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Venezuela Orders Ministerial Migration to Open Source

  • TechNewsWorld (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 3:31 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
There are 14 ministries covered by Venezuela's first decree, which stipulates that government entities must complete the migration to open source within two years. Ministries can claim exemption if they can show that migrating from proprietary solutions would be impossible.

Linux on the Desktop at work and worth it

  • Builder.com (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 2:38 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
This post is in response to the various naysayers in these forums who say Linux on the business desktop is either not possible or not worth it.

Review: Small Business Accounting Software For Linux

  • LinuxPlanet; By Carla Schroder (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 2:17 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Choosing small business or personal accounting software seems relatively simple: evaluate features, ease of use, price, support--the usual things. The one factor that can really drive you nuts is migrating away from an existing installation.

Windows, Linux Squeeze Unix

Linux distributions continue to amass on the border of Windows Server's enterprise territory, but top executives at Microsoft Corp. are not blinking. That's because the real battle for software growth this year, they say, will center on low-cost, high-volume x86 hardware and drawing enterprises away from proprietary Unix.

Linux Platform Ecosystem to Grow to $36 Billion by 2008

So just how big is the Linux ecosystem today, how fast is it growing, and how big is it going to get? These are the three questions that IT managers, independent software vendors, and IT hardware suppliers are all trying to answer as they map out their plans for the next several years. The answer to those questions, according to a study by IDC is big, fast, and a lot bigger.

Interview with PlaySMS project owner Anton Raharja

PlaySMS, a mobile application platform, was initially released on SourceForge almost a year ago. Since then it has been downloaded more than 11,000 times and built a community of more than 200 developers. Now on version 0.8, it is on track to release version 1.0 by the first quarter of next year.

Linux and Open Source: The 2005 Generation

  • eWEEK Linux; By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 9:53 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux and open source are at the heart of today's computing technology. Deal with it.

Unix Vendors Target Each Other

  • eWEEK Linux (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 8:46 AM EDT)
  • Groups: HP, Sun; Story Type: News Story
As Windows and Linux carve into their OS turf, Sun and HP trade barbs over HP-UX, Solaris and Linux.

Looking back at 2004

In this week's issue of Linux.Ars, we bring to you a recap of the past year's activity, its successes and failures, in the *nix and open source world.

VCs Hope To Leverage Linux Community, Technology

  • E-Commerce Times; By Lisa Stapleton (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 7:42 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Community
The success of open-source software is having broad implications outside of open-source companies' own corporate boardrooms and lunchrooms. "They're changing the way the rest of the industry plans to make money off of software," said Forrester Research analyst John Rymer.

Useful Things You Can Do with FVWM

  • Linux Journal (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 6:35 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Learn how to take screenshots quickly, change window titles and reconfigure a running FVWM instance.

Could Open-Source save Segway?

  • Always On (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 6:14 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
I'll bet there would be a lot of individuals out there who could make killer products if they had access to the Segway technology. Segway could create real, lasting value with their tech by sharing it via licensing, system development, what have you and allowing others to create the myriad ideas necessary to get really good products into the market. Segway should, no MUST help these other radical explorers develop their cool products, products they can't even begin to imagine.

Open Source Software Firms Expand Presence In DBM System Market

Open source software companies are beginning to augment their presence in database management (DBM) system market. According to industry sources, open source DBM system providers such as Computer Associates (CA), MySQL and PostgreSQL are poised to push aggressive marketing strategies targeting public organizations and Internet service providers, threatening existing closed source DBM solution companies such as Oracle.

Linux Gazette #110 is out!

  • Mailing list; By Benjamin A. Okopnik (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 3:42 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Linux Gazette is a volunteer-run monthly web magazine dedicated to two simple ideas: making Linux a little more fun, and sharing ideas and discoveries.

Building a distro

  • NewsForge (Posted by dave on Jan 3, 2005 3:36 AM EDT)
  • Groups: GNU; Story Type: News Story
You download a CD or maybe a diskette image, transfer it to the appropriate media, boot your computer with it, and voilà, you're running Linux. It sounds so simple -- but a great deal of work goes into creating that software. Beginning about two years ago, I spent a year and a half building a desktop-oriented GNU/Linux distribution named MfxLinux, designed to be tightly integrated with Crowell Systems' Medformix medical office management system. Along the way, as with any project a lot of design and implementation decisions had to be made -- some of which worked out better than others.

Open And Shut

  • TechWeb (Posted by dave on Jan 2, 2005 3:49 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The value and utilization of open-source software have grown immensely in recent years, but in the booming analytics market, open source is strangely not keeping pace. A variety of projects are out there—search open-source nexus SourceForge.net for "OLAP" or "reporting," and you'll find dozens. Unfortunately, many of these attempts seem amateurish, more intentions than anything approaching commercial-grade products. The projects that do appear worth a trial run boast only niche rather than broad-market appeal. Nonetheless, they do suggest far greater future adoption of open source for decision systems.

Analytics: The next stop for open source?

  • Intelligent Enterprise (Posted by dave on Jan 1, 2005 2:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The value and utilization of open-source software have grown immensely in recent years, but in the booming analytics market, open source is strangely not keeping pace. A variety of projects are out there—search open-source nexus SourceForge.net for "OLAP" or "reporting," and you'll find dozens. Unfortunately, many of these attempts seem amateurish, more intentions than anything approaching commercial-grade products. The projects that do appear worth a trial run boast only niche rather than broad-market appeal. Nonetheless, they do suggest far greater future adoption of open source for decision systems.

Open Source on PocketPC

  • Onlamp (Posted by dave on Jan 1, 2005 10:36 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
When I set out to create open source software on a PocketPC, I figured that was pretty strange, given the thoroughly proprietary nature of the tools, from the OS through the compilers, I'd be using. As it turns out, it's not that strange - lots of people are doing it!

Startups Take To The Open-Source Trail

Boutique services company MozSource now offers e-mail technical support services for the Mozilla Firefox browser and Thunderbird e-mail client. It's not the only startup hunting for revenue from open-source projects. Such companies represent a growing number of cottage services springing up around projects such as Mozilla, Linux, Apache and MySQL.

Absoft announces SDK for Linux on clusters; Visual Numerics revs library

  • SDTimes.com (Posted by dave on Dec 31, 2004 5:10 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Late last year, two software companies souped up their supercomputing offerings. Fortran and C/C++ tools maker Absoft readied in November a software development kit for deploying Linux on clusters and servers, and a handful of tools for Mac developers. And Visual Numerics updated its numerical library for Java, used not just for science and engineering applications, but also for business.

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