Showing headlines posted by Scott_Ruecker
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Recently, Mr. Steven Titch wrote an article about Open Document which contained Microsoft-style disinformation. At that moment, some of our readers suggested Heartland or Mr. Titch might have been funded by Microsoft. While I couldn't find any direct ties, there are lot of indirect ties between the Heartland Institute and Microsoft, and at a certain point in my research, even the name of Mr. Abramoff showed up. A summary of the things I found.
My hardware toolbag
Get ready for the Vista/SUSE smackdown!
In one corner, we have the champ -- Windows. Come January, it will come out swinging with what Microsoft tells us is the latest and greatest version ever -- Vista.
In the other corner, we have the challenger -- OpenSUSE 10.1, the latest shipping version of Novell/SUSE's community Linux. Sometime this summer, its commercial version, SUSE Linux Enterprise 10, will come out looking to KO the champ.
Before this epic battle begins, let's take a look at their training camps.
Tools: GCC 3.4.6, Final GCC 3 Release
Dave Korn announced GCC 3.4.6:
"This release is a minor release, containing fixes for regressions relative to earlier releases, but no new features. It is the final release from the 3.4.x series and the branch is now closed. It is thus also the final release from GCC series 3 overall."
GCC is the GNU Compiler Collection which includes C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, and Ada compilers. Download GCC 3.4.6 from a gcc.gnu.orgmirror.
Why should we care about open-source Java?
Linux: Tainting the Kernel From Userland
Theodore Ts'o proposed a new patch allowing a userland program to taint the kernel by writing to/proc/sys/kernel/tainted
, "to be used when userspace is potentially doing something naughty that might compromise the kernel." When asked when this would be needed, Theodore went on to explain, "the problem is that the Real-Time Specification for Java (RTSJ) **requires** that the JVM provide class functions which provide direct access to physical memory; all physical memory.
Germany 2006: Nuremberg area becoming hotbed of open-source ...
Red Hat India appoints Ingram Micro as national distributor
Lagos to host African VoIP Forum
Ubuntu Linux to support Sun Niagara servers
Red Hat co-founder spending gains on Lulu, football team
Us Marshals Switching to Red Hat Linux
CLI Magic: Executing jobs once
Linux: Fun With Kernel Names
Most 2.6 Linux kernel releases have contained a unique name that is only visible within the top level makefile. Some examples, 2.6.17 was named "Lori Rules", 2.6.16 was named "Sliding Snow Leopard", 2.6.14 was named Affluent Albatross, and 2.6.13 was named "Woozy Numbat"
Kyle McMartin recently posted a patch to thelkml with the intention of making the kernel name visible, leading Linux creator Linus Torvalds to explain, "well, part of the charm of the name is that it's totally meaningless. I can pick names out of my *ss, and they don't matter in the least, and nobody will ever see it except in the kernel diffs."
Open source vector graphics app turns 0.5
Java won’t fracture like Linux, says Sun
Rox desktop in new Debian package
Linux Helps FAA Monitor Air Traffic
Hrp-2m Choromet Linux Powered Robot
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