Free Republic 4th Qtr 2025 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $39,084
48%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 48%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: linux

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Windows Cheaper Than Linux, Says Microsoft

    11/07/2002 5:13:25 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 101 replies · 218+ views
    VNUNeet ^ | 5 November, 2002 | Rob Jones
    European chief argues that total cost of ownership is lower Microsoft has dismissed claims that Linux is more cost-effective for businesses, arguing that Windows is cheaper over its total lifecycle. When asked by Gartner about Microsoft's intensifying battle against the open source operating system, European president Jean-Phillipe Courtois claimed that Linux is in fact more expensive to run than Windows. Arguments that Linux is free, and therefore a good alternative for governments and organisations on a tight budget, are incorrect, he said. Courtois claimed that Microsoft has been tracking the total cost of ownership (TCO) in 12 organisations across a...
  • In victory, Microsoft morphs into IBM, and loses it

    11/05/2002 2:09:06 AM PST · by JameRetief · 9 replies · 229+ views
    The Register USA ^ | 11-04-2002 | John Lettice
    Throughout the antitrust trial Microsoft executives have seen it as vitally important that they avoid the legal threat turning Microsoft into IBM. Big Blue itself faced a major antitrust action in the 80s, and although it eventually emerged relatively intact (apparently), it did so with a large gaggle of lawyers attached to it for ever more, and with a deep paranoia/paralysis engendered by fear of antitrust. That of course is a matter of opinion, and although I personally do not believe it is entirely true, Microsoft and numbers of analysts believe that it is. IBM won the battle but lost...
  • Mac OS among least prone to attack

    10/31/2002 9:15:03 PM PST · by HAL9000 · 28 replies · 297+ views
    IDG News Service ^ | October 31, 2002 | Paul Roberts
    Apple Computer Inc.'s Macintosh was among the computer operating systems least prone to attack and damage from malicious hackers, worms and viruses in 2002, while Microsoft Corp.'s Windows and the Linux operating systems were the most vulnerable, according to a report by technology risk management company mi2g Ltd. The report, which will be released Friday, presents data on the discovery of software vulnerabilities and incidents of digital attack for 2002, according to a summary of the report released Thursday. Data from the report is taken from mi2g's SIPS (Security Intelligence Products & Systems) database, which stores information on more...
  • Why Linux development is like the Catholic Church

    10/28/2002 10:03:14 AM PST · by Theosis · 5 replies · 188+ views
    Catholic Light ^ | 10/27/2002 | Eric Johnson
    Linux shouldn't work. It's an operating system designed by hackers, the kind of people who can give you detailed plot synopses of every "Star Trek" episode. The "official" releases of the OS are really just releases of the kernel, the basic core of the system. Other companies and groups assemble drivers, programs, interfaces, etc., and package them all together in distributions, which are free to the public. You can view and modify the Linux source code, if you're into that kinky stuff. Microsoft would spend a zillion dollars in court before it let anyone look at the code for Windows....
  • Tools Vendor Readies Passport for Linux

    10/17/2002 8:11:22 AM PDT · by TechJunkYard · 9 replies · 107+ views
    PC World ^ | 2002/10/16 | Matt Berger
    Tools Vendor Readies Passport for Linux   Server component of Microsoft's single sign-on technology may be resold apart from Windows. Matt Berger, IDG News Service Wednesday, October 16, 2002 A small software development company this week disclosed that it will soon offer prebuilt versions of Microsoft's Passport Internet-based authentication technology for the Unix and Linux operating systems.The news follows Microsoft's announcement Thursday that it will share some of the source code for its single sign-on service. The software giant said it would make available in November the code to the Passport Manager--software that links a Web site or a software...
  • If I tell you that I'll have to kill you: Red Hat fights the DMCA [Digital Millenium Copyright Act]

    10/16/2002 3:03:29 AM PDT · by JameRetief · 35 replies · 312+ views
    The Register USA ^ | 10-16-2002 | John Lettice
    If I tell you that I'll have to kill you: Red Hat fights the DMCA By John Lettice Posted: 10/16/2002 at 04:33 EST Red Hat has struck a small blow against the DMCA, by publishing a security patch which can only be explained fully to people who are not within US jurisdiction. The company's position here seems to be not altogether voluntary - according to a spokesman "it is bizarre, and unfortunately something Red Hat cannot easily do much about," but like it or not Red Hat has been recruited to the campaign to make the DMCA look ridiculous....
  • IBM confirms Altivecked POWER4-lite [Specs disclosed]

