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Keyword: linux

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  • IBM goes silent on Linux desktop effort

    01/29/2005 11:42:59 AM PST · by Bush2000 · 76 replies · 967+ views
    IDG News Service ^ | January 25, 2005 | Robert McMillan
    IBM goes silent on Linux desktop effort Big Blue mum about progress of the company's move to open source clients By Robert McMillan, IDG News Service January 25, 2005 More than a year after IBM's (Profile, Products, Articles) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Sam Palmisano challenged his company to move to the Linux desktop by the end of 2005, IBM has significantly toned down its rhetoric on the subject of open-source clients. "We don't have anything we want to say that's definitive," said Nancy Kaplan, an IBM spokeswoman, as she declined to comment on specifics of the roll-out. "There are...
  • Pols attack IBM-Lenovo (China) deal

    01/27/2005 5:48:10 AM PST · by Golden Eagle · 19 replies · 587+ views
    The Deal ^ | January 27, 2005 | Ron Orol
    Pols attack IBM-Lenovo deal Three key lawmakers are pressing federal regulators to expand their probe into Lenovo Group Ltd.'s $1.7 billion acquisition of IBM Corp.'s PC division. In a letter Tuesday, Jan. 25, to Treasury Secretary John Snow, House International Relations Committee Chairman Henry J. Hyde, R-Ill., House Small Business Committee Chairman Donald Manzullo, R-Ill., and House Armed Services Committee Chairman Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., requested an agency briefing on the merger and urged him to withhold approval until they can confer. Hyde's panel poses a particular threat to the deal because it oversees export control issues. "Given the relationship between...
  • Sun introduces OpenSolaris, releases 1,670 patents

    01/26/2005 8:12:26 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 41 replies · 929+ views
    InfoWorld ^ | 25 January 2005 | Paul Krill
    Sun Microsystems (Profile, Products, Articles) on Tuesday launched its OpenSolaris program, which provides access to the Solaris operating system via an open source format, and also announced the release of 1,670 patents to the open source community. The initial piece of Solaris being made available now is DTrace performance analysis technology. Other Solaris source code, such as file system and security technologies, will be offered in the second quarter of this year. Sun Chairman and CEO Scott McNealy, a surprise participant on Tuesday’s conference call pertaining to the announcements, declared Sun as likely the largest donor of code anywhere on...
  • The Tables Are Turned - SCO Objects to IBM's Discovery Demands

    01/26/2005 6:03:54 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 17 replies · 541+ views
    Groklaw ^ | 26 January 2005 | Pamela Jones
    What goes around, comes around, they say. And we now have the hilarious opportunity to watch SCO tell the court how burdensome it would be for SCO to have to produce to IBM every product Caldera distributed for the past 6 years. These are the same folks who whined until they got not only every released version of AIX and Dynix going back to the '80s but every *unreleased* one also, in their own discovery demands.Here, for your enjoyment, are SCO's objections to IBM's discovery efforts related to IBM's patent counterclaims: Objections to International Business Machine Corporation's Rule 30(b)(6) Notice...
  • RealPlayer 10 for Linux, Now includes license and codec for MP3..

    01/24/2005 6:50:09 AM PST · by N3WBI3 · 19 replies · 749+ views
    slashdot.org ^ | 2005-01-24 | Timothy (Slashdot mod)
    kforeman (aka Kevin Foreman, GM of Helix RealNetworks, Inc.) writes "As part of the free RealPlayer 10 for Linux, Real has paid Thomson for a legal MP3 playback license and then includes it at no cost as part of the newly released RealPlayer 10. As I speak to people, many are under the false impression that MP3 playback patent and royalty rights are free, since there are open source implementations of MP3 playback available. Not true. Nonetheless, we are glad to do our part of making the Linux desktop a first class citizen by legally providing MP3 playback to users...
  • IBM-Lenovo deal faces US security challenge-report

    01/24/2005 5:32:08 AM PST · by Golden Eagle · 134 replies · 2,066+ views
    Reuters/Yahoo ^ | January 24, 2005 | Reuters
    IBM-Lenovo (Chinese front) deal faces US security challenge SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 23 (Reuters) - IBM's proposed $1.25 billion sale of its personal computer business to Lenovo Group of China may be held up by U.S. regulators over national security concerns, Bloomberg reported on Sunday. The report, citing unnamed sources "familiar with the matter" said members of the Committee on Foreign Investments in the United States, or CFIUS, are concerned that Lenovo employees might be used to conduct industrial espionage.
  • Linux, Inc.

