IBM InterJet II Uses Embedded FreeBSD 124
stephen.schaubach writes, "The new IBM InterJet II is a small net appliance that looks cool, is small and has some kick-ass features, including: e-mail server, Apache, Firewall, FTP, DNS and DHCP services. Admin it from a Web browser like the cobalt's. But, best of all it runs an embedded operating system based on FreeBSD UNIX. The down side is that it looks as though you kinda of ASP-lease the thing. Anyone told VA yet? heh " The InterJet is a neat piece of kit, and the developers at Whistle have contributed a lot of high-quality code back to the BSD project, both before and after their buyout by IBM.
What sucks about it.... (Score:3)
Guess what IBM? Most of us already HAVE high-speed internet service. Sell the damn thing as a stand-alone product and you'll sell a hell of a lot more. = /
So what? (Score:1)
IBM: The Next Generation. (Score:3)
Since they've adopted Linux (and made other changes), it seems they've gone from Big White Box makers to trendy gear for the web-generation - the kind of transformation Microsoft would love to have made about three years ago.
IBM have definitely changed their targets - they started the desktop PC revolution but have turned their backs on that in favour of mid-range servers . Now they're capitalising on the popularity of Linux to sell their stuff - and as long as they bring to it their old reputation of good quality hardware, good luck to them... as long as they don't try to Monopolise!
ASP = "Application Service Provider" (Score:1)
ASP also stands for Application Service Provider -- a popular buzz-phrase meaning remotely hosted, rentable applications.
Single Point of Failure (Score:2)
Plus.. this machine represents a single point of failure for your whole network.. when you have seperate components and one of them goes down, it is relatively easy to isolate the problem and then fix or replace it, but with these all-in-one solutions, troubleshooting becomes a major pain and very time-consuming. Better to leave these services separate and buy products that are meant to handle them alone. It might be a little more expensive up front, but the down time you'll save in the future (not to mention the latency this box must incurr) will be more than worth it.
//Phizzy
have the advert flyer right here... (Score:2)
It's pricey. Course, I would just get a 486 out of the closet and install Suse.
And on top of it, the web site http://ibm.com/smallbusiness/wc121 requires IE for viewing. Real swift.
Re:Net Appliance? (Score:1)
Yes I am aware of the irony. (Score:1)
Re:Single Point of Failure (Score:2)
What shocked me was that NAT uses almost no cpu, I've run tests by utterly saturating the link (not the easiest thing to do, but conxion came in handy), and the combonation of natd & snort never got the cpu usage above 3%.
This box also hosts about 8 domains, web, mail, and ftp. I also run many development tasks on it, and most of the sites are all dynamic content (java, python, and perl). The only thing that puts a load on the machine is mod_jserv, with the java process using a constant 6%.
Considering IBM's server doesn't do CGI, the only thing I could see it sweating from is a ton of samba connections (and that would depend mainly on memory on the machine and the speed of the internal connection).
Re:What sucks about it.... (Score:2)
That is not the only thing to suck (TM). If you haven't noticed the proxy is CyberPatrolled by default. As the romans said "O tempora, o mores". Slashdot advertising an appliance with network censorship reconfigured...
Re:IBM: The Next Generation. (Score:2)
IBM's server division has been leading the way for who knows how long... Or do you really think the PS/2 or Aptiva-series are killer-products? Their Netfinity-series, RS/6k & larger products are quite well-known and make lots of $$$ for their "Global Services"-division.
I don't see that IBM has changed their targets at all... What I wonder is why do they try to get a share in the small-business world... there's no room there for IBM's pricing structure and huge margins...
Re:Single Point of Failure (Score:2)
I would skip Bay as something I dunno, but err, do you have an idea of what Cisco puts as CPU in any of their boxen. If you had you would not have wondered why they have some "problems" NATing a T1.
On the contrary even a whimpy pentium with BSD or Linux can NAT at 10MB.
