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SCO Expands Partnerships

LAS VEGAS—To buttress its anti-Linux product strategy, The SCO Group Inc. is working with third-party partners that include MySQL AB and EnterpriseDB Corp. on databases, Borland Software Corp. on tools, and NeTraverse Inc. in the virtual server arena, SCO executives said during an annual user conference here this week. Although Oracle Corp. has declined to support to SCO's software servers, SCO already has long-time commercial database partners that include Computer Associates International Inc., Progress Software Corp., and IBM's Informix group. (Editor's Note: Could this be someone's idea of a joke?)

Book review: The Book of Postfix

  • NewsForge (Posted by dave on Aug 10, 2005 5:30 AM CST)
  • Groups: GNU; Story Type: News Story
Like many things in the Unix, GNU, and BSD worlds, the Postfix mail transport agent (MTA) is powerful but difficult to configure optimally. With basic instructions and a couple of hours (or more) to test the configuration, you can probably make Postfix work, but how do you make it work to its full potential? How do you make it more secure? How do you make it get rid of spam? How do you configure it for complex situations that involve multiple servers, email addresses, email groups, and domains? That's what "The Book of Postfix" is for.

Ibm Workplace Options for Linux

IBM is making good on its pledge earlier this year to invest US$100 million in Workplace software for the Linux platform. Big Blue and one of its business partners will offer new products designed to give customers more choices for collaborative solutions while helping to manage costs and increase flexibility through cross-platform support. The new products are browser-based messaging software with support for Firefox 1.0.X, and software that integrates Lotus Notes access into IBM Workplace Managed Client. Ericom, an IBM Business Partner, has a new Linux plug-in for IBM Workplace Managed Client. These solutions run on many platforms, including Linux, and offer alternatives for customers looking for a client-side Linux solutions.

Linux: LKML Upgrade

The server that handles theLinux Kernel Mailing List [archive] recently got an upgrade. Matti Aarnio explains, "folks at Dell have donated a new machine to be VGER, and folks at RedHat have installed it into [a] co-location facility with [a] 1000Mbps network connection into the machine." The upgrade offers much more performance for handling the extremely high-traffic mailing list.

The Linux Kernel Mailing List is usually referred to as the lkml. It evolved many years ago from the "Linux Activist" and otherearly Linux mailing lists run in Finland. Eventually the early mailing lists were replaced by theMajordomo powered lkml, managed by David Miller at Rutgers University on a server called "vger". When David went to work at RedHat, the server and mailing list went with him. To this day, it continues to be housed at RedHat. Even though it has a kernel.org domain name, it is not actually part of the Linux Kernel Archives [story] or their infrastructure. Instead, it's included in the kernel.org domain due to its function as the primary Linux development mailing list.

Toolkit to aid governments moving to free software

  • Tectonic; By Alastair Otter (Posted by tadelste on Aug 10, 2005 4:01 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
With more and more African governments and policy makers looking at free and open source software as a viable alternative to proprietary software, Bridges.org today released a research report that looks at the current stat of FOSS usage on the continent and offers some suggestions on how decision makers can evaluate the benefits and pitfalls of switching to free software.

LinuxWorld Conference& Expo - Day 1

  • NewsForge (Posted by dave on Aug 10, 2005 1:30 AM CST)
  • Groups: GNU; Story Type: News Story
SAN FRANCISCO - 09 Aug 2005 - This is the 10th or 11th LinuxWorld Expo I've attended. Or is it the 12th? Anyway, I've been to all the U.S. ones and they're starting to blur together. Two seconds after I came through the door I ran into Mae Ling Mak and Clay Claiborne of Los Angeles-based Cosmos Engineering, two old friends from LinuxWorlds past, and we tried to estimate the percentage of people who were here because they were committed GNU/Linux advocates vs. the percentage who were here because they were paid to be here as part of their jobs. We figured at least 85% of all attendees were here for their jobs.

Special Report: LinuxWorld San Francisco 2005 (Article Listings)

  • DesktopLinux.com (Posted by tadelste on Aug 10, 2005 12:52 AM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
While Linux and open-source software keep making progress in the server market, could this be its time to break through in the wider enterprise? eWEEK.com looks at the state of the market from the floor of LinuxWorld San Francisco, August 2005 .

Managing Linux daemons with init scripts

  • NewsForge (Posted by dave on Aug 9, 2005 11:30 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
When you install a new Linux server distribution, you can often install all of the daemons you'll need to run on that machine at install time. Distribution vendors present a "ready to go" distribution by supplying initialization scripts for all of the services you might run. But what happens if you're building from source, and no init script is supplied? What if you're writing the source and haven't ever built an init script? Here are a few ways to cope when you're faced with this challenge.

