s hardware. I found one component that Vista couldn’t deal with at all, and several that required some work with MEPIS before I could get them operational. 

I’m going to save those stories for the next installment where I talk about hardware compatibility, so I can continue talking about making Vista and Linux dual-bootable. Before I do this, though, let me make one thing clear. People are always talking about how Linux has problems with devices. And, that’s true. Vista, however, at this point in its development anyway, also has a goodly number of hardware problems. 

For the most part, both the Vista and MEPIS installations went without any problems. Both operating systems come on DVDs and once you boot the system up and start installing them, your “hardest” job will be setting the proper time. 

In the case of Vista, though. I did have one of those “What the heck?” moments. If you look at the Windows setup screen you’ll see that it lists both Home and Business as choices, but there’s really no difference between them. Or, if there is, you sure can’t tell it from this display. I do have to wonder for a moment, too, about anyone who’s not sure if they’re at home or in the office, but I’ll let that pass.


One of those “What the heck?” moments.

Once both systems are on the machine, though, you’re going to quickly find that you can only boot the system into Linux, thanks to the unfriendly Vista BCD. 

There are several ways to get around this. For Ubuntu-based systems like MEPIS and Kubuntu, which use theGRUB bootloader, here’s how you set it up. 

First, you want to switch to root, aka super-user mode. MEPIS enables me to do this with the su command. Most of the Ubuntu family requires you to use the sudo command. For our purposes, changing the bootloader settings inUbuntu with its sudo settings will work in exactly the same way.

Then, in most of Linuxes, you open up the file /boot/grub/menu.lst with your favorite text editor, not word-processor. In my case, that’s vi in a terminal window. 


Configuring GRUB to dual-boot Linux and Vista

Then, you enter the following lines at the bottom of the file…

    title            Vista
    rootnoverify     (hd0,1)
    savedefault
    makeactive
    chainloader      +1

…and then you save and close it. 

In my case, Vista is on my first — and only — hard drive’s second partition, so the root setting is “hd0,1″. If it were on my second drive’s first partition, it would be “hd1,0″.

Now, when you boot your system up, the first thing you’ll see is the MEPIS boot screen. If you want to go to Linux, you just leave it alone and off you go. If you want to boot Vista, simply select it, and that will put you into Vista’s BCD menu and you’ll be on your way to Vista. 

If you want to get fancier, say run Vista, XP, Red Hat, Mac OS X, Ubuntu, Solaris, and — oh, what the heck — OS/2, on a system, you should get a high-end boot manager editor. At this time, the best I know of, which can also handle Vista’s BCD, is EasyBCD 1.52, from NeoSmart Technologies. This is a Windows-only, freeware program.


My Vista desktop
(Click to enlarge)


My MEPIS desktop
(Click to enlarge)
At the end of this, as you can see, I had both Vista Ultimate and SimplyMEPIS 6.01 installed and running successfully on my PC. Well, mostly successfully. For what went right — and wrong — with the system’s hardware with both operating systems, stay tuned for the next exciting chapter.

Oh, and yes, that is an Internet Explorer icon on the MEPIS window.

 

A Vista vs. Linux Matchup

Part 3: Hardware Wars

by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols


When last we left my exploration of Vista vs. Ubuntu/MEPIS Linux, I had the system up and running in a dual-boot environment.

Now, came the interesting part: seeing how each operating system would work, or not, with the hardware on my HP Pavilion Media Center TV m7360n PC. When it was first built, in early 2006, this was a high-end system. Today, in early 2007, it’s still a powerful system; but, it’s in no way, shape, or form a cutting-edge PC. In other words, neither Vista nor MEPIS should have too much trouble with the hardware. Right?

Well, I was half-right.

To start with the very basics, neither operating system had any trouble using the PC’s hyper-threaded 2.8GHz Pentium D 920 dual-core processor, 4MB of L2 cache, 800MHz front-side bus, and 2GB of DDR (double-data-rate) RAM. Both recognized and appropriately used those system resources. 


MEPIS provides a detailed look at what’s what in memory, and that’s not much at all with the Linux in a resting state.
(Click to enlarge)


With both systems completely idle except for their memory map programs and the screenshot program, MEPIS has a memory footprint of less than 100MB, while Vista is pounding down its foot with over half-a-gigabyte of RAM.
(Click to enlarge)

For the purposes of my evaluation, I didn’t make the best possible theoretical use of the hardware, however, because, on this 64-bit system, I used 32-bit versions of both OSes. I did this because both Vista and Linux still have teething pains on 64-bit systems. They’ll run just fine, but there are nowhere near enough 64-bit hardware drivers or applications for either one. 

