BlueQuartz

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BlueQuartz is an open source server administration tool with a graphical user interface through a web browser. BlueQuartz originated from the Cobalt RaQ 550 source code, the BlueQuartz project was set up to port the Cobalt management software to standard computers.

The BlueQuartz project is managed by the Japan-based Cobalt Users Group. "The Cobalt Users Group will continue to participate in the deployment of the all of Cobalt-based software including the porting tasks to 550 based BlueQuartz system," wrote Yutaka Yasuda on the site. "The 550 series has been discontinued and no development plan exists for a new product which inherits Cobalt DNA. However, the Cobalt DNA will survive."

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On 23 December 2003, Sun released the RAQ550/Sausalito source code under a BSD license.

The release means that all of the custom user interface and back-end code for the Qube 3 and RaQ 550 server appliances is now available under a BSD-style licence. Also, the custom BIOS for all x86-based RaQ/Qube products -- which, among other things, let an administrator tap in the device's network settings without having to plug in a keyboard and monitor -- have been released under the GNU General Public License.

Although Cobalt servers are based on the Linux operating system, which is open source anyway, it is the custom code that gave the servers their appliance-like ease of use. As ISPs and companies hosting Web sites warmed to the Cobalt servers in the late 1990s, Sun Microsystems, whose big, support-heavy servers were losing space to rack-fulls of cheap, almost disposable Cobalt Raqs, bought the company for $2.2bn (£1.2bn) in 2000.

The source code for the distinctive Cobalt Qube servers, which found homes in many small businesses as easy-to-set-up Web and email servers, was released in July 2003 and is also maintained under the BlueQuartz moniker.

The Cobalt Users Group is an active community demonstrating the passion that Cobalt users harbour for the products. Cobalt-branded merchandise on the group's site ranges from SKYY Vodka to beach sandals, which leave the Cobalt logo imprinted in the sand, and an official user group t-shirt.

Cobalt servers aroused a passion among their users rarely shared by any IT kit produced outside Apple, and inspired a number of imitators. Typically, the servers came pre-configured with the Apache Web server, PHP4 and the MySQL database, as well as DNS and email software. In 1999, a group of Cobalt employees set up the PkgMaster.com to host extra applications, such as WebMail, that had been "packaged" in a way that let Cobalt users install them from their appliance with a few clicks of a mouse.

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