Take Your Pick of the Debian Litter

  • EnterpriseNetworkingPlanet; By Carla Schroder (Posted by tadelste on Aug 9, 2005 7:06 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Debian
Since Knoppix burst dramatically into the Linux scene there has been an explosion of Debian-based distributions. This is welcome news to us lonely souls who have long been preaching that Red Hat is not Linux. Linux covers a far wider spectrum, as a quick peek at DistroWatch demonstrates. You'll find everything from tiny specialized Linuxes that fit on embedded devices, USB keys, floppy diskettes, or miniature CDs, to full-blown "kitchen sink" distributions that fill a DVD. Red Hat deserves a substantial amount of credit for supporting Linux development, popularizing Linux, and spawning a host of other Linux distributions. Just don't think that Red Hat is all there is to the Linux world.

The Arrival of NX, Part 4

  • Linux Journal; By Kurt Pfeifle (Posted by bstadil on Aug 9, 2005 5:09 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
In Part 4, Kurt explains how NX interoperates with Windows Terminal Services and VNC remote setups. Much of what Kurt describes in this series can be reproduced and verified with one or two recent Knoppix CDs, version 3.6 or later

Red Hat Network Gains Solaris, Monitoring Support

Red Hat, in an effort to expand its patching service's utility, is adding monitoring and cross-platform support to aid customers migrating to RHEL.

Red Hat bangs the security drum

Red Hat has unveiled an initiative dubbed 'Security in a Networked World' at the LinuxWorld tradeshow in San Francisco. As part of the programme, the Linux vendor showcased its Red Hat Certificate System that allows organisations to manage security certificates used to sign emails, or authenticate users for online banking applications. It also supports authentication through the use of smartcards. Red Hat has been working with the Apache Foundation to add support for the Firefox browser and Thunderbird email client through the use of Apache's open source Network Security Service Libraries. The collaboration will allow users of both systems to send and receive authenticated emails with Thunderbird, while organisations including online banks and web stores can use the system to authenticate users through smartcards in combination with Firefox.

GPL3 first public draft due early 2006

  • CNET News.com; By Stephen Shankland (Posted by dave on Aug 9, 2005 3:05 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
Release should lead to debate of near-religious fervor over future of license that governs much free and open-source software.

It's Linux week in San Francisco...

  • Silicon Valley Watcher; By Tom Foremski for SiliconValleyWatcher (Posted by tadelste on Aug 9, 2005 2:49 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
LinuxWorld is in town and I haven't seen this much activity around a trade show in years. Actually, if you think about it, this is not surprising because it is becoming such a bedrock foundation of today's enterprise software world. Linux, as the spearhead for the open source movement, has also become the metaphor for how to succeed in today's IT world. The metaphor is: take advantage of community property and layer your secret/proprietary sauce on top.

Oracle Makes Oracle(R) Cluster File System Release 2 Available to Open Source Community

  • PR Newswire; By Press release (Posted by tadelste on Aug 9, 2005 2:06 PM CST)
  • Story Type: Press Release
New Version Provides Simplified, General Purpose Cluster File Management at No Cost

AMD seeks to jump-start software changes

  • CNET News.com; By Stephen Shankland (Posted by dave on Aug 9, 2005 2:05 PM CST)
  • Story Type: News Story
Chipmaker releases a simulator designed to prod development of software for upcoming processor features.

Linuxcertified 64-bit Linux Laptop review

The latest 64-bit offerings from Intel and AMD are compelling and reasonably priced. 64-bit technology may soon dominate the desktop, but is it ready for the laptop market? A quality mobile computer needs to balance performance and power consumption in a way that will maximize user productivity and mobility. Are mobile 64-bit processors up to the task? I decided to review an AMD Athlon 64-bit laptop in order to find out

HP works to bring Linux to NonStop servers

  • CNET News.com; By Stephen Shankland (Posted by dave on Aug 9, 2005 1:05 PM CST)
  • Groups: HP; Story Type: News Story
Company will collaborate with universities to move its high-end but rarely used product line closer to the mainstream.

The case for semantic search

Everyday, employees produce a boatload of documents in their everyday work, which are stored on various content backends. WebSphere Information Integrator OmniFind Edition provides extensive capabilities to search for the needle in the haystack of business information from a single point of access, within sub-second response time, while scaling to millions of documents and thousands of users. This article describes the key concepts involved, outlines a workflow for designing and implementing semantic search solutions.

IBM updates Linux desktop with Firefox support

Previously supporting only Mozilla and Microsoft's Internet Explorer, Big Blue's Workplace desktop software now also supports the Firefox browser.

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