Actually, Vista has far more trouble than Linux does with the 64-bit environment. Microsoft decided, in the interests of security, to require 64-bit Vista drivers to be digitally signed. If they’re not signed, they don’t load, they don’t run, and that’s the end of the story. That actually does make some sense. For example, it will stop some rootkit attacks cold. On the other hand, it also means that there are darn few digitally signed drivers available. 

Therefore, since I was interested in seeing how Linux did against Vista on a level playing field, I decided not to go 64-bit. When it comes to 64-bits, Linux has a clear advantage in hardware compatibility. You could argue it does that by being less secure, but consider the track record: Windows, as secure as the web built by the itsy-bitsy spider in the rain spout; versus Linux, no known significant viruses or rootkits. All things considered, I’m not worried about Linux’s lack of digitally signed drivers.

Both operating systems ran flawlessly with the Maxtor 300GB, 7200rpm SATA hard drive. And, both of them were able to recognize and use the system’s dual-layer, multi-format LightScribe DVD/CD burner drive and the DVD-ROM drive. Vista was also able to use LightScribe, which enables you to burn gray-scale graphics and lettering onto special DVDs and CDs, whereas MEPIS doesn’t have this functionality built-in.

LightScribe recently released its own driver and software for RPM-based Linux systems such as Fedora and openSUSE. The drive vendor Lacie, however, has also released software – 4L: LaCie LightScribe Labeler for Linux– that enables any Linux, including Debian-based ones such as MEPIS and its parent Ubuntu, to use LightScribe.

The usual array of memory card reader ports — CompactFlash I and II, SmartMedia, Memory Stick and MS Pro, Secure Digital (SD) and MMC MicroDrive, and XD Picture Card — worked well. The USB 2.0 and FireWire ports also ran without a hitch for both OSes. 

Moving right along, while installing the operating systems, I ran into a complete failure of an operating system to recognize an integral component of the system. The naughty operating system? Vista.

Yes, I know you’ve been taught to think that Windows runs everything, and that Linux is the one with hardware driver problems. Well, yes, Linux does have some shortcomings with drivers thanks to proprietary drivers, but Vista has its troubles, too. 

Vista’s problem child surprised me though: it was the audio. I can’t recall the last time any operating system I worked with had trouble working with a motherboard’s onboard audio. While Vista had no trouble finding and activating the Intel High Definition audio chip (aka Azalia), what it couldn’t work with at all was the common-as-dirt RealTek ALC 882 audio chipset.

The result was that while Vista could push Dolby 5-1 media audio to my media speakers, it actually couldn’t use my plain-old vanilla speakers. I checked into this further, and quickly discovered that I was far from the first person to run into this problem. At this time, there also doesn’t appear to be a solution. 


Vista found the high-end audio, but it couldn’t find the basic audio.
(Click to enlarge)

MEPIS, on the other hand, immediately recognized and put all the system’s audio to work. At this very moment, I’m listening to the Dropkick Murphys‘ Boston-branded Celtic-Punk off the system using my favorite Linux music player,Banshee


No trouble with the audio hardware in MEPIS.
(Click to enlarge)

Not long after my musical interlude, I switched back to Vista… and found that Vista has other audio problems.

My test system’s high-end audio outputs are S/PDIF (Sony/Philips Digital Interface Format) compliant. S/PDIF is probably the most common high-end audio port around for PCs today. It also has no built-in DRM (digital rights management) capability, and that turned out to be an important matter.

When I switched back to Vista, I tried to play Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot CD. Whoops! Not a single sound emerged from my speakers. After a little investigation, I found that Vista disables media outputs that don’t incorporate DRM, when you try to play DRM protected media through them. 


My test system’s high-end S/PDIF audio port lacks built-in DRM. Without that functionality, Vista won’t play music through the PC’s speakers with Windows Media Player 11. MEPIS, on the other hand, has no trouble playing online music. In this case, I’m using Streamtuner.
(Click to enlarge)

That was a kick in the head. I have a fully legal CD in my hand. Any other version of Windows will play it, Linux will play it, Mac OS will play it, and my CD player will play it, but if you’re using S/PDIF for your computer-driven audio and Vista, you’re out of luck. If you have a card with a Toslink optical digital audio port, you will be able to play it.

One of the ironies of the situation was that this very album had been first released on the Web without any DRM, in part as a protest against DRM. Ah well, that was yesterday.

