Thom Holwerda Archive

MacOSX Week: Maya Technologies & TheOrphanage Interviews

Some software companies might find a new OS a daunting thing to develop for. Not Alias |Wavefront. This leading developer of 3D animation software, recently released the new OSX version of their flagship product, Maya. For a company that wasn't a player in the MacOS world, this is pretty significant vote of confidence in Apple's new OS. OSAlert spoke with Andrew Pearce, the Director of Maya Technologies at Alias|Wavefront and with TheOrphanage's Kevin Baille (Visual Effects Artist).

MacOSX Week: Omnigroup Interview

OSX is the beneficiary of more than NeXTStep core technology. Apple's new OS also inherited considerable expertise and terrific developers like the OmniGroup. These longtime developers for NeXTStep have been swept into the Apple world along with their preferred OS. In this significantly larger market, the Omnigroup has the advantage of exceptional depth of experience with OSX. OSAlert spoke to Manny from the Omnigroup about their experiences so far.

Interview with Progeny’s Steven Schafer

Last month Progeny Linux Systems ceased development on their own distribution in order to focus on selling professional services. In their announcement, the company cited the prohibitive cost of developing and publishing a distro. This move marked another firm in the wave of tech companies, Linux and otherwise, making significant changes to adjust to the market slump. Progeny's distribution was based on Debian GNU/Linux, and many in the Linux community were closely watching the company because it was founded by Debian creator Ian Murdock. OSAlert spoke to the President of Progeny Linux Systems, Steve Schafer, once the dust had settled on his company's announcement.

Interview with QNX’s Paul Leroux

Just in time for the Embedded Systems Conference in Boston this week, we here at OSAlert thought that we would bring our readers an interview from the world of embedded OSes.
OSAlert was happy to meet with Paul Leroux of QNX Software Systems at their headquarters in Kanata, part of the Silicon Valley North area around Ottawa, Ontario. With 20 years of experience in the field, QNX is synonymous with embedded systems. Many people will be familiar with the QNX demo disk that fit their OS, GUI, browser, web server, games, TCP/IP, and more onto a 1.44M bootable floppy. In 2000 QNX gained notoriety for making the QNX realtime platform free for non-commercial use. QNX has been riding a wave of buzz in this last year. We spoke during the hectic lead up to Embedded Systems Conference.