This is a service not a device (Score:2)
Looks nice and everything (Score:1)
But, one thing comes to mind. What happens when your web service goes wacko some day, and you can't access the web pages? What do you do, what DO you do? I didn't see any alternative way to get in (unless maybe it's got a serial port you can hook a terminal into and administer).
All in all, though, looks like a sweet looking machine (could beef up the hard drive to about 13-20 GB though, instead of 6). I think I'd like to get one for home sometime.
Nothing New... (Score:2)
For the non-computer-user, that's about right. It's really easy to configure (I researched it once because a family member's business was considering marketing a Linux-based competitor), but if you have the slightest hint of what you are doing, buy your own box
Furthermore, I've seen it mentioned on
InterJet? (Score:1)
Or maybe they hope people will take it for the newest HP printer and buy it right away.
Re:Yes I am aware of the irony. (Score:1)
I'm the great, cynic, I'm the indifferent gaze
Re:Single Point of Failure (Score:1)
//Phizzy
Nothing new (Score:1)
glacial FPU (Score:1)
Small offices are "moving to ADSL/Cable/T1"? Only in the same sense that glaciers "move".
Re:Net Appliance? (Score:1)
"Hello Is that Flazzbang Support? Yes, my fridge's firewall has crashed. I got script kiddiez ordering Sunny Delight by the bucketload. And since they cracked my microwave I can only cook on alternative thursdays"..
Just cause you can doesn't mean you should....
Blue Garage? (Score:1)
whatever (Score:1)
Whistle Interjet I is also running FreeBSD (Score:4)
jan 19 12:17 Critical: /kernel: Copyright (c) 1992-1998 FreeBSD Inc. /kernel: Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1993 /kernel: The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. /kernel: /kernel: FreeBSD 2.2.7-STABLE #0: Mon Jan 3 23:45:11 PST 2000 /kernel: dianeh@built1.whistle.com:/usr/prod/ia/freebsd/sys /src/compile/IA /kernel: CPU: Cyrix 486DX4 (486-class CPU) /kernel: Origin = "CyrixInstead" DIR=0x361f Stepping=3 Revision=6 /kernel: real memory = 16777216 (16384K bytes) /kernel: avail memory = 14962688 (14612K bytes) /kernel: Copyright (c) 1995-1998 Whistle Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. /kernel: Detected version 1 InterJet motherboard /kernel: Probing for devices on the ISA bus:
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Re:This is why I won't use GPL (Score:5)
Once again, a Large Corporation takes control of what was previously a fre project, slaps a few worthless features on it, and sells it back to us, the Open Source community for big bucks.
First of all, I doubt anyone with enough of a clue to know the difference between OSS and regular software would even consider purchasing this particular piece of equipment. I mean realistically, a server that's adminstered via http, most likely without telnet/ssh? This is aimed squarely at people who need a workgroup server/firewall and don't have the time/ability to administer it themselves, nor the money to hire someone to administer it. A lot better than a Windows95 box with wingate, don't you think?
Do I hear cries of outrage over IBM's abuse of the BSD and apache licenses? No. Even the BSD users, notorious for their unfounded zealotry (such as implying that FreeBSD is somehow superior to Linux), are silent. Do you enjoy being ravaged by the forces of violent captialism?
Ok, this is the main thing I must disagree with. The ability for IBM to take the code and use is the whole purpose of this type of license. I develop software for a living. I don't have a boss, I get paid for what I can sell. Whether it's a software package, or an integrated system. I release code under the BSD license for the same reason I try to only use software under a BSD license. This is the spirit of OSS, whether some huge company comes along and decides to take and not give back is irrelevant. In every project I've implemented, I've always given full source, and I don't think theres been a single instance where my work would not have been 100% compliant with the GPL. But I still wouldn't use it. I see the GPL as a restriction, it restricts people from using my code in situations where they might really need it. And where they might not be in a position to use the GPL (it happens). It's simply the golden rule, I don't want to someday be involved in a commerical venture and have to worry about the GPL. Not every OSS developer develops as a hobby. This is why other licenses continue to exist. The GPL simply doesn't make sense sometimes.