There’s a very detailed report on just how Vista goes wrong with DRM, which I recommend to you. I’ll just content myself by saying an operating system – any operating system — is not the place for DRM. 

Next up, I came to the system’s Agere Systems PCI K56flex data/fax modem. It was, of course, a WinModem. These accursed modems consist of a bit of hardware and a lot of Windows code. Vista has no problems with it, but MEPIS was unable to work with it. 

Now, most people assume that Linux, by and large, can’t work with WinModems at all. That’s not true. Many WinModems will work with Linux. The trick is to find the right driver for your modem. The motherlode of Linux and WinModem information is at Linmodems. An extremely useful site for Ubuntu Linux family users is the Dial Up Modem section of Ubuntu’s online documentation. Alas, in my case, I’m stuck with a WinModem I can’t get to work. 

Since the chances of me using a modem on a desktop system is somewhere between slim and none, I don’t regard this as a major failure.

Things, however, did go much better with my PC’s networking systems. Unlike any other tower PC I’ve ever met, this HP system comes with both an Intel Pro/100 10/100 BASE-T Ethernet port and 802.11g WiFi. As you would expect, both Vista and MEPIS took to the Ethernet like ducks to water. What might surprise you, though, is that MEPIS had no trouble swimming away with WiFi as well.

While Linux often has trouble with WiFi, thanks again to proprietary drivers, the WiFi system on the m7360n uses an Atheros Communications chipset and Linux can work with most, albeit not all, Atheros-based WiFi devices. This works thanks to the Madwifi project, which has worked for years on enabling Atheros equipment to work with Linux. While not all Linux distributions include Madwifi, MEPIS, fortunately for me, does. 

If you’re stuck with a laptop that doesn’t use Atheros WiFi hardware, there are also many other Linux WiFi drivers. And, if worse comes to worse, you can always try using a Windows WiFi driver in Linux by installing NDISWrapper. This project implements a Windows driver API and the NDIS (Network Driver Interface Specification) API within the Linux kernel. You then take a working Windows wireless network driver, say the one with Vista, and use it to connect to WiFi networks. For the best reference to Linux and WiFi, visit Hewlett-Packard and Jean Tourrilhes’s Wireless LAN resources for Linux site.

Again, in my case, though, there was no fuss or muss. Both OSes just worked with both network interfaces.

I was also pleased to find that MEPIS, as well as Vista, could work with the TV tuner and video capture chipset — the Conexant Falcon II NTSC. Between it, and the GeForce 6200SE graphics card, it boasts S-Video and composite inputs and outputs, coaxial cable TV, and FM antenna ports. 


Neither operating system had any trouble turning the PC into a TV. Here, we see a shot from a recent episode of Ugly Betty being rendered by VLC media player on MEPIS.
(Click to enlarge)

While it’s enjoyable to watch TV with both operating systems, I won’t go into anymore detail on it since (1) the Conexant only has a single-tuner, and (2) it doesn’t support HDTV. If you want to get serious about a 2007 “media center” using either Vista or Linux, you’ll want a much more recent and capable TV video card.

Finally, I come to graphics. Here, I have to report that while both operating systems worked with the NVIDIA GeForce 6200SE video card, neither worked with it as well as I had hoped. Of the two, I was most disappointed with Vista.

Now, the GeForce 6200SE is no speed demon. Instead of having its own video RAM, it cannibalizes 256MB of the system’s main RAM. No one expects to get any kind of WOW experience from this card.

What I did expect, though, was, given the rest of the system, to be able to at least run Vista’s fancy-pants new GUI, Aero, decently. Wrong.

While I was installing Vista, it told me that my “Windows Experience Index” was going to be 2.4. Let me translate that for you: my graphics quality was going to be mediocre. A 3.0 is considered adequate for Aero. 


A Vista experience of 2.4 isn’t a good experience. Time to go out and buy a graphics card with its own dedicated 256MB of RAM — or should that be 512MB?
(Click to enlarge)

Things were better on MEPIS, but its 3D graphics, using both Beryl and Compviz were, well, OK. While working with these, Linux finally lived up to its reputation as being difficult to install. 

Other Linuxes, such as openSUSE with Compviz and Foresight with Beryl, already incorporate the 3D, special-effect windows managers. On those systems, installing a fancy graphics manager goes much easier.

That said, I installed both Beryl and Compiz. Most Linux users probably could install them. But, Mr. Joe Windows? Forget about it. He’ll never get it done. That said, I got more eye-candy goodness from MEPIS than I ever did with Vista. 

