Showing headlines posted by tadelste

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Via teams on Linux car PC kit

  • LinuxDevices.com (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 5:03 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Chip and boardmaker Via has partnered with an online retailer to create a car PC targeting in-car navigation and infotainment applications. The $300 "Voom PC" is supported by a media-oriented embedded Linux operating system, and is based on one of Via's newest, most powerful mini-ITX motherboards.

Us fights for Internet control

  • Investor's Business Daily (subscription); By Frank Barnako (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 4:06 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The European Union proposed stripping the Commerce Department and the Internet Corporation of Assigned Names and Numbers of authority over domain name management and other regulatory tasks. David Gross, the State Department official in charge of America's international communications policy, reacted saying, "No intergovernmental body should control the Internet, whether it's the United Nations or any other" according to the International Herald Tribune. He said such a system would lead to unnecessary bureaucracy.

A Footprint For Regulation Compliance

On Linux, the software can integrate well with MySQL, Oracle8i/9i and Postgres 7. When it comes to Sun Solaris, the automation software runs with MySQL and Oracle8i/9i, and on IBM AIX, the utility can work with MySQL, Oracle8i/9i and DB2 v8.

Foxnews: You may have lost Linux users as an audience

When you published your article, "Massachusetts Should Close Down OpenDocument", you made an error. You let someone from the Americans for Technology Leadership influence your fair and balanced reporting. Well, the story is unfair and unbalanced. Get Bill O'Reilly on the phone and have him talk to Tim.

So, here are our talking points.

(Note: For those readers who have never seen the Bill O'Reilly show on Fox, this is a parody of how he opens his show.)

More Linux Laptops? Distributions Are Too "Alienated," Says Dell CEO

  • LinuxToday; By Jacqueline Emigh (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 2:12 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Now that a laptop with pre-installed Mandrake Linux is available in France, will Dell follow up with Linux laptops in the US or other nations? In the words of Dell CEO Michael Dell, the many distributions of Linux are too "alienated" from each other to make that work.

How To Future-Proof Your Firefox Extensions

  • InformationWeek; By Matt McKenzie (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 12:57 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Want to test-drive the Firefox 1.5 beta and bring most of your favorite extensions along for the ride? We'll show you how to make your brand new Firefox update less picky about installing extensions -- and explain why doing so isn't always a good idea.

Sun OpenDocument Patent Statement, submitted by Sun Microsystems, Inc., September 29, 2005

Sun irrevocably covenants that, subject solely to the reciprocity requirement described below, it will not seek to enforce any of its enforceable U.S. or foreign patents against any implementation of the Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) v1.0 Specification, or of any subsequent version thereof ("OpenDocument Implementation") in which development Sun participates to the point of incurring an obligation, as defined by the rules of OASIS, to grant (or commit to grant) patent licenses or make equivalent non-assertion covenants. Notwithstanding the commitment above, Sun's covenant shall not apply and Sun makes no assurance, covenant or commitment not to assert or enforce any or all of its patent rights against any individual, corporation or other entity that asserts, threatens or seeks at any time to enforce its own or another party's U.S. or foreign patents or patent rights against any OpenDocument Implementation.

Opinion: There are too darned many Linuxes

  • Linux Watch; By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 11:42 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Intel
By my count, there are one million, two hundred and seventy thousand, and four hundred and seventeen Linux distributions. Nah, I'm kidding. There are only, by my quick count, one hundred and forty one Linux distributions. Currently shipping. For the Intel platform. In English.

Andreessen Sets Sights on PHP

Internet visionary Marc Andreessen has taken an interest in PHP (define), an open source programming language some consider a threat to languages, such as Java and Microsoft's Active Server Pages and .NET. The Netscape co-founder along with Informatica Founder Gaurav Dhillon joined the board of directors at Zend Technologies, the top provider of PHP software, services and technical support. The company's two co-creators are the authors of PHP 3, which is what all subsequent versions are based on.

Radio's Next Generation: Radii

See how Linux can be used to prototype a sophisticated Internet appliance.