This isn't to say your opinion doesn't matter. It does, follow your own principles, but understand that some of us do indeed make a living via software. And just because you pay for something doesn't always make it any less free (glances at stack of FreeBSD cds that have never been used).
Re:have the advert flyer right here... (Score:1)
Re:IBM: The Next Generation. (Score:1)
errr, (Score:1)
IBM does not control BSD and is even less likely to control BSD than to control Linux.
IBM among others supports Apache. IBM does not control Apache.
As to BSD's technical superiority, the aproach and philosophy are different. Saying BSD is technically superior is not quite the same as saying Linux is technically inferior. Anything much better in one will soon show up in the other anyway. Open source is much stronger with BOTH!
Why do I get the impression that I am responding to a MS troll
Re:What sucks about it.... (Score:1)
Interjet II (Score:1)
The original InterJet ran FreeBSD, so I don't think it's a design decision on IBM's part, but an inheritance.
One of my favorite things that would happen to these every so often, is when they would crash. The power-off command on the InterJet was soft, so it would trigger a shutdown script to be run. Well if it crashed, that wouldn't work.
One cute thing about the InterJet is that it had a built in UPS. So when it would crash, you couldn't just unplug it. You'd have to (short of ripping the thing open and disconnecting the battery) wait for the battery to drain before you could restart after a crash.. No hard off switch anywhere on the box either.
Apart from that small problem though, it was a cute little box that did its job.
This is why I WILL use BSD (Score:3)
BSD: Companies can use it, but you don't get any money or credit. Realistically, though, this isn't much of a loss -- if the BSDies I've run into are any indication, IBM would never consider hiring you anyway. End result: "Big corporations are taking over. They're doing exactly what the license intended them to do, but that still doesn't make me happy. Bitch bitch moan moan."
Linux: Companies that want to make extensive modifications don't want the GPL to show their secrets to the world. So they use the hated BSD or the even more irrationally hated closed source solution. End result: "Big corporations don't care about Linux. They don't understand how superior we are. Bitch bitch moan moan."
The point: The point of open source software is to improve the world, not to turn everyone into little soldiers for your personal OS/license jihad. You should be celebrating the fact that IBM, with its army of programmers and massive code base, has been impressed with open source software.
Re:Looks nice and everything (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:whatever (Score:1)
Re:have the advert flyer right here... (Score:1)
doesn't make sense (Score:1)
Re:have the advert flyer right here... (Score:1)
Re:This is why I WILL use BSD (Score:1)
>credit. Realistically, though, this isn't much of a loss -- if the
>BSDies I've run into are any indication, IBM would never consider
>hiring you anyway. End result: "Big corporations are taking
>over. They're doing exactly what the license intended them to do, but
>that still doesn't make me happy. Bitch bitch moan moan."
FWIW, IBM hired (through acquisition of Whistle) whole boatload of BSDies. And you won't find a lot of BSDies complaining, because Whistle has contributed a lot back to the community, and IBM (through Whistle) is, in fact, doing exactly the types of things the BSDL is supposed to allow. If BSDies actually wanted a restrictive license like the GPL, they'd use it.
Re:Single Point of Failure (Score:1)
Re:doesn't make sense (Score:1)
So if this is so easy, has anybody done it? I've been looking for an open-source administrative tool like Cobalt's for a while now, with no success.
Any ideas? Or is this about to become my new project, to learn all about web scripting?
[Change the temperature to hot in my email address...]
While working a long day at tech support... (Score:2)
The best thing about them, from the ISP perspective, is that they can be configured through a dial-up; ie, a UUNet customer with an InterJet dials into a pop, puts a code in the box, and it downloads its new configuration. Pretty sweet.
From a consumer perspective, someone with a whistle is more likely to get help from isp tech support when they have a problem, than if they're running some homebrew.
I found that they are especially handy with reseller customers, who have a contractor come in to set them up and leave them running. A small office underbudgeting it's IT needs can get this product, complete with web hosting and mail, without hiring a fulltime guru (NT), or hunting down an intermittant Linux guy, for a comparable price to routers usually available from ISPs.