Along the way, I might add, I updated the graphics drivers in both operating systems. In the case of MEPIS, it made a real difference. With Vista, well, if the new driver improved things, I couldn’t tell. 

Don’t get me wrong. Both operating systems did well at showing videos and snapping 2D applications in and out of focus. It’s just that if you wanted to have a spectacular graphics experience, you were at the wrong PC. 

What I learned from this experience is that Microsoft has low-balled Vista’s requirements even more than I had thought they had. Seriously, if you’re going to run Vista and you want Aero, get a high-end video card with 256MB of dedicated memory — 512MB would be even better. I have to say that my last thought on both Vista and Linux is that if you really, really want the best possible graphics… get a Mac. 

Putting aside Apple hardware, where all the software works with all the hardware so long as it’s all up to the minute, I found that MEPIS actually has better hardware support for this PC than Vista. 

Now, that may change as Microsoft puts dollars into hardware vendors’ hands to support Vista. But, for now, if you’re going to upgrade your operating system on an existing PC, Linux gives you the better shot of everything working correctly. 

On the other hand, if you’re planning on viewing or listening to DRM-protected media of any sort, Linux is clearly going to give you better hardware support. By incorporating DRM into the operating system, Microsoft is going to make it very difficult for everyone from PC DVR (digital video recorder) users to just a guy who wants to play a DRM-crippled CD to be certain that everything will work properly.

Adding insult to injury, since DRM protection schemes must evolve constantly, to stay ahead of hackers tearing them down, I have little doubt that one day you’ll come home to find that a Vista update to DRM-protection has just locked you out of your media collection. You know, the same collection, which had worked just fine the day before. Repeat after me: DRM does not belong in operating systems. 

Next up, I’ll start looking at what both Vista and MEPIS have to offer with their basic, built-in software. See you then.

 

 

A Vista vs. Linux Matchup

Part 4: Software Wars — Bundled Apps

by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols


To get you up to speed, here’s where we are in my evaluation of Vista vs. Ubuntu/MEPIS Linux. When we left off, I had the system up and running in a dual-boot environment

In the last episode, the question was how each operating system would work, or not, with the hardware on my HP Pavilion Media Center TV m7360n PC. The answer was that neither OS worked perfectly with the computer, but Ubuntu/MEPIS — yes, the Linux system — actually worked better with the PC than did Vista. In no small part, that was because Vista’s built-in DRM (digital rights management) gets in the way of viewing or listening to high-quality video or music.

In this episode, I turn my attention to the software that both OSes include in their standard packages. Since I was using Vista Ultimate, the Vista with all the bells and whistles, I should note that it has more applications built in than its siblings. Similarly, MEPIS, a professional-grade adaptation of Ubuntu, comes with more applications than a vanilla Linux distribution, although with less than some Linuxes, such as Novell’s openSUSE or SLED (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop), or Xandros’s Professional Linux desktop.

You can, of course, add software to both operating systems, but that’s the subject of the next episode in this series. Today’s topic is what you get in the box, or download as part of the system.

Games 

OK, let me make myself clear. We are not talking World of Warcraft or Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion; we’re talking Solitaire and Hearts.

When it comes to mindlessly burning the hours in the office, both distributions come with a fine selection of games. For me, MEPIS 6.01, which comes with the KDE-version of Sudoku, takes the brass-ring for best time-waster.


Just when you thought you couldn’t waste any more time with built-in games, MEPIS, via KDE, gives you Soduku.

On the other hand, Vista does boast prettier versions of such old classics as Minesweeper. 


Of course, there’s always Minesweeper on Vista. But, now you can make your minefields bigger and, I guess, better.

Regardless of which OS you favor, both will give you many ways to wend away the minutes until lunch.

Web browser

With Vista you get just one choice of Web browser: Internet Explorer 7. I have no great fondness for IE 7. In part, that’s because I have to use several IE-specific sites… that won’t work with IE 7. Oh the irony! 

I’m far from the only one who’s discovered that Vista and IE 7 won’t work with their existing work-related websites. Additionally, I’ve heard from dozens of users that they’re now unable to use Citrix remote desktops with Vista and IE 7. 

The problem here is that the Citrix ICA Client uses an ActiveX Control that won’t work with IE 7’s Protected Mode on Vista. The only work-around that I can find from either Microsoft or Citrix is to right-click the Internet Explorer icon and select “Run as administrator.” This allows the ActiveX control to run. It also, of course, blows away Vista and IE 7’s supposedly improved security. 

