Showing headlines posted by dave
« Previous ( 1 ... 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 ... 595 ) Next »Book Excerpt: JDS Instant Messenger (IM)
This excerpt from Exploring the JDS Linux Desktop teaches you how to instant message friends and colleagues from your desktop system.
Open source sniping tool takes aim at eBay
Have you ever bid in on eBay auction item and thought you were going to win, only to see it go at the very last second for a bid just slightly higher than yours? Congratulations, you've been sniped. Luckily, you can fight back by getting your own sniping tool, courtesy of the open source community, which provides JBidwatcher, one of the best ones gunning.
Interview: Ian Lynch, creator, INGOTs free software service certification
There is a Native American proverb that says, "Tell me and I'll forget, show me and I may not remember, involve me and I'll understand." These words are the mission statement of a new scheme for certifying IT capability -- the International Grades in Office Technology (INGOTs) program. To obtain their certificates, students must demonstrate an understanding of free and open source software (FOSS) issues by actually contributing to the OpenOffice.org project. INGOTs creator Ian Lynch contributes to the OpenOffice.org as education lead. We have asked Ian to explain the main features and advantages of the program.
Business Must Be Cautious With Firefox
Many mission-critical applications have been built on Internet Explorer, and most organizations don't have the budget or resources to recode them. In addition, PCs' application loads need to be properly tested to ensure that nothing breaks with the addition of a different browser. In the near term, many business users will be better served by keeping Internet Explorer and installing security updates as they're released.
Open Source as a strategy against going offshore
"Open Source is an opportunity for small, local companies to position themselves against offshore providers", says Gerhard Havlik of OSCON co-organizer incite. The Open Source Business Conference (OSCON) was held last Friday in Vienna. Danese Cooper, a proponent of Open Source at Sun Microsystems, spoke about what she had seen in India: a large section of the economy was working solely on applying standard software and linking various standard components to each other.
Open-source PBX Battle Brewing
In the open source PBX world, Asterisk is king, but it’s no longer the only game in town.
British public bodies say no to open source
UK local authorities are far less likely to use open-source software than those of some other European countries, according to findings from a Dutch study. The study has so far found that 32 percent of local authorities in Britain use open-source software, compared with 71 percent in France, 68 percent in Germany and 55 percent in the Netherlands.
FOSS developers gather to build education tools for Africa
Following on from the developer roadshow held at the University of the Western Cape last month, free software developers from nine African universities are again meeting at the university this week. This time they are learning about and developing software for the Kinky application framework.
Red Hat pushes for Linux in federal market
Company plans new division, software release aimed at luring government users
Tutorial: Mepis + apt = Working On Easy Street
my ears perked up when I heard that the live-CD Mepis Linux distribution was built on Debian. That meant that all the slick things that my friends raved about in Debian are rolled into Mepis. And Mepis is a breeze to install. Once Mepis is running from the CD you have the option of installing it on the hard drive, which took about 20 minutes on one of my prehistoric 266-MHz laptops.
Teen [Blake Ross] is co-creator of Firefox browser
Ross, now 19, a sophomore computer science major at Stanford University, has an even more impressive resume than most of his peers. Before graduating high school, he helped develop Firefox.
Linux gets small and smaller
Last week unbridled joy entered your life when you got coLinux running on your Windows PC without any kind of virtual machine monitor and without the aid of a safety net. Several of you have already written in to tell of your coLinux exploits, and this week - can you believe it? - it gets better!
Vendor extends patch tools to Linux, Unix
Patch management vendor New Boundary Technologies is expanding the range of its software beyond Windows to answer user demands for cross-platform support that will address vulnerabilities, regardless of where they exist on the network.
The pros and cons of free software - Part 1
No one wants to spend money on something they can get for free. If you're building your own computer, or upgrading an old one, a major expense is going to be Windows itself. This can cost upwards of £100 and, if you want to add other programs, you'll find that the project can become rather expensive. There are alternatives to Windows and its compatible programs, however, and we're not talking about illegal copies of software.
Mozilla Links Newsletter - 25 - January 24, 2005
On November 9th, the highly anticipated Firefox 1.0 arrived. If you'd been using Firefox Preview Release or a Release Candidate there was no news at all feature-wise, since most changes were related to bug fixes or under the hood improvements.
Innovations in window management
When you have 20 or more windows open across nine virtual desktops, the complexity of window management can become overwhelming. A number of new tools are now available to facilitate effective window management.
Wienux, a Linux for Vienna
Employees at about 4,800 desks of Vienna's Municipal Authority, the department heads included, from this year on will be given the choice of using a special Linux distribution named Wienux in place of the hitherto exclusively used Microsoft platform Windows 2000 with Office 2000.
Linux in Government: OSS in the US Navy?
The Navy's Program Executive Office for Information Technology is giving open-source software a look.
A small business consultant's must-have Linux apps
As a consultant to small businesses and non-profit organizations that are too small to have any IT staff of their own, I need to be able to support a diverse array of desktops and servers, platforms and file formats. I've been able to do it exclusively with Linux since 1998. Here are my must-have Linux desktop applications.
Screenshots of New Mozilla Firefox Options/Preferences Window
Ben Goodger has posted some screenshots of the new Mozilla Firefox Options/Preferences window, which is currently under development.
« Previous ( 1 ... 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 ... 595 ) Next »