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Critical to the concept of patch management is testing. When applied indiscriminately, patches can override working drivers, break existing software, and change the links to key files. They may introduce new features that override services on which you rely. Best practices suggest that you test every patch before installing it on production computers. Ideally, you'll have one or more extra computers available for this purpose.
YubNub: A command line for the Web
Tired of dragging your mouse from one Web site to another, trying to get to the best of the Web? Give YubNub a run. Its name means "hooray" in Ewok, and it might just make you jump for joy. Its developer, Jon Aquino, calls YubNub the URL command line of the Web OS. It provides a portal to hundreds of searchable Web sites.
The Politics of Honest Voting
It's time to replace the politics of secrecy and cover-ups in voting with the politics of open source.
Free software movement heads for Nairobi
Free software developers and advocates from across the African continent will be heading for Nairobi in Kenya this week as they gather for the second Free Sofware and Open Source Foundation for Africa conference. Keynote speakers during the opening day of the conference will include Ubuntu's Mark Shuttleworth as well representatives of Google.
Ubuntu Linux distros achieve feature-freeze alphas
The fourth alpha release (known as Flight 4) of the upcoming Ubuntu Linux 6.04 "Dapper Drake" is now available for download, the South Africa-based project announced this week. This is the feature-freeze version of Dapper Flight.
Review: Four Linux Games I Can't Stop Playing
The GNU/Linux operating system isn't exactly known for gaming, but that doesn't mean that there aren't any games on it that are worth playing. LinuxPlanet welcomes new contributor Jem Matzan, who introduces us to games worth your time.
Stallman among keynoters at FOSDEM in Brussels
Richard M. Stallman, director of the Free Software Foundation, OpenOffice.org developer Michael Meeks, and Xen Project chief architect Ian Pratt will be among the keynote speakers at the sixth annual Free and Open Source Software Developers' European Meeting (FOSDEM), set for Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 25-26, 2006, in Brussels, Belgium.
GNOME sliding Linux onto business desktops
GNOME update will include tools designed to make it easier to deploy Linux desktop environment in enterprises.
Open university courseware trend comes to SA
The University of the Western Cape is to make its educational material including lecture notes accessible to all as part of a global free and open courseware movement.
Mysql to adopt Firebird architecture
Today it became generally known that MySQL has acquired a company called Netfrastructure. This company offers a product which is a reimplementation of the Firebird database architecture, combined with a web-based application server front end. It was designed by Jim Starkey in the late nineties and combines a database, a custom java virtual machine and a web server. Jim Starkey is also the principal author of Datatrieve, Rdb/ELN and InterBase, which became Firebird after being open-sourced in 2000.
Sarbanes-Oxley may up the ante for GPL violations
What happens if you violate the GNU General Public License (GPL)? Historically, you'd earn the scorn of the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and the open source community, and you might have to disclose or rewrite some code. However, the intellectual property disclosure requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 may present an additional threat to companies that violate the GPL.
MEPIS (and Debian) upgrades available now
MEPIS founder Warren Woodford has announced upgrades for SimplyMEPIS 3.4. The upgrade packages, which are now available in the MEPIS apt source pool, enable SimplyMEPIS 3.4-x users to upgrade their systems to the latest SimplyMEPIS version, version 3.4-3.
Tax Prep Open Source Code Effort Reports Promising Start
A fledgling Internet-based tax preparation platform offering free software to tax preparers and an open source code to that software from which programmers could theoretically build other technologies key to the tax prep process, has attracted a handful of practitioner members and is discussing potential development opportunities with at least one of the tax prep industry’s top five software companies, according to the site’s founder, a CPA.
Devil's Advocate: Open source for government
Despite the UK government's reluctance to embrace open source, Martin Brampton points out the many ways they're suited to each other - the least of which is cost.
The government regularly claims it will reduce the cost of administration through the use of IT. Such a claim is inherently implausible, given the sector's track record in IT projects. Quite apart from that, government appears to be going about things in entirely the wrong way.
The government regularly claims it will reduce the cost of administration through the use of IT. Such a claim is inherently implausible, given the sector's track record in IT projects. Quite apart from that, government appears to be going about things in entirely the wrong way.
Lack of Support Slowing Spread of Open-source Applications
From the "I'm a Microsoft shill journalist" department
SAN FRANCISCO -- Of all of the virtues that backers of open-source software tout, widespread availability of enterprise-level support is not among them.
In fact, a lack of support has been a drawback for most corporate IT decision-makers when they look to add open-source tools to their software stacks, said a panel of users and vendors at the Open Source Business Conference here last week.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Of all of the virtues that backers of open-source software tout, widespread availability of enterprise-level support is not among them.
In fact, a lack of support has been a drawback for most corporate IT decision-makers when they look to add open-source tools to their software stacks, said a panel of users and vendors at the Open Source Business Conference here last week.
Column: Why open source databases are ripe for acquisition in 2006
Analysts predict that the $300 million open source database market is going to continue to grow rapidly. Forrester Research Inc.'s analyst Noel Yuhanna projects that mission-critical deployments of open source databases will increase by 20% this year. It is that growth that Yuhanna believes will drive the OSS database market from $300 million now to the $1 billion mark by 2008. Most importantly, analysts say, this segment is being taken seriously by proprietary database vendors attracted to making open source technology part of their own product offerings.
Free software? You can't just give it away
Who could be upset by a scheme that allows free use of software? Well, Gervase Markham has found one Trading Standards officer who is
GNOME 2.14 targets corporate desktops
The next version of GNOME will include a number of tools aimed at making it easier for administrators to deploy the Linux desktop environment in enterprises. GNOME 2.14, which is due for release on 15 March, will include new administrator tools such as a profile manager and an editor to lock down PC functionality, according to GNOME developer Davyd Madeley in an article posted on the project Web site at the end of last week.
Singapore housing saves money with Linux
As part of the drive to cut costs and future saving, Singapore Housing Development Board decided to migrate its business applications on the Internet and intranet to Linux as its strategic operating system.
What Linux distribution do you use as a desktop? SUSE 9.0 on iCube
I do a lot of audio manipulation (Old Time Radio, CD ripping, etc), and it's nice to see those apps run fast and stable!
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