    10/15/2002 7:59:59 PM PDT · by HAL9000 · 10 replies · 158+ views
    The Register (UK) ^ | October 15, 2002 | Andrew Orlowski
    Microprocessor Forum IBM's Peter Sandon disclosed technical details for IBM's PowerPC 970 processor in San Jose this morning and confirmed that the processor supports the AltiVec instruction set. In addition to providing a competitive workstation and edge server chip for IBM - which deploys POWER3 in these space and power sensitive designs, the processor is tailor made for high end Apple machines. It's expected to sample in the first half of next year, and appear in production volumes in the second half. 970 is a single 64bit core - as opposed to today's POWER4 - with IBM predicting 937...
  • Open Source: Rebel at the Gate

    10/14/2002 12:35:32 PM PDT · by ShadowAce · 44 replies · 245+ views
    CNET News.com ^ | 14 October 2002 | Mike Ricciuti
    For years, Bill Gates and other top executives at Microsoft railed against the economic philosophy of open-source software with Orwellian fervor, denouncing its communal licensing as a "cancer" that stifled technological innovation. Today, Microsoft claims to "love" the open-source concept, by which software code is made public to encourage improvement and development by outside programmers. Gates himself says Microsoft will gladly disclose its crown jewels--the coveted code behind the Windows operating system--to select customers. "We can be open source. We love the concept of shared source," said Bill Veghte, vice president of the Windows Server Group. "That's a super-important shift...
  • IBM server chip seen slimmed down for Apple Macs

    10/13/2002 11:44:28 PM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 22 replies · 279+ views
    Bigcharts Marketwatch ^ | OCTOBER 13, 2002 11:59 PM | Reuters U.S. Company News
    ARMONK, N.Y., Oct 14 (Reuters) - International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) on Monday announced a microchip for personal computers that will crunch data in chunks twice as big as the current standard and is expected by industry watchers to be used by Apple Computer Inc. (AAPL) Apple was not available to comment, and IBM declined to comment on which PC makers would use the chip, but its plans would mark a change for the industry, which has emphasized the importance of the speed of a chip rather than its ability to handle heavy workloads.IBM said its new PowerPC chip...
  • IBM processor hints at Apple's 64-bit future

    10/10/2002 12:21:04 PM PDT · by HAL9000 · 13 replies · 252+ views
    EE Times ^ | October 10, 2002 | Rick Merritt
    SAN MATEO, Calif. — IBM Corp. may give a peek into Apple Computer Inc.'s 64-bit future when it details a new version of its Power4 microprocessor next week. Aimed for use in desktops and low-end servers, the 64-bit Power4 could be IBM's first PowerPC-compatible chip to support the Altivec multimedia instruction extensions defined by Apple and Motorola Inc. The IBM device is one of about 18 new processors that will be described at the Microprocessor Forum 2002, to be held Oct. 14-17. "I expect there will be a fair amount of discussion about this part," said Peter Glaskowsky, editor-in-chief...
  • Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS)? Look at the Numbers!

    10/10/2002 5:01:44 AM PDT · by ShadowAce · 42 replies · 285+ views
    David Wheeler ^ | 8 October 2002 | David A. Wheeler
    This paper provides quantitative data that, in many cases, using open source software / free software is a reasonable or even superior approach to using their proprietary competition according to various measures. This paper examines market share, reliability, performance, scalability, security, and total cost of ownership. It also has sections on non-quantitative issues, unnecessary fears, usage reports, other sites providing related information, and ends with some conclusions. You can view this paper at http://www.dwheeler.com/oss_fs_why.html (HTML format). Palm PDA users can view it in Plucker format(you will also need Plucker to read it). Old archived copies are also available. 1. Introduction...
  • Microsoft won't cut Windows price to beat Linux

    10/09/2002 10:51:17 AM PDT · by GeneD · 59 replies · 280+ views
    Reuters via Forbes.com ^ | 10/9/02 | Caroline Humer
    LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. won't cut the price on its Windows operating system to compete with a $199 personal computer that runs rival operating software, the No. 1 software company's CEO said Wednesday. Walmart.com, the online shopping site of the nation's largest retailer Wal-Mart Inc., has been selling a $199 personal computer -- monitor and modem not included -- that runs the Lindows operating system. LindowsOS, from San Diego, California-based Lindows.com, is based on the Linux operating system, which is a free, open-source operating system that is increasingly being used by large corporations for back-end systems....
  • Linux TCO: Less Than Half The Cost of Windows

    10/08/2002 8:45:48 AM PDT · by ShadowAce · 103 replies · 448+ views
    Linux Today ^ | 8 October 2002 | Dan Orzech
    The cost of running Linux is roughly 40% that of Microsoft Windows, and only 14% that of Sun Microsystem's Solaris, according to a new study which examined the actual costs of running various operating systems over three years. The study, by the Robert Frances Group, in Westport, Conn., looked at production deployments of Web servers running on the three operating systems at 14 Global 2000 enterprises. Linux cost $74,475 over three years, while a Windows deployment cost $190,662 and one on Solaris $561,520. Most of the savings with Linux come from software licensing fees. Companies will typically purchase commercial versions...
  • Mr Linux basks in the limelight (WINDOWS BEWARE?)