World's largest telco releases lossless Linux filesystem

  • LinuxDevices.com (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 11:04 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
An R&D affiliate of the world's largest telephone company has achieved a stable release of a new Linux filesystem said to improve reliability over conventional Linux filesystems, and offer performance advantages over Solaris's UFS filesystem. NILFS 1.0 (new implementation of a log-structured filesystem) is available now from NTT Labs (Nippon Telegraph and Telephone's Cyber Space Laboratories).

Wikibooks Take on Textbooks

Wikibooks, sister project to Wikipedia - the online encyclopedia that can be accessed and edited by anyone, has been introduced. Previously called Wikimedia Free Textbook Project and Wikimedia-Textbooks, Wikibooks is a collection of free textbooks, manuals, and other texts, with supporting book-based texts, that is written collaboratively on the website. It works on the same principal as Wikipedia, meaning that anyone can edit any book module by clicking on an "edit this page" link, which appears in every Wikibooks module.

French military body to install Linux cluster

  • Silicon.com; By Ingrid Marson (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 7:12 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
An agency of the French Ministry of Defence is planning to install a high-performance Linux cluster for technical and scientific work. The Technical Establishment of Bourges (ETBS), which tests and manufactures armaments, has issued a tender for the supply of a 64-bit Linux cluster, according to a document on an EU website. The deadline of the tender was reached on Thursday but it was unclear from the tender document when the ETBS plans to start implementing the cluster.

LAMP/Asterisk-powered voicemail keeps Katrina victims in touch

Linux, Apache Web server, MySQL and PHP - the widely used LAMP platform - are key parts in a recently-built voicemail system that is helping displaced residents of the Gulf Coast keep in touch with family and friends around the country. LAMP technology is the engine running contactdlovedones.org, a project that provides freely accessible voicemail services to people who had to evacuate their homes due to Hurricane Katrina.

Learning the SUSE Linux shortcuts

SearchEnterpriseLinux.com caught up with Featherly to talk about his new book and to get his thoughts on where Linux and the open source applications market is heading. The author also offered tips for SUSE administrators and developers, those comparing KDE and GNOME, and those mulling the deployment of JBoss with SUSE. Featherly, who in addition to being a writer is currently a consultant with HP Services and Consulting Integration Group, is a 20-year veteran of the IT industry.

Asay: Linux gaining at Windows expense

Just found this (of all places, on Novell's website - you'd think someone would have shared this with me...?). As the IDC analysis goes,

IDC expects Linux to continue biting at the heels of Windows market share and increase from 24 percent to 33 percent within two years forcing Microsoft to swallow even smaller profit margins just to hold on to their share

Mini-ITX SBC targets high-volume embedded apps

Kontron is sampling a mini-ITX board that supports Linux and targets cost-constrained, high-volume applications such as gaming, POS (point-of-sales/service), data communications, and medical equipment. The 786LCD/mITX is based on a mature Intel chipset and low-voltage processor, yet supports USB 2.0, SATA, FireWire, and LVDS, Kontron says.

Open Source for the Enterprise

IBM has supported Linux for some time, and Dell's recent announcement that it is now shipping servers with the open source Web platform LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) is yet another indication that open source is entering the corporate mainstream. Even so, some IT managers are still reluctant to use open source products. This book is the perfect antidote. You won't find any rants here — just a reasoned and prudent assessment of open source products, how to evaluate them and determine if they suit your organization's needs.

Automating Linux security should be a higher priority

  • ZDnet; By Dana Blankenhorn (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 2:12 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
But I strongly believe that Linux users badly need the kind of automated anti-viral patch management service that Windows users now take for granted.

Effort to give 15 million $100 Linux laptops to school kids gains momentum

  • DesktopLinux.com (Posted by tadelste on Sep 30, 2005 12:18 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Speaking Thursday at MIT's ongoing Emerging Technologies Conference, Negroponte confirmed that five countries -- Brazil, China, Egypt, South Africa, and Thailand -- are already putting plans in place to distribute as many as 15 million of the devices. The effort has taken the form of a nonprofit group launched by the Media Lab that is known as One Laptop per Child, which Negroponte first detailed at the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, in January.

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