Red Hat goes from strength to strength
I was talking with some senior guys from Red Hat last week about their potential move beyond platforms towards solutions. We were actually discussing collaboration solutions. There view at the time was that their focus was to take what was available in the Open Source community and productionise it. Its interesting therefore to see them release an application server. When you look at the potential though to address the collaboration market Red Hat would do well to consider packaging a solution for email, IM, document management etc. At the moment they ship the bits, but the bits don't make a solution. If you look at a previous post about Microsoft and their, "integrated innovation", marketting there is probably as much scope if not more to do the same thing in the Open Source world. Start thinking Solution guys, you seem to have Platforms and Component packaging fairly well sown up.
I used to love my Blackberry - but this looks like a dream

The new Seimens SK65. Full blackberry functionality with a really innovative format, tri-band. Hopefully it has a decent task manager! For more details check out this web site.
Linux and thin clients
eWeek reports that Wyse, (a long term user of Windows embedded technologies), is now moving into Linux in a bigway.
"Linux has really grown, and has become 20 percent of the worldwide thin-client marketplace,"
What actually suprised me was that the market share was so low, given that Linux seems to be a perfect fit for the embedded market, but clearly it takes time for things to catch on.
Interesting view on XML and the benefits of generic solutions
IBM and Linux, - but what about Sun?
Jonathan Schwartz, provides a very interesting perspective on the pickle that IBM have got themselves into over Linux. Whats even more interesting is that he does not discuss Sun's simillar predicament! Maybe thats because his series of blogs on this and related topics is building up the background for Sun's position which is likely to see a return to the promotion of Solaris as a viable alternative to Redhat which is gradually being positioned by Jonathan as a kid of "proprietary solution", certainly one that locks you into RedHat.
Update: I am not the only one who is puzzling over what Jonathan is up to with his blog. Look at this eWeek article that pulls lots of opinion together, it appears Jonathan is playing a pretty risky game.