Showing all newswire headlines
View by date, instead?« Previous ( 1 ... 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101 7102 7103 7104 ... 7443 ) Next »
Dave Whitinger: Inventing Linux News Reporting
Dave's return to the limelight started with his new site, LXer.com. After some preliminary catching up, he finally agreed to do an intervew with me. Out of the Linux spot light, he has created web sites such as Dave's Garden, the largest database of plant listings and images in the world. He admits his passion for Linux, though. Fortunately we have him back.
Report from KDE World Summit, Day 8: End of the marathon
Day eight of aKademy marked the end of the coding marathon. As though restless with their desktop, KDE hackers turned their attention to a tutorial in live cracking, an impromptu demonstration of command line tools, and a brief rootkit panic. Despite the shift in focus, I found some time to talk to some members of the documentation team about their plans.
Email Sender ID: It's like Kerberos all over again
We received a lot of interesting feedback in comments and email as a result of the story we ran last week on Email Sender ID: the hype and the reality." Many of those who contacted us are intimately acquainted with the subject matter, having had personal, first-hand involvement in the process to date. One of those was Yakov Shafronovich, who co-chaired the Anti-Spam Research Group during 2003, when the group was considering this very issue, prior to passing it on to the IETF. That led to an exchange of email messages during which I got a much clearer look at how Microsoft is once again embracing, extending, and attempting to encumber open source technology. Doggone it, it looks like Kerberos all over again.
Securing Web services: Foundations and specifications
Web services, by definition, are particularly vulnerable to breaches in security. The flow of potentially sensitive data not only between machines, but between enterprises and across untrusted networks, presents the need for special attention to areas such as message confidentiality, message integrity, authentication, and authorization. Additionally, since Web services are well suited to business-to-business communications and cooperation, there should be some way to enforce trust relationships between business partners. Finally, Web services are used not only by humans, but by other Web services as well. The high degree of automation required for interaction between Web services requires well-designed software architectures, preferably built upon well-designed standards.
Microsoft's Sender ID rated incompatible to Open Source
Indeed, if the framework is looking less appealing right now, it's only because some say that Microsoft's licensing terms are incompatible with Open Source.
ATI Petition for Adequate Drivers in Linux
Linuxlookup.com is reporting an online petition to ATI Technologies Inc. The community will no longer endure ATI's poor driver support for Linux both in 32-bit and 64-bit computing. This petition is aimed at the designers at ATI who for whatever reason choose not to acknowledge our pleas and specifically at ATI as a company. The signers of this petition will no longer purchase ATI products until ATI make a workable 3D accelerated 64-bit driver for Linux and a 32-bit that utilizes the full potential of the Raedon chips.
Nmap 3.70 released. Nmap is a port scanner utility for security auditing and network exploration
The scanning engine has been rewritten and is now faster, gentler against target hosts and now able to scan many hosts in parallel.
Microsoft v/s Linux: Matrix Reloaded
comparison. The analysis shows that Windows is more secure than four key Linux distributions (MandrakeSoft, Debian, SuSE and Red Hat).
CU Library to distribute its open source electronic publishing system
Cornell University Library is developing an open source publication management system that will provide authors and publishers with a more affordable way to publish scholarly research on the Web. In making its DPubS software available to libraries, university presses and other independent publishers, Cornell will expand opportunities for creative communication among scholars around the world.
aKademy Interview: NX - Revolution of Network Computing?
In their own series of aKademy interviews, the German IT news website Golem.de has talked to KDE contributors Fabian Franz (also a member of the Knoppix development team) and Kurt Pfeifle about FreeNX. Now OSnews carries the English translation. NX, developed by NoMachine.com aims for nothing less than to revolutionize network computing. The software allows to connect and work on remote desktops even across low bandwidth links such as ISDN or modems. While at its core it speed-boosts X11 connections, as an addon it also can accelerate VNC/RFB and Windows Terminal Server/RDP sessions by a factor of 2 or more.
OSDL-sponsored Enterprise Linux Summit to debut in January
The Open Source Development Labs (OSDL) plans to host an enterprise-focused conference in the San Francisco area early next year. The three-day OSDL Enterprise Linux Summit (OSDL-ELS), which will be held in Burlingame, CA from January 31 through February 2, will include three educational session tracks and a full day of tutorials that address topics and issues around successful Linux deployments in real-world scenarios, the group says.
Labor will promote open source: Lundy
Federal government agencies and departments locked into restrictive outsourcing and procurement contracts will find relief under a Labor policy of encouraging the innovative use of open source software, according to shadow IT minister Senator Kate Lundy.
Is Linux Really a Contender Against Longhorn?
Microsoft looks to be giving the Linux client an opening against Windows with its changes to Longhorn's timing and features. Or are other contenders waiting in the wings? Check out two vastly different views of its opportunities.
IBM and Intel to open up blade specifications
In an effort to encourage hardware vendors to build components for the blade platform they co-develop, Intel Corp. and IBM Corp. on Thursday will open up parts of the BladeCenter design specifications, according to documents obtained by IDG News Service.
Parties in fight over open source
Four days into the election campaign and we now know exactly where the Coalition, Labor and Democrats stand on the the use of open source software in government. And it looks like they're standing just about where they were last week, although opposition IT spokeswoman Kate Lundy had a stab at estimating potential cost savings that an open source strategy could produce for federal departments.
Logiclibrary develops open-source compliance module
Development teams working with open-source software need to make sure they don't get themselves into legal problems with license agreements, warns Brent Carlson, vice president of technology at LogicLibrary.
« Previous ( 1 ... 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101 7102 7103 7104 ... 7443 ) Next »