Another Citrix problem with the IE 7 and Vista pairing is that CPM (Citrix Password Manager) 4.5 doesn’t work at all. I’ve heard from several ticked-off enterprise Citrix administrators that they haven’t received any kind of fix for this problem, and that they still don’t know when they will get one. 

For many users, Citrix problems don’t exist at all. However, for many business users, Citrix is a mission-critical application. 

Still, at least, my IE 7 title bar is showing English characters. My good friend and colleague, Wayne Rash, reports that his title bar is presenting him with Chinese characters on his Vista installation. No, we’re not kidding.

I also ran into an odd little problem of my own. When I tried to print emails with the message headers from Outlook 2003, the messages wouldn’t print. Microsoft has released a hotfix for this problem, and while it worked for me, it may not work for you. Unless this is being a real pain for you, Microsoft recommends that you wait for the “next service pack for Windows Internet Explorer 7 that contains this hotfix.”

MEPIS, meanwhile, comes equipped with both Firefox 1.5.0.9 and Konqueror 3.5.3 browsers. While neither are the newest Linux browsers on the block, both do just fine. In particular, Firefox works well with many sites that favor IE.


MEPIS, Windows, whatever — give me Firefox when it comes to Web browsing.
(Click to enlarge)

Rather than waste your time telling you how wonderful Firefox is, suffice it to say that I run that browser on every system I have: Vista, Linux, FreeBSD, whatever. Even if you will never, ever run Linux, give Firefox a try. For me, it’s simply the best browser I’ve ever used, and I might add, my first “browser” was telnet on Unix to info.cern.ch in 1992. 

If you do have a site that’s IE 6-specific and IE 7 won’t do the job, since MEPIS comes with WINE (the open-source implementation of the Windows 2000 and 98 application programming interface), you can install IE 6 on Linux more easily than you can on Vista. Actually, I’m not sure you can install IE 6 on Vista. 


If you have to have IE 6, MEPIS and Ubuntu, thanks to WINE, actually make it easier to get to that browser than Vista does.
(Click to enlarge)

There are many easy ways to get IE, or other Windows programs, to work on Linux. If you want support, pay forCodeWeaver’s Crossover Linux. If that’s not a consideration, WineTools also makes installing Windows programs on Linux easy. I might add that with IE 6 on MEPIS, I was able to use my IE 6-specific sites, and could also run, in a test mode, the Citrix ICA client. 

Email

For email, Vista comes with Windows Mail, aka the next generation of Outlook Express. This is one update that I consider to be a real update. The program now stores mail messages as individual files instead of in a single, easy-to-corrupt database file. With account setup information now stored in the mail database itself, instead of the registry, moving Windows Mail, and its messages, from one system to another has become much easier. 


The new Vista email client, Windows Mail, isn’t just a pretty face; it’s far better than any version of Outlook Express, which preceded it.
(Click to enlarge)

The program also has a vastly improved Bayesian junk-mail filter with top-level domain and encoding blocking. With this, Microsoft finally has an email client that does a decent job of blocking spam. 

That’s all very nice, but Vista still doesn’t equal MEPIS. The reason? MEPIS 6.01 comes not merely with an email client that’s just as good in my opinion, the open-source Thunderbird 1.5.0.9 and the solid KMail 1.9.3, but the best email client on the planet: Novell’s Evolution 2.6.1.


Unfortunately for Microsoft and Vista, Windows Mail is in no way, shape, or form the equal of Evolution.
(Click to enlarge)

Evolution is to an email client, what a Rolls-Royce is to a car. Besides being an email client that can work with the usual Internet mail protocols — POP, IMAP, and SMTP — it can also work with Microsoft Exchange 2000 and 2003’s MAPI (Message Application Programming Interface). 

Evolution also is a full-featured groupware client. You can use it to maintain calendars across Exchange, CalDAV, and iCal-calendar services. I, for example, use CalDAV to keep my local Evolution calendar in sync with my Web-based Google Calendar. 

With Evolution, I can also use both a personal contact list and access LDAP-based (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) directories. Throw in a good memo and task manager, and you have one great groupware program. 

What’s that you say? You can do most of that with Outlook 2003 or Outlook 2007? Yes, that’s right, but with MEPIS you don’t need to pay for that level of functionality. It’s built in. Windows Mail is a big step up from Outlook Express, but it’s no Outlook.

