Showing headlines posted by Herschel_Cohen
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[ED: Just wish SAP(ians) would make up their minds: either F/OSS stinks or it's Great! Come on, you been studying out in the Sun too long. - HC]
Why LUGs matter
Test shows how vulnerable unpatched Windows is
[ED: Read this elsewhere, but worth repeating. Nonetheless, do not become over confident, stay current on security. - HC]
Sap Cozies Up to Microsoft
SAP is extending its “adaptive computing” capabilities, which allow customers to run applications as services and distribute them across various pieces of hardware and software, to Microsoft databases and operating systems. For example, instead of running software on a large mainframe computer, companies can do the same on a few smaller servers that cost less than one large mainframe.
[ED: This is absolutely terrible news for all those mainframe manufactures that are now going to go bankrupt with this important, strategic moves by all those Saps. End of the line IBM. Your next Oracle. And F/OSS - worthless, as Sapians pointed out when it didn't rise to saving their business. Wait ... is this just a move propelled by bitterness? Who knows, better yet: who cares. - HC]
Novell Offers Details on SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10
Firefox to get phishing shield
The phishing shield is a key new security feature planned for Firefox 2, slated for release in the third quarter of this year, Mozilla's Mike Shaver said in an interview Tuesday.
[ED: Odd: "... already in Netscape 8 and Opera 8, both released last year." and will be in IE later in 2006. I wonder if Firefox will at least beat out MS on this needed feature. - HC]
After flap, Symantec adjusts browser bug count
In its latest Internet Security Threat Report, covering the last six months of 2005, the company now features two different ways of counting browser bugs: one that finds that Internet Explorer has the most vulnerabilities, and a second that reveals Firefox as the bug leader.
Firefox had the highest number of "vendor-confirmed" vulnerabilities, with 13 bugs reported during the six months covered by the report, compared with Internet Explorer's 12, said Dave Cole, a director of Symantec Security Response.
[ED: Color me cynical, but does Symantec's revisionism mean: that they are attempting to be more truthful? Or is it recongnition the market is changing? Or even more likely, recognition that their partnering with Microsoft and cash flow is ending with the release of Vista? When the latter occurs MS becomes the sole protector of the mass of ignorant users. - HC]
Help, open source!
So how do you break the cycle of vendor dependency? One popular choice is to explore open-source alternatives.
Open source election systems desirable, unavailable
[ED: Why not some effort to do it? Any vendor not wanting to play can be excluded. Remember, a republic is built on the belief you have some say in your vote. If that proves true, over throwing the current holders of power becomes the only option. Hence, this is too important an issue to say it's a nice concept. - HC]
Free As In Freedom
Paraphrasing Richard Stallman ... “free software” is not referring to getting something for nothing, but to “market freedom.”
Portable apps get a thumbs-up
" ... John T. Haller, a Queens financial systems programmer, proposed an open-source project that would lead to a new paradigm ... in theory, be possible to cut Mozilla loose and run it by itself, on removable media - just like my old copy of Wordstar. Those little tiny pen (aka USB, aka thumb) drives ... the old Microsoft paradigm of immovable software has been obliterated ..."
[ED: Interesting read, but I will stay with Linux for now myself - HC]
Firefox: On the front lines of the Internet wars
Will there finally be enough volume to finally bring this issue to the fore? Will it arouse enough of the public to incite action?
Good questions, which may not turn out positive, but at least begin to have the possibility of being addressed. Watch for more.
[lg-announce] Linux Gazette #124 is out!
Another HTC PDA/phone boots Linux
A PDA-like Windows Mobile phone has been successfully coaxed into running Linux. The "Universal," created by Taiwanese ODM HTC and re-sold under various brands, has successfully booted several Linux OSes, after a flurry of collaboration on a developer community forum.
[ED: I guess they began rejecting the shrink wrap license. I wonder if they got a OS refund? In any case, they should apply, since it could lower the cost to the customer - HC]
Free articles cover Linux kernel debugging tools, techniques
"Software released under an open source license" is no longer news
[ED: Anyone want to hazard a bet when we do the same? - HC]
2006 DPL debate, 16 March 2006 22:30 UTC
Caboodle Networks Launches Open Source Semantic Web-Based Search ...
[ED: This will be usable only if we can stop those that want to lock everything up. These same types will wonder later why no one is buying their product. Hence, they offer no other solution than sueing the malefactor non-users or having government imposed charges to subsidize their ownership expenses plus a fair profit. Make sense, provided you own one. - HC]