    10/05/2002 3:22:29 AM PDT · by MadIvan · 66 replies · 236+ views
    BBC News ^ | October 5, 2002 | BBC News
    Linus Torvalds has revealed he is happy to be the poster boy for the anti-Microsoft campaign but would not know what to say if he met Bill Gates. Talking to BBC World ClickOnline at his home in Silicon Valley, the inventor of the Linux operating system admitted that he has never been in the same room with his arch-rival. "We have been at the same conferences but never in the same room. I wouldn't know what to say to him," he told ClickOnline. Mr Torvalds enjoys the notoriety he has achieved as the man that challenged the Microsoft empire with...
  • Where can I get Linux?

    10/04/2002 4:54:39 PM PDT · by Live free or die · 21 replies · 312+ views
    4 Oct 2002 | Me
    I'm trying to find a website where I can download Linux without some kind of wierd commitment and a deluge of junk-mail. I've heard its free but I'm really no seeing it...There's a website for this sort of thing right?
  • Virus writers get Slapper happy

    10/04/2002 2:44:47 PM PDT · by Bush2000 · 130 replies · 369+ views
    CNET News.com ^ | October 4, 2002, 1:46 PM PT | Robert Lemos
    Virus writers get Slapper happy Internet vandals have continued to modify the recent Slapper worm and have sent at least four new variants of the hostile Linux program into the electronic wilds. The newest variant, dubbed "Mighty," exploits the same Linux Web server flaw that other versions of the Slapper worm have used to slice through the security on vulnerable servers. Russian antivirus company Kaspersky Labs said in a release Friday that more than 1,600 servers had been infected by this latest variant as of Friday morning and are now controlled by the worm via special channels on the Internet...
  • Linux vs. Windows: The Rematch

    10/01/2002 1:05:54 PM PDT · by ShadowAce · 95 replies · 555+ views
    PC World ^ | 1 October, 2002 | Scott Spanbauer
    Can a frustrated Windows user dump Microsoft? Even with lots of improvements, Linux is still no cakewalk. Scott Spanbauer From the November 2002 issue of PC World magazinePosted Tuesday, October 01, 2002 You might be pretty happy with Windows XP. But Windows continues to suffer from more than its share of drawbacks: From the newer operating system's incompatibility with older software to Microsoft's well-known security problems, Windows still engenders a fair amount of user aggravation. Windows XP also subjects its users to the indignity of the Microsoft Product Activation service: You might have to ask Microsoft for a new key...
  • Flirting With Mac OS X (Linux User)

    09/27/2002 1:41:37 PM PDT · by big'ol_freeper · 54 replies · 408+ views
    Byte.com ^ | September 23, 2002 | Moshe Bar
    Regular readers of this column already know there is no lost love between me and GUIs. In fact, I rarely use them; I do most of my work from the regular console, using a variety of tools to do all the things I'd ever need from a GUI: Multiple terminal sessions (screen, Linux virtual terminals, Emacs, vim) and a good e-mail client (nothing beats pine). Yes, I know. Nowadays you can really get productive with a Linux box and KDE or Gnome. StarOffice; or better yet OpenOffice; works as well or better than the Windows classic suites. However, for the...
  • Linux Gains Traction Outside of PC, Server Market

    09/25/2002 1:49:35 PM PDT · by milestogo · 84 replies · 62+ views
    Washington Post ^ | Wednesday, September 25, 2002; 4:41 PM | Reed Stevenson
    Linux Gains Traction Outside of PC, Server Market ReutersWednesday, September 25, 2002; 4:41 PM By Reed StevensonSEATTLE (Reuters) - Having established a firm foothold in the server market and a cult-like following among programmers, the Linux open-source operating system has set its sights on a new target: the cash register.Linux is not after the money inside the cash register, but the machine itself, which these days is an increasingly complex computer that not only records transactions but offers inventory information, advertisements and customer services.Steve Solazzo, General Manager for Linux at International Business Machines Corp. , said the retail sector is...
  • Microsoft CEO Ballmer: United, we'll stomp on Linux

    09/24/2002 10:39:02 AM PDT · by HAL9000 · 59 replies · 226+ views
    CNET News.com ^ | September 24, 2002 | Peter Judge
    Microsoft's taking a leaf out of Linux's book to fight off its open-source rival--it's calling its dedicated band of supporters to arms. Although the software company cannot compete against Linux on price, the company will use its community of professionals to outsmart the open-source movement, CEO Steve Ballmer told an audience of Microsoft Most Valued Professionals (MVPs) in London on Monday. "Linux is a serious competitor," said Ballmer. "We have to compete with free software on value, but in a smart way. We cannot price at zero, so we need to justify our posture and pricing. Linux isn't going...