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A report said the Free Standards Group (FSG) will today move to back Linux Standard Base 2.0.
Open source 'pirates' will be prosecuted, says ministry
Vendors who distribute open source software without legitimate licences -- thinking that its "freeware" status protects them -- can be prosecuted under Malaysia's antipiracy laws. While users are free to download open source software (OSS) for their personal use, they are not allowed to resell it commercially, the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry's Selangor assistant state director Othman Ahmad told In.Tech recently.
aKademy Interview: Lars Stetten About Unix Accessibility
During the KDE Community World Summit 2004 "aKademy" the 'Unix Accessibility Forum' took place which gave possibility for handicapped persons to come in touch with Unix. We talked with Lars Stetten, a partially sighted computer science student from Marburg.
IBM delivers Power-based servers with Linux
IBM will push its Power5 line of servers down into the low end of the market, taking Linux with it, when it unwraps an aggressively priced series of Linux-only systems on Monday that will go up against the offerings of Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard.
Protecting Linux servers
I am starting to move my company to Linux as the server platform of choice. With the seemingly continual stream of alerts about the different hacks possible, I know that I should put some type of firewall in place to protect the servers. What are my options?
An open letter to California's governor
Dear Mr. Schwarzenegger, The purpose of this letter is two-fold: To congratulate you for your choice to utilize open source software in California in order to reduce operational costs. To warn you that the path you take in a different section of the cost-reducing white paper is dangerous and stands against the ideology of open source enthusiasts.
Novell Open Enterprise Server Provides Advanced Services on Customers' Choice of Platforms
-- Novell Open Enterprise Server meets enterprise-class computing needs, incorporating the best from leading commercial and open source platforms along with integrated management, identity-based services and support ecosystem
Novell Introduces Virtual Directory Services to Enable the Identity-driven Enterprise
-- Novell Virtual Directory Services is an Embeddable Identity Store That Aggregates Information From Multiple LDAP Data Sources
Telstra IT chief slams claims of 'Linux turf war'
The head of Telstra's technology division opened up with both barrels last week over reports the Australian telco’s CIO, Jeff Smith, has been sidelined because of the failure of open source initiatives. In 2002–03 Telstra looked at replacing most of its Microsoft desktop systems with Linux and Sun's StarOffice, but according to The Australian newspaper, the open source initiatives failed to get traction and Telstra has re-signed its desktop services with Microsoft.
Firefox Pre-Preview Release Available for Testing
We took one more important change into the builds last night, moving from a blacklist to a whitelist for external protocol handlers, so today's builds are the new candidate 1.0PR builds. If all goes well with these builds, they'll become the official Firefox 1.0 Preview Release builds on Tuesday morning. Please help us test these bits and if you find any major regressions, please file bugs and nominate those as PR blockers with the bug flag "blocking-aviary1.0PR?" so that the Aviary team will see.
Curbing some Linux enthusiasm
When IBM Workplace Client Technology was introduced, some in the marketplace and press claimed the solution would bring applications and functionality to the open source that would rival the Microsoft Office suite of products, thus making Linux a desktop competitor to Windows. However, that unbridled enthusiasm, while understandable, is a bit premature and misplaced.
aKademy Hackers Port Mozilla to Qt/KDE
Among the most exciting things to come out of aKademy, the recent KDE Community World Summit, is a Qt port of Mozilla's Gecko rendering engine. This will give Gecko the full native look and feel of KDE/Qt, and make it available as a KPart, where it can provide an alternative HTML renderer for Konqueror.
Cash Rewards Offered to Security Bug Bounty Hunters
A $500 cash prize will be awarded to users who identify and report security vulnerabilities in MozillaTM software. This initiative called the Mozilla Security Bug Bounty Program was launched last month by the Mozilla Foundation and is being funded by Linux software developer Linspire, Inc., and Internet entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth.
Wireless broadband for all! says Intel
Intel is sampling a chip for wireless broadband modems that it hopes will greatly increase the number of global households with access to high-speed Internet service. The "Rosedale" SoC supports WiMAX, an emerging broadband wireless standard recently ratified by the IEEE. Rosedale targets inexpensive customer premises equipment (CPEs).
Codecs for Linux to support high-end Windows audio
Fabless chip house SigmaTel will support Microsoft's latest high-end audio distribution standard in its line of codec chips, it says. The C-Major audio codec family is available with Linux drivers, and will support Microsoft Windows Media Audio 9 Professional (WMA Pro) in chips targeting PC-like devices and home-entertainment systems.
In-flight entertainment systems run embedded Linux
Engadget has published a seat-of-the-pants review of an in-flight entertainment system it says is based on embedded Linux. The review includes informal photos and a description of Matsushita Avionics Systems (MAS) eFX, an all-digital networked multimedia/data distribution system supporting satellite TV, mp3 playback, Internet access, and more.
Pogo Linux PerformanceWare worth jumping on
Like a sports car that combines a big engine with a small body, the Pogo Linux PerformanceWare 3564 3U server packs a lot of processing power into a relatively small chassis. And though it performs like a hot rod, comes fully loaded with software, and handles like a dream thanks to stellar management tools, the 3564 is priced competitively.
Linux: Reducing Kernel Latency
With much feedback on the lkml, Ingo Molnar has continued to improve his voluntary kernel preemption patch . Testing the patch has revealed a number of areas in the 2.6 Linux kernel that were causing high latency. Fixes have been created and merged as these areas have been located. For example, following Ingo's release of the -R6 version of the patch, Lee Revell reported that he was still able to cause measurable latencies by driving the server to swap. Ingo acknowledged that this was do to the get_swap_page() function which he described as, "pretty stupid, it does a near linear search for a free slot in the swap bitmap - this not only is a latency issue but also an overhead thing as we do it for every other page that touches swap." He went on to add, "this is pretty much the only latency that we still having during heavy VM load".
Linux poised to move out from data centre to desktop, says report
A report published this week says that Linux is now a credible alternative for the core of the data centre, and will be one at the client end within two years.
Novell CTO: Linux applications are under development
Novell became a major Linux promoter worldwide with the acquisition of the Ximian and SuSE Linux operating systems in the second half of 2003. Alan F. Nugent, CTO of Novell, explained that the open-source operating systems have not only seen broadening acceptance in server applications, but also in a wide range of other IT applications.
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