While running a porn site off one isn't a good bet, running internet/intranet and mail for a modest office (upto ~100 wkstns) and a modest connection (upto T1) is going to suit most business needs without a huge outlay of cash and time. (remember, these people are supposed to be working, which doesn't always include hours surfing the net)
--mandi
__________
my $.02 presents no capitol gains tax risk
Recall OS\2 (Score:1)
Re: So get a OneGate instead and stop whining (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:1)
Re:whatever (Score:1)
Re: So get a OneGate instead and stop whining (Score:1)
Re:Neat but odd (Score:1)
This is perfect for small business (Score:1)
IBM is filling a gap in the industry. Let's face it 99% of small businesses don't have tech savvy people working for them like the readership of /.
It does for $99 a month what it would cost a small business $5000 to hire one of us to set this up and manage the Linux install. Just think of it this way. More and more small companies that put one of these on their winblows network we get more %'s in the overall bucket of apache on the web on FreeBSD. So when allot of small business install these, big business will notice that apache and FreeBSD are gaining in the metrics, then FreeBSD MIGHT start to be looked at by these large companies as a relative option to other OS's based in Redmond.
Are the new ones expandable? (Score:2)
Re:Looks nice and everything (Score:1)
Pity they don't support BSD or Linux *clients* (Score:1)
I guess they're happy to make money off the opensource community's back, but not to support us. :-/ (And yes, I relize one can probably access this box using Samba/smbfs. It's just the principal of the thing.)
Tread VERY carefully with this thing! (Score:3)
If you only use ISDN or periodic dialup, it's fine. If you need nothing but the most rudimentary web serving and mail hosting (I never tested it for relaying. If it is a relay, there's no way to fix it), it' great. If you actually
There is NO access to anything on the device besides it's web interface. If you're thinking "Well, LinuxConf makes it work..." just stop. This is nowhere near that nice. Instead, it's pretty, but gives you next to no functionality. We had issues about wanting to modify the firewall's activity (opening certain ports, special routing, etc). It was an absolute no-go. Only recently did they add the ability to modify the NAT (static translations and such).
And the it's so-called fast serial interface. God, don't remind me. We used an external CSU/DSU (of course, only a fast-serial port on this thing) hooked up to a full-burst T1. Once we hit about 1.2 mb/s, it would just turn off the serial port, and completly forget about it. We had to power-cycle the CSU/DSU atleast once a day to fix it. It had worse uptime than any of the NT (or 95...) boxes in the building. No, there was no problem with the line. We finally got a Cisco in December, and it hasn't had any trouble at all. We even had to show Whistle how we set up our network. They didn't even know that what we did was possible (nothing special. an NT acting as a bridge on the InterJet's "internal interface" routing all the office traffic to it, since our network was 100baseTX only, and the interjet is only 10baseT).
So, if you're just starting, and you just need something that works (sorta..), NOW, it's fine. So if you're a windows-minded shop (it works, mostly, and don't need to over-customize), it's just right. Once you try to use it to it's claims, it fails miserably.
Sorry about the high rant value, but this thing gave me nightmares for months. Honestly, if you plan on really using the features that this thing claims to have, save yourself alot of time and just get a linux box (mail/web) and a good router. Might cost you an extra 2k, maybe, but will save you hours and hours of maintenance time.
Web Admin (Score:1)
All I want... (Score:2)
Re:doesn't make sense (Score:1)
This thing is made for static pages. Last I remember (granted, I stayed away from the web hosting nonsense on the thing as much as possible), there wasn't even a way to set any sort of decent permissions on a directory, or any sort of real administration at all.
You must be doing something wrong... (Score:1)
Trekking to it? I've administered a linux box and a router for 6 months without seeing them. That includes software updates, major configuration changes, and reboots. There's telnet, ya know. Sure, the stock windows client sucks, but there are hundreds of better ones availible for free out there.
Cheap? I could setup a linux router for $300 or so.
