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Introduction to Enterprise Linux
What is Enterprise Linux? Who has it? What does it cost? Are there any viable free alternatives? These are all questions that this article will address and try to answer. Enterprise linux is being offered by the three major commercial linux distributions; RedHat [sic], SUSE and Mandrake. Here is what each says the purpose of it's enterprise product is.
Interview with two Ark Linux Development team members
The following Interview was conducted by e-mail and IRC over the past few weeks. Questions by Tim Mullins, answers from Zackary Deems and Bernhard Rosenkraenzer who are two of the head developers in the Ark Linux Project.
Application of the Month: KSirtet
As part of the March 2004 issue of the "Application of the month" series on KDE.de, Andreas C. Diekmann has interviewed Nicolas Hadacek, author of KSirtet, a Tetris clone for KDE. The Dutch KDE website is offering an English translation of the interview as well as the overview of this issue.
Debian alert: New heimdal packages fix cross-realm vulnerability
"a cross-realm vulnerability allowing someone with control over a realm to impersonate anyone in the cross-realm trust path."
LXer story count review: March, 2004
In March of 2004 we posted 726 stories (security alerts were not counted). Here are the biggest newsmakers of the month, along with the most interesting story posted about them during that time.
Gentoo alert: Insecure sandbox temporary lockfile vulnerabilities in Portage
A flaw has been found in the temporary file handling algorithms for the sandboxing code used within Portage. Lockfiles created during normal Portage operation of portage could be manipulated by local users resulting in the truncation of hard linked files; causing a Denial of Service attack on the system.
The Commercialization of Open Source
We've all heard the news: JBoss has received $10 million in funding and now it's time to sit back and mull it over. Without a doubt this infusion of capital is a signal of confidence for JBoss Group. But is this investment a good thing for open source? Not an unimportant question for those of us who have decided to use open source in our enterprise applications.
Microsoft Releases Code to Open Source Community
Microsoft yesterday released the Windows Installer XML (WiX) toolkit under IBM Corp's Common Public License (CPL) to what is believed the industry's largest open source development community, SourceForge.
Novell appoints first Linux training partner
Smartsource Corporate Training, a Cape Town-based Linux training specialist with a network of business partners in Johannesburg, has been appointed the first Linux training partner for Novell SA.
NTT group firms take stakes in Linux Systems
NTT Data Corp and NTT Comware Corp plan to buy interests in VA Linux Systems Japan, a Sumitomo Corp unit that specializes in creating Linux operating systems and related software, with a goal of co-developing Linux-based telecommunications systems.
FlashMob I proves points but misses goal
FlashMob I took place on a typically foggy April Saturday at the University of San Francisco's Koret Center gym. Exactly 700 computers of various shapes and sizes -- donated by individuals and several organizations -- were gathered in the auditorium and interconnected via a homegrown local area network to in effect try to become one of the world's 500 most powerful supercomputers. Surprisingly, it wasn't the huge tangle of wires many people thought it would be; all the networking hardware was kept well under control by all the event "hub captains."
Microsoft forges link with open source
If it had happened on 1st April nobody would have believed it - but Microsoft has posted its first piece of open source-approved software.
Study says Linux not a low cost alternative for all
Let the flame wars begin, right? Before you get your fingers warmed up for another typical Linux vs. Microsoft debate, let's keep in mind what the survey focused on. First of all, it covered only 1,000 I.T. administrators and execs. Second, it did not say that Linux did not offer an improved total cost of ownership for everyone--small firms still realized some gains.
Analysis: Why did Sun's chief tools spokesman really resign?
There is no lack of blockbuster headlines coming from Sun Microsystems these days. On Friday, Sun announced a news trifecta: 1) a new partnership deal with its longtime archenemy, Microsoft; 2) a new president, the ponytailed and bespectacled Jonathan Schwartz; and 3) a stunningly paltry quarterly earnings report.
Oracle, Dell may have bundle on the way
Dell CEO Michael Dell and Oracle CEO Larry Ellison plan to host a joint press conference on Tuesday. Industry analysts speculated that Dell and Oracle will create a new bundle that includes Dell's two-processor servers and Oracle's database cluster software. About a year ago, the two companies announced a deal to install Oracle's 9i database cluster software on Dell's two-processor PowerEdge 2650 servers, which run Linux.
Gentoo Weekly Newsletter - Volume 3, Issue 14
The Gentoo website is having trouble, the newsletter link is returning intermitten 404's, so I've mirrored it here.
Mandrake security alert: Updated mplayer packages fix remotely exploitable vulnerability
A remotely exploitable buffer overflow vulnerability was found in MPlayer. A malicious host can craft a harmful HTTP header ("Location:"), and trick MPlayer into executing arbitrary code upon parsing that header.
Sun names Loiacono new head of software
Sun Microsystems Inc. has promoted John Loiacono to replace Jonathan Schwartz as the new head if its software business. Schwartz was elevated to president and chief operating officer Friday, when Sun announced a broad technology-sharing agreement with its erstwhile nemesis, Microsoft Corp. Sun also said Monday that Rich Green, the head of its Java tools division, has decided to leave Sun after 14 years with the company. He will be replaced temporarily by Chris Atwood, a director of engineering with Sun's tools group, until a permanent replacement is found, the company said.
Fork in Linux Road?
...there are some pretty big differences between Linux and Unix. The biggest difference, by far, is the Linux kernel itself. When Unix forked, each variant had a different kernel. In other words, the core code of each Unix system was unique, which often resulted in incompatibilities and difficult cross-platform application integrations.
HP Indonesia ready to support new Linux-based PCs
Hewlett-Packard (HP) Indonesia says that it is prepared to support the recent plan of its parent company to globally expand its line of desktop personal computers (PC) based on the GNU/Linux operating system (OS).
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