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Embedded Linux vendor honored on top private companies list
Embedded Linux house MontaVista is included on a list of the top 100 privately held U.S. technology companies assembled by media company AlwaysOn and accounting firm KPMG. The "AO100" list highlights companies with exceptional revenue or customer growth, and companies with "game-changing" approaches and technologies.
Interview: IBM veteran Jim Stallings on Linux sophistication
In his first 18 months as general manager of IBM's worldwide Linux team, Jim Stallings has seen dozens of corporate shops and governments around the world push Linux from the periphery to the heart of their IT strategies -- never a bad thing for job security when you have the word"Linux" in your title. But with the open source operating system now more firmly entrenched, the next challenge for Stallings and his team is to help Linux drive IBM's companywide On Demand initiative deeper into corporate accounts with one hand while fighting the ongoing server battle against Windows with the other.
Questar Issues Clarification of AP Story
Questar Corp. today said an Associated Press story distributed Tuesday, July 6, erroneously stated that the Salt Lake City-based natural gas company was in a partnership with Dell Inc. to market Linux-based desktop computers in Europe. The AP subsequently corrected the story to indicate that another company named Questar -- identified as "a virtual unit company focusing on software sales" -- was partnering with Dell in the European venture. The Utah-based Questar is an integrated natural gas company with $4 billion in enterprise value.
Dell clarifies reports of Linux PCs in Europe
A PC dealer in Europe has begun selling Dell desktops equipped with Linux, but Dell emphasized that the systems were customized by the dealer and that this isn't the first time this has happened. Questar, an Italian-based computer seller, has begun to ship Optiplex business desktops loaded with Linspire 4.5, a version of Linux, and a copy of OpenOffice, an open-source alternative to Microsoft's Office software package. The basic Questar computer, with a 2.4GHz Celeron processor, sells for about $562.
Small, low-cost Linux system targets wireless networking apps
Nimble Microsystems has unveiled a small, low-power, SuperH-based fanless computer that comes with Linux, supports PoE (power-over-Ethernet), and has two Ethernet ports and two mini-PCI slots suitable for 802.11x wireless cards or other internal expansion. Available in single quantities for $250, the TNP-51R targets networking applications such as routers, firewalls, VPN, spam and content filters, RFID savant, webcams, and video servers.
Aduva Joins Open Source Development Labs
Aduva, a privately-held system management software company with financial backing from BMC Software, IBM, and Intel, develops technology that helps enterprises reduce the time and expertise required to build, deploy and maintain stable, compliant, secure and reliable Linux software environments.
Novell adds $600 million to war chest
Novell, the second-ranked seller of the Linux operating system, raised $600 million in a bond offering that closed Friday. Novell will use about $475 million of the funds for "general corporate purposes, including potential future acquisitions," the company said in a statement. The move comes about six months after rival Linux seller Red Hat raised $600 million of its own.
Debian Weekly News - July 6th, 2004
Welcome to this year's 26th issue of DWN, the weekly newsletter for the Debian community. The online-forum debianHELP is carrying an online Debian Trivia Quiz for you to see if you can put yourself into the hall of fame. In retrospect of this year's Debian conference Joey Hess complained about being not very productive at conferences and high expectations that also block productivity and socialising.
Oracle, Red Hat in Linux push
Oracle and Red Hat have announced the launch of an Oracle and Red Hat Linux Enterprise Applications Porting (LEAP) centre in Singapore. And there might well be governmental support for Linux soon.
Red Hat opens office in Kolkata
Red Hat, the leading provider of Open Source and Linux software worldwide, has opened a sales and support office in Kolkata. This office will serve as the eastern regional hub to address the growing demand for Red Hat products and services in eastern India. Red Hat will now be able provide its complete range of products and services to potential customers in Government, enterprise and education segments in the eastern states. In addition, the new office will also provide support to existing customer implementations.
Linux: Secure Computing For 2.6
Andrea Arcangeli presented a "secure computing" patch for the 2.6.7 stable Linux kernel, asking people to review it and to look for holes. Evidently referring to the as-of-yet veiled CPUShare, Andrea explains, "I need this new kernel feature for a spare time research project I'm developing [on] the weekends," which at first glance looks to be a cooperative clustering solution.
Who wrote Linux? The spy who loved Linux
I got mad as heck when Kenneth Brown, president of the Alexis de Tocqueville Institute, claimed that Linus Torvalds stole Linux from Minix. So I told the world the truth: I wrote Linux. Now, I'm getting so many e-mails from bogus Linux inventors that I think I'm going to create a Linux Liar's Club (LLC). What? Oh yeah, some guys in Utah beat me to it.
Squashing Bugs at the Source
Based on new research, source code analysis has been used to find thousands of bugs in the Linux 2.6.x kernel. Here's how the technology works, what it can find, and why coding may never be the same again.
Zen and the Art of Aspect-Oriented Programming
As enterprise systems evolve from concept to code, an otherwise clean design can become downright, well, messy, as the practical plumbing of logging, caching, transactions, and more infiltrates modules. Wouldn't it be better if, say, logging were just another module? Enter aspect-oriented programming.
GNU Zebra
As your networks grow, you'll want ways to segregate and manage them. Cisco routers are staples for this purpose, but Linux, together with GNU Zebra, can make a good substitute. Here's how to get up and running with Zebra.
The Hard Way, by Jason Perlow
The Elephant (Finally) Dances
Out in the Open, by Jason Gilmore and Jon Shoberg
Checking Out 2Checkout.com
Extreme Linux, by Forrest Hoffman
Writing Hybrid MPI/OpenMP Code
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