    01/21/2005 9:34:02 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 203 replies · 2,655+ views
    BusinessWeek online ^ | 21 January 2005 | Steve Hamm
    Linus Torvalds once led a ragtag band of software geeks. Not anymore. Here's an inside look at how the unusual Linux business model increasingly threatens Microsoft Five years ago, Linus Torvalds faced a mutiny. The reclusive Finn had taken the lead in creating the Linux computer operating system, with help from thousands of volunteer programmers, and the open-source software had become wildly popular for running Web sites during the dot-com boom. But just as Linux was taking off, some programmers rebelled. Torvalds' insistence on manually reviewing everything that went into the software was creating a logjam, they warned. Unless he...
  • Court ruling is a plus for SCO vs. IBM

    01/20/2005 8:25:59 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 94 replies · 1,270+ views
    Salt Lake Tribune ^ | 19 January 2004 | Bob Mims
    A federal magistrate has handed a partial victory to Utah's SCO Group, ordering computer giant IBM to turn over more of its Linux operating system-related program codes. U.S. Magistrate Brooke Wells' ruling, released just minutes after Salt Lake City's federal courthouse closed Wednesday, came in the Lindon software company's contractual suit stemming from Big Blue's alleged distribution of Linux applications purportedly tainted with SCO's proprietary Unix code. In a lawsuit tentatively set for trial next fall, SCO is seeking damages ranging from $5 billion to $50 billion from IBM. The Utah company also is in Linux-related litigation with Novell, Linux...
  • RedFlag pins hopes on new product

    01/19/2005 11:18:26 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 20 replies · 447+ views
    People's Daily Online ^ | 19 January 2005 | Unknown
    Leading Chinese Linux software maker RedFlag Software Co Ltd expects to achieve a 50 per cent growth in sales revenues this year, pinning hopes on Asianux 2.0, a new product to be jointly launched in July with Japanese and Korean partners. "We expect our sales revenues to increase by 50 per cent," said Bai Ke, RedFlag's marketing supervisor. "Asianux 2.0 will be a great impetus." The company's board has not approved this year's sales target, "but they will probably raise that figure," he added. According to Bai, the company made a profit last year for the first time since its...
  • Linux kernel rewrite claims denied

    01/18/2005 11:40:57 AM PST · by N3WBI3 · 42 replies · 745+ views
    zdnet ^ | January 18, 2005 | Ingrid Marson
    Open Source Development Labs has reportedly rejected reports it is leading a revision of the Linux Kernel to remove code that might infringe software patents Open Source Development Labs (OSDL), which promotes the adoption of the Linux operating system, has denied that it plans to rewrite the Linux kernel to combat claims that it infringes some software patents. Linux Business Week reported last week that, according to "informed sources", the OSDL, Intel, IBM, the state of Oregon and the city of Beaverton are part of a consortium that will rewrite the parts of the Linux kernel that allegedly infringe patents....
  • Linux fights off hackers

    01/17/2005 10:56:25 PM PST · by N3WBI3 · 110 replies · 1,311+ views
    vnunet.com ^ | 17 Jan 2005 | Iain Thomson
    A study by not-for-profit IT security testing organisation Honeynet Project has shown that, on average, Linux systems today take three months to fall prey to hackers, up from 72 hours in equivalent tests conducted between 2001 and 2002. The 2004 results came after a team of researchers set up 19 Linux and four Solaris 'honeypots' in eight countries including the UK. Honeypots are unpatched internet-connected computers designed to be targets for hackers. "Default installations of Linux distributions are getting harder to compromise," said the report. "New versions are more secure by default, with fewer services automatically enabled, privileged separation in...
  • Windows cooperating with Linux, honest!

    01/17/2005 12:05:20 PM PST · by ShadowAce · 66 replies · 2,100+ views
    NetworkWorldFusion ^ | 17 January 2005 | Mark Gibbs
    We are delirious with joy, or maybe it is just that we've spent too long staring at the screen. . . . Whatever, we just found the coolest hack that you just have to check out! We're playing with Debian Linux running cooperatively with Windows. Yes, you might go back and re-read that sentence. This fascinating system is called coLinux and it allows the Linux kernel to run as a program or service under Windows 2000 or XP without using a commercial PC virtualization system such as User Mode Linux or VMware. Specifically, coLinux - a port of the 2.6 kernel - is "special...
  • Linux Kernel To Be Re-Written To Counter Microsoft FUD

    01/14/2005 3:32:21 PM PST · by Golden Eagle · 192 replies · 2,569+ views
    Linux Business Week ^ | January 14, 2005 | Maureen O'Gara
    IBM, Intel, the Open Source Development Labs, where Linux creator Linus Torvalds works, and other industry lights are planning to rob Microsoft of the ability to scare customers off of Linux by saying that the operating system is a patent infringer, informed sources say. On January 25 they are supposed to announce that a consortium has been created that will rewrite the components in the Linux kernel that allegedly tread on other people's IP - or at least the 27 Microsoft patents that Linux is supposed to infringe. The consortium will reportedly be underwritten by the state of Oregon and...
  • Copying, content and communism (Bill Gates on Who is a Communist