If editing a text file is painfull for you, then you shouldn't be using linux at all... If you really want things to run well, you have to do it yourself. It's that way everywhere. Atleast, it used to be that way
Reboot windows clients? Dude. DHCP. run dhcpd on the linux box. If you need to change settings (should never happen, really. set it up how it needs to be and leave it), SIGHUP the dhcpd process, open up "winipcfg" on all the clients, and click "release" then "renew". viola. Everything fixed.
I'm sorry, but you're not using your tools to their full capability.
Re:What sucks about it.... (Score:2)
Re:Single Point of Failure (Score:1)
As far as single point of failure, for a small non-tech office we had good tech support from the ISP who were a partner with whistle. Although there were connectivity probs mentioned above we never had email problems with it. We didn't have any tech resources or UNIX savvy people to troubleshot multiple firewalls, proxies, mailservers etc. The dollars lost in minor connectivity problems were more than outweighed by the savings over multiple boxen and a $50k+ sysadmin salary ;)
Before the II came out I did usability testing for interjet and thought that it was even better. I was disappointed by IBMs decision to bundle it with services since we already have DSL. Before we went with DSL I upgraded the SW for VPN and had been playing with PPTP and such....
This is not the same as having a Linux or BSD box that is fully accessible, but it can be administered by non-techs and certainly beats NT ProxyServer and Exchange! Because we couldn't upgrade the Interjet 1 when we got DSL, it now serves as DNS/mail and internal docs and web. We love it!! too bad we can't put an extra NIC into it for internal firewall.Re:whatever (Score:1)
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Looks to me as if this isn't a "new" machine, but rather a new name...
Re:have the advert flyer right here... (Score:1)
http://32.97.169.81/@^@l$C5g$3C$C4Go{m$80$BA$_$
But the page came up, along with an ever-lovin' popup banner too!
Win98se, Netscape, 312k SDSL, uh, whatever else...
Re:Where Win NT/2000 can't compete. (Score:1)
Hell, even Windows CE (Based on NT) has a webserver
Re:Where Win NT/2000 can't compete. (Score:1)
You mean like embedded NT [microsoft.com]?
Re:Single Point of Failure (Score:1)
7[67]x series - i386@25MHz
100x series - 68360@? (embedded Moto w/68020 core)
160x series - 68360@33MHz
25xx series - 68030@20MHz
A Cisco 1601 is in other words not exactly what you want if you require IPSec and NAT over a T1.
The newer low-end routers are better, though:
80x series - MPC850@33MHz (embedded PPC)
17xx series - MPC860@?
26xx series - MPC860@40/50MHz
A "wimpy pentium" does not really have anything to be ashamed of compared to what is inside lower-end access routers.
Re:All I want... (Score:1)
Mine is running on a 486, no probs. Our LRPs at work run P100 full 100mbps, so I assume a freesco on a P100 will be similar.
Scott
Re:What sucks about it.... (Score:1)
Re:Looks nice and everything (Score:1)
Re:doesn't make sense (Score:1)
Re:All I want... (Score:1)
Re:IBM: Not Linux, FreeBSD (Score:1)
Re:Where Win NT/2000 can't compete. (Score:1)
Did newton have sound, ODBC (or any kind of advanced data access), infrared, 16bit sound, 16bit colour, 32MB memory, Macromedia Flash support, full Java 1.1 support (not that silly picoJava stuff)?
Windows CE has a heck of a lot stuff more than the newton - but then it depends on what you want out of a handheld i guess. I like toys
Re:Slashdot Just Got Me Fired!!! (Score:1)
Nothing personal, but:
1. You were reading slashdot at work (which is not
inherently wrong, but it was entirely your choice
to do so at work).
2. There is no guarantee anywhere on slashdot
that any of the links posted by readers are of an
"appropriate" nature by any definition.
That said, since you say in one of your responses
that you are glad to be out of this job, then
congratulations. But get off unemployment!
That's for people who really can't get work (I
assume you are an overpayed tech industry worker
like the rest of us and can find work rather
easily; apologies if I am wrong). Best of luck
to you.