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De Bortoli Wines is staging a nationwide rollout of Linux terminal replacements and plans to move over to new Linux desktops by the end of 2005. De Bortoli's IT Manager Bill Robertson said there were several reasons for moving much of its application base to open source software, citing ease of deployment, portability, adaptability, avoiding vendor lock-in issues, flexibility and cost savings as key factors.
IDC: Linux server sales to hit $9.1 billion in 2008
Sales of servers using Linux will grow faster than the overall market at least through 2008, when customers will spend $9.1 billion for machines using the open-source operating system, market researcher IDC forecast Monday.
Book Review - Open Source Software: Implementation and Management
The next time someone asks you how to introduce open source into an organization, suggest this book as a starting point.
The Young Turk of Firefox
Stanford University sophomore Blake Ross is the lead architect of the Firefox browser, which hit its long-anticipated 1.0 release in November. In its long preview release stage, Firefox—part of the Mozilla family of open source software—already ate into the dominant market share of Microsoft Internet Explorer. Ross discussed the browser and its implications with Redmond magazine Managing Editor Keith Ward.
A Modest Player in Open Source
Computer geeks have helped make Martin Roesch's kitchen-table startup a $100 million outfit. His secret ingredient: A dash of humility.
Thunderbird 1.0 Takes Aim At Microsoft's Outlook Express
Following the launch of its Firefox browser, Mozilla delivers an E-mail client. A calendaring application may be next.
What are the real vulnerabilities of Linux?
Some Linux fans are tired of reading reports and articles about viruses and attacks for the Linux operating system that would be as bad as malware for Windows if the open source OS was most popular. Why waste your time worrying about a potential threat for which there is little historical or empirical evidence that it even exists, right?
Open-source practices moving into enterprise development
Everyone knows that open source is gaining widespread acceptance in enterprise settings. A recent Forrester report found that 60% of organizations are adopting open source technologies and platforms in one form or another. From Linux to Apache to Sendmail and beyond, open source is fast becoming an enterprise commonplace.
Fashionistas meet penguinistas
Fashion and Linux -- it's not a familiar combination. You get a mental picture of an open source hacker in an extra large T-shirt and long fuzzy beard on a runway on Seventh Avenue. It's as unlikely as the fashion industry, which is slow, technologically speaking, moving away from tried and true methods of doing business (read: even if it's broke, don't fix it, because at least we're used to it, and what's wrong with AS/400 anyway?). But Ed Foy of Brick, N.J., has made it his business to break all the rules. He's helping celebrities sell clothes -- a lot of clothes -- using only Linux, Apache, MySQL, and Perl.
Ziff Davis Media Acquires DeviceForge LLC
Under terms of the agreement Ziff Davis Media has purchased several vertical technology and information websites including LinuxDevices.com, WindowsForDevices.com, DeviceForge.com, and DesktopLinux.com.
Thunderbird 1.0 has landed!
Mozilla Foundation announces the release of its open source email software
Microsoft PowerPoint versus OpenOffice.org Impress
By now, anyone who has researched replacing Microsoft Office with OpenOffice.org knows that Writer is an acceptable, even superior substitute for Word. But word processing is only part of what the average user needs in an office program. What if you need to design a slide show in OOo Impress? Coming from PowerPoint, what can you expect?
Linux Camp Takes New Tack on Kernel
With a common goal of providing a more constant, smoother and faster development cycle, new technologies are being put directly into Linux kernel 2.6.x.
OSDL Adopts Open Posix Test Suite
The Open Source Development Labs has integrated into the library of tests that run against new Linux kernel builds the Open Posix Test Suite (OPTS) - an open source project designed to make it easier to port applications from other Posix platforms - Posix being the IEEE portability standard associated mostly with the Unix operating system - to Linux.
The Linux Kernel's Fuzzy Future
Linus Torvalds and his open-source colleagues keep adding new features, but there's no technical road map leading the way.
Site review: Libervis.com
From a village near Zagreb, Croatia, comes Libervis.com, a Free Software-oriented site that seeks to build a "community center" that welcomes all people interested in Free Software, whether "supporters of the pragmatical open source ideology or pure free software ideology."
Frontpage Gets Open Source Foe
Nvu (pronounced N-view, for a "new view"), the free Web editor and authoring system for desktop Linux, Macintosh and Microsoft Windows users, has been released in beta version. The release comes in advance of the forthcoming Nvu 1.0 product sponsored by Linspire. According to a release from the company, Nvu gives non-technical computer users the power to create, edit and publish professional Web sites, much like Microsoft FrontPage or Macromedia Dreamweaver.
Making an open source living, part 1
Running a business based on open source software is possible, as we found out when we interviewed Steven Noels, a Belgian consultant and member of the Apache Software Foundation.
Fluendo Funds Xiph.org for Vorbis and Theora RTP Specifications
GNU/Linux multimedia specialist Fluendo announces funding of Xiph.org to complete RTP specifications for the Vorbis and Theora codec formats
Wal-mart Picks Up Xandros
Walmart.com, which pioneered Linux PCs, is now selling cheap Microtel boxes with the Xandros brand of desktop Linux that Xandros bought off Corel. There are four new Xandros-based desktops, ranging in price from $200-$600. Customers can pick from either 1.5GHz Sempron boxes or ones that are built on a 2.8GHz Celeron chip or a 3GHz Pentium 4.
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