    01/13/2005 12:54:36 AM PST · by nickcarraway · 254 replies · 5,925+ views
    BBC ^ | Bill Thompson
    Bill Gates, Microsoft's chairman and chief software architect, has been talking about the digital future. The other Bill, technology critic Bill Thompson, has been reading between the lines.Bill Gates thinks I'm a communist. Not the old-fashioned state socialist concerned with five-year plans for boot production in the eastern provinces, but a "new modern-day sort of communist", the sort who "want to get rid of the incentive for musicians and movie-makers and software makers". Admittedly, Mr Gates probably does not know who I am and I doubt if he spends a lot of time reading the BBC news site. But he...
  • To Evil! of December 2004

    01/13/2005 7:43:31 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 2 replies · 242+ views
    OSDir ^ | 12 January 2005 | Danny O'Brien
    December is always a tough month for us collectors of evil. Something else is out there, something bigger than us all. In the cold snow and the dark, it is stronger, swifter to find out who is naughty and who is ... not so naughty. They fear it, the humans. They work hard to hide their corruption from Father Christmas's all-seeing-eyes. Of course, in the open source world, privacy-conscious evildoers conduct their naughtiness using anonymizing sneakiness proxies and onion-routed nastiness networks, and write angry letters to their local Privacy Czars about Santa's data-retention policies. Slim pickings remain for us amateur...
  • I.B.M. to Give Free Access to 500 Patents

    01/11/2005 10:09:09 AM PST · by antiRepublicrat · 41 replies · 792+ views
    NYTimes ^ | January 11, 2005 | STEVE LOHR
    .B.M. plans to announce today that it is making 500 of its software patents freely available to anyone working on open-source projects, like the popular Linux operating system, on which programmers collaborate and share code.The new model for I.B.M., analysts say, represents a shift away from the traditional corporate approach to protecting ownership of ideas through patents, copyrights, trademark and trade-secret laws. The conventional practice is to amass as many patents as possible and then charge anyone who wants access to them. I.B.M. has long been the champion of that formula. The company, analysts estimate, collected $1 billion or more...
  • Installing Linux on a Dead Badger: User's Notes

    01/07/2005 10:53:26 AM PST · by null and void · 37 replies · 1,161+ views
    Strange Horizons ^ | 5 April 2004 | Lucy A. Snyder
    Let's face it: any script kiddie with a pair of pliers can put Red Hat on a Compaq, his mom's toaster, or even the family dog. But nothing earns you geek points like installing Linux on a dead badger. So if you really want to earn your wizard hat, just read the following instructions, and soon your friends will think you're slick as caffeinated soap.
  • Venezuela chooses Linux (I love them, I hate them...)

    12/31/2004 9:51:20 PM PST · by FightinFederalist · 27 replies · 733+ views
    ZDnet UK ^ | 12/31/2004 | Ingrid Marson
    The Venezuelan president has decreed that the public administration will switch over to use open source software over the next two years... Read full article
  • Venezuela and Open Source: A Paso de Vencedores

    12/30/2004 8:10:15 PM PST · by Kitten Festival · 4 replies · 310+ views
    The Devil's Excrement (Venezuela) ^ | Dec. 30, 2004 | Miguel Octavio
    8/31/2002 ... I wrote for the first time on Venezuela and Linux, due to an article which appeared in Linux Today entitled Venezuela’s Government shifts to open source software. The article generated a big discussion in Slashdot, most of which was useless as most writers have no idea how inefficient the Venezuelan Government is. 9/01/2002 A scandal broke out because it turned out that two of the three “advisors” to the Minister of Planning happened to have very strong ties to Linux commercial efforts. It was that and not some Microsoft plot that stopped that effort. 9/29/2004 Right after Venezuela...
  • Need a little Linux/Knoppix help

    12/28/2004 7:18:09 PM PST · by edchambers · 54 replies · 713+ views
    12-28-04 | edchambers
    This is my first post so forgive me if I violated some protocall by not posting to "Breaking News" Ok, so I tried Knoppix, pretty amazing stuff, a full OS that runs from a CD and I liked it so.. I decide to install it on a partition on my hard drive.I followed the instructions from the Knoppix website and I think I was successfull.The Lilo boot screen shows up gives me a choice of a couple or three versions of Linux and my Windows 98se installation.The 98se partition still boots but when I boot Linux it prompts me for...