Linux penguin graces Xbox

A German programmer says he has made the first step toward running the Linux operating system on Microsoft's Xbox game console--without running into any legal entanglements.

Michael Steil, a German programmer, has built an application called linuxpreview, which simply flashes the Xbox LED (light-emitting diode) and draws a penguin on the Xbox start-up screen, along with the message "Xbox Linux Coming Soon!" and a link to the Xbox Linux Web site. However, it is touted as the first application to run on Xbox without using tools from the official Xbox Software Development Kit (SDK), and is the first step toward turning the Xbox into a Linux-based PC.

Steil is the head of the Xbox Linux Project, which is marshalling volunteers to figure out a way to run Linux--which directly competes with Microsoft's Windows operating system--on the console without using any of Microsoft's proprietary development tools. In some ways, the project should be simple, since Xbox is built from hardware that is identical or similar to a standard Intel-based PC.

The first barrier to overcome, however, is Xbox's BIOS (basic input/output system), which differs from that of a PC. In order to start up, Linux needs a bootloader, and the existing varieties all depend on software such as a PC BIOS, or the basic operating system, DOS. The trick, according to Steil, is to figure out enough about the Xbox's BIOS to write a Linux bootloader.

His new program doesn't yet accomplish this, but it's a start, Steil said. "Linuxpreview is a small application, and it's the first one, which shows that it is possible to write an application that has not been developed with Microsoft's SDK and does not contain any Microsoft code," he said in an e-mail interview.

"It would be trivial to write an application showing a penguin logo on the screen which has been written using Microsoft's development tools every regular Xbox game developer has access to. We cannot use this software of course, so it's more difficult to write software that 'does something' on top of the Xbox system software," Steil added.

He said that linuxpreview can be used as a template for the upcoming bootloader and other applications. However, once Linux has booted, other applications will have to deal only with the Linux environment and will not have to deal directly with the Xbox BIOS, according to Steil.

The current application runs on an Xbox with modified hardware that lets the console run non-Xbox applications. Ultimately, though, the Xbox Linux developers are aiming to get Linux up and running with a software-only method. An anonymous donor recently offered US$200,000 for various stages in the Xbox Linux project, with $100,000 for finding a software-only Linux solution.

The necessity of hardware modification isn't just inconvenient; it can also be expensive for programmers who are spending their spare cash on the consoles. "I now have my third Xbox; two were broken because of my hardware research," said Enrico Kern, another German programmer working on the project.

On the other hand, the Linux enthusiasts are well aware that, according to analyst estimates, Microsoft is losing $125 or more for every console it sells. "We are no friends of Microsoft," Kern said.

Linux is based on an open-source license, beloved by hackers because it allows them to modify and redistribute the operating system's underlying source code, as long as the resulting software is itself open source.

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Talkback 4 comments

    "I'm on my third XBOX 'co ...Pierre -- 09/07/02

    "I'm on my third XBOX 'cos I broke two trying to run Linux on them"

    What a moron!!!!!!

    A company releases a gaming console for us to while away the wee hours and morons around the world want to re-solder components, pirate its games and run a propellor head operating system on it!!!!

    Can you imagine the dinner party chat ... "yup on my fourth XBOX - whadda bout you Fritz?", "oh I'm on my fifth, but I got the lights on the front to glow last week".

    Clowns ...

    "I'm on my third XBOX 'co ...Scott Middleton -- 12/07/02

    "I'm on my third XBOX 'cos I broke two trying to run Linux on them" Tell me why on earth you were trying to put Linux on a platform it doesn't support? Were you expecting by some stroke of luck it would work? Come on be sensible. Then to go and do it a second time is only asking for trouble. The only reason your on your third XBox is your fault not Linux.

    Maybe now you've broken two you could break your third by trying to put Windows on your XBox?

    Get a grip guys! This is exact ...Anonymous -- 01/08/02

    Get a grip guys! This is exactly how the IBM clone PC was born - it's called reverse engineering.

    What these geeks do with their own money is their business, why should you care? MS are sponsoring them to the tune of $125 per box - without even meaning to!

    Will I ever run Linux on Xbox? No. Do I even own an Xbox or Linux distro? No. But I think these guys are great and more power to them. Maybe they'll come up with a great Open Source gaming machine or home server, maybe (probably) not.

    But don't begrudge them the attempt.

    multi platform gaming paul aka blazingangel -- 21/02/08

    ok heres a good place to put there brains to, someone should make a console(under the guise of a pc) that plays x-box 360 (with hi def dvd compatability) and playstation 3 (and blu-ray dvd movies) games, granted it would need 3 disk trays and be massive, but i would buy one, oh the third disc tray is to run pc applications and games,

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