Instant communications

Oddly, and I do mean oddly, Microsoft decided not to bundle an IM (instant message) client in Vista. Windows Messenger, the XP IM client, is history. It does come with a link to download Windows Live Messenger, the IM client formerly known as MSN Messenger. 

This move seems to be part of Microsoft’s ill-conceived “When in doubt, slap Live on the name” branding campaign.

Once downloaded, Windows Live Messenger 8.1 is a full-featured IM client. Besides IM, both with the Microsoft and the Yahoo IM networks, Live Messenger supports video-conferencing and VoIP (voice over Internet protocol). If you want to use it as part of a business-only IM network, you’ll need to buy Windows Server 2003 for its Active Directory services and Live Communication Server.

MEPIS, like the rest of the Linux family, splits out this functionality. For IM proper, MEPIS uses Gaim 1.50a. Gaim supports most IM protocols — including but not limited to AIM, MSN, Yahoo, Jabber, and ICQ — so no matter what IM network your friends and business partners are on, you’ll be able to reach them.


With a lot of my work comrades on AIM, Gaim on MEPIS makes far more sense for me than Microsoft’s Windows Live Messenger.

For VoIP, MEPIS comes with Skype 1.3.0.53. This may appear to Windows users to be woefully out of date, since the Windows version is now 3.0, but it’s actually the newest Linux version, released last October. Skype for Linux, however, doesn’t support video. 

If you want video-conferencing with MEPIS, you’re going to need to go outside the installed and commonly supplied software stack. For those who want to give it a try, I’ve found that Ekiga, formerly GnomeMeeting, works well. When it comes to video-conferencing, in general, with Linux, Webcam support is still sketchy. Brave users can start with theUbuntu Web cam wiki listings.

I see this IM and other instant communications as being a dead heat between Vista and MEPIS. If you need IM with users on AIM or a multitude of other IM networks, MEPIS is the better choice. On the other hand, if video-conferencing really is important to you, Vista’s the better choice.

Software matchup, so far

In balance, though, up to this point, I still see MEPIS as being the software leader. Not only does it give you better programs — Firefox and Evolution — it offers you more choice from the moment you fire it up on your PC. 

Next up, I take a look at the two operating system’s default offerings in multimedia, office applications, security, and utilities. See you then. 

– Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols

To be continued . . .      


 

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Halo 3 Effect

Halo

The release of what Microsoft referred to as a global entertainment phenomenon has managed to explode sales of its Xbox 360 consoles. The combined market performances of Halo 3 and Nintendo’s Wii console have contributed to a 75% jump in sales of video gaming hardware and software in the U.S. According to market research firm NPD, gaming related sales passed the $1.3 billion milestone in September, increasing from $779 million the previous month. NPD indicated that Microsoft’s claims revealing Halo 3’s impact as a new standard of interactive entertainment were justified, as the title pushed in excess of 3.3 million copies in its first month. In this context, the following nine games combined, in the top 10 selling titles, account for a little over half of Halo 3’s sales. 

The latest version of the Halo franchise was a catalyst for the sales of Xbox 360. Piggyback riding on the immense success of Halo 3, Microsoft sold approximately 528,000 consoles. The fact of the matter is that the third installment of Microsoft’s Halo flagship franchise - Halo 3, put Xbox 360 well ahead of Nintendo’s Wii. But Wii, even without a Halo of its own, still managed to sell 501,000 consoles in the U.S. just in September. 

This means that overall, Nintendo pushed over four million consoles, with Microsoft not far behind at almost 3.5 million and with Sony’s PlayStation 3 at just over 1.7 million. In this regard, the truly remarkable results are those of Wii, launched in November 2006, almost concomitantly with the PS3, while Xbox 360 has been available since 2005. PS2 delivered a poor performance in comparison with its rivals selling only 119,000 items in September. Still, Microsoft’s official position is that it’s not all about Halo 3. In fact, it would be dangerous for Microsoft’s Xbox 360 to become associated with a single game, when the content available for the console is much richer. But this does not deny the fact that Xbox 360 is currently ridding the Halo 3 wave to perfection…

Here are some Halo factoids:

 

- There are 15 million hardcore Halo fans in the world
- 11 million people own Halo 1 or 2
- More than 1 million people pre-ordered Halo 3
- Developing Halo 3 took 3 years of work
- 600 everyday players were used to beta test Halo 3 at Bungies Studios
- 3000 hours of beta play were analyzed and used to fine-tune the game
- The day after the release several parts of Xbox Live collapsed due to massive traffic by Halo 3 players

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