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Keyword: linux

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  • It's unofficial: Microsoft bets business on Linux

    11/04/2005 7:05:20 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 15 replies · 740+ views
    ComputerWorld ^ | 4 November 2005 | Rodney Gedda
    The next time Bill Gates sends an e-mail through Microsoft's shiny new Wireless LAN it will be passed through a behind-the-scenes Linux-based network appliance. Earlier this year Microsoft and Aruba Networks jointly announced the two companies will work to replace Microsoft's existing Cisco wireless network with Aruba's centrally-managed infrastructure, which eliminates the need for individual changes on the access points. Aruba Networks was selected to provide the networking equipment for what is considered to be one of the world's largest next-generation wireless LANs, serving more than 25,000 simultaneous users a day in some 60 countries. According to an Aruba press...
  • Nokia Linux-based web tablet on sale at last

    11/04/2005 6:15:02 AM PST · by PissAndVinegar · 33 replies · 847+ views
    The Register ^ | Friday 4th November 2005 11:56 GMT | Dinesh C Sharma
    Nokia has begun shipping its Linux-based Nokia 770, the so-called "Internet tablet", according to the Finnish giant's direct-sales website. The device lacks the usual Nokia mobile phone technology, relying instead on Wi-Fi (802.11b/g) and Bluetooth to connect it to a broadband connectivity host. The 770 is pitched at consumers who want to access the Internet for emailing and web browsing anywhere in their home.
  • SCO describes alleged IBM Unix misuse to court

    11/01/2005 6:47:15 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 54 replies · 1,274+ views
    CNet News ^ | 31 October 2005 | Stephen Shankland
    It took more than two and a half years, but the SCO Group finally has disclosed a list of areas in which it believes IBM violated its Unix contract, allegedly by moving proprietary Unix technology into open-source Linux. In a five-page document filed Friday, SCO attorneys say they have identified 217 areas in which the company believes IBM or Sequent, a Unix server company IBM acquired, violated contracts under which SCO and its predecessors licensed the Unix operating system. However, the curious won't be able to see for themselves the details of SCO's claims: The full list of alleged abuses...
  • (Vanity)Linux and Wireless Networks Help/Advice sought(Vanity)

    10/30/2005 9:09:41 PM PST · by birbear · 24 replies · 546+ views
    me | 10/30/2005 | me
    I just inherited a Dell Inspiron 2500 notebook (Pentium 3, 700mhz, 192megs of RAM). It's currently running WinXP Home, but it's dog-slow. I'm thinking of throwing some type of Linux on it, rather than reinstalling XP, just so I have a Linux machine to learn on and play with. My question is about wireless networks. I just threw a Linksys wireless card in the slot thingy (PCMCIA?) and it found my home network just fine. Will I have any problems with this hardware if I switch to Linux? Thanks a lot! Bir
  • Why do people switch to Linux?

    10/30/2005 6:08:37 AM PST · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 17 replies · 259+ views
    O'Reilly ^ | Oct. 27, 2005 | Tom Adelstein
    During the last month, we conducted a survey of readers who use Linux. We asked them why they switched to Linux and received a plethora of answers. Surprisingly, anti-Microsoft sentiment had less to do with the choice than one might imagine. Could the pundits have it all wrong? Is it possible that Linux stands on its own merits? Most Linux users would yes. Use of Linux does not represent a rebellion against Microsoft and Linux stands on its own as a user preference.
  • Is OpenOffice.org Bloatware?

    10/28/2005 7:52:10 PM PDT · by postaldave · 75 replies · 1,345+ views
    PC world ^ | Harry McCracken
    I've had mostly positive things to say about the free OpenOffice.org suite, so in the interest of equal time, here's a link to an interesting ZDNet blog item (via Scobleizer) which looks at the speed and resource requirements of Microsoft Office and OpenOffice.org. It's far from exhaustive--the numbers reported relate only to launching the applications and opening a spreadsheet--but it shows OpenOffice.org as being far more memory- and CPU-hungry than the Microsoft suite.
  • Adobe Joins Intel, IBM, HP Aboard Linux Bandwagon

    10/21/2005 9:14:20 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 5 replies · 156+ views
    Foxnews ^ | Wednesday, October 19, 2005 | Steven Vaughan-Nichols eWeeks
    The Free Standards Group and its Linux Standard Base work group Tuesday announced the formation of the Linux Standard Base Desktop Project (), with the support of Adobe Systems Inc., Intel Corp., IBM, Hewlett-Packard Co., Linspire Inc., Mandriva SA, Novell Inc., RealNetworks Inc., Red Hat Inc., Trolltech, Xandros Inc. and others. The LSB (Linux Standard Base) Desktop Project's goal is to standardize common libraries and application behavior so as to make it easier for independent software vendors (ISVs) to write Linux () desktop programs. The long-term goal is to help the Linux desktop achieve wide-spread adoption. In the past, Linux...
  • Dumber people can run Linux

    10/16/2005 7:27:02 AM PDT · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 41 replies · 592+ views
    http://www.volesoft.com/?article=26935 ^ | Friday 14 October 2005 | Wendy M. Grossman
    Here's the other thing: it worked. It said, "Choose a user name and a password." It logged me in. And there was an entire computer, ready to go. It connected to the Internet. Firefox went places. Email downloaded. OpenOffice…officed. I mean, call that open source? Where's the anguish and pain? Where's the six weeks of downloading drivers and learning how to compile source code? A shocking lapse of standards, I call it. If Linux can be run by people as dumb as the people who can run Windows, it's the end of civilization as we know it. Don't these people...
  • Service Model Picking Up Steam in Software Realm

    10/12/2005 10:22:09 AM PDT · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 2 replies · 209+ views
    Linux Insider ^ | 10/11/05 | Krishna Kant
    Both Gartner and IDC, in recent reports, have said that a majority of software vendors will shift from upfront license revenue to long-term subscription revenue models by 2008. Currently, subscription revenue is estimated to account for less than 10 percent of the industry's revenues. Microsoft, the world's largest product company, has, however, refused to play ball.
  • How hard is Linux? Check out betterdesktop.org

    10/11/2005 12:56:54 PM PDT · by N3WBI3 · 66 replies · 673+ views
    betterdesktop.org ^ | 2005-10-11
    Welcome! Better Desktop is a project dedicated to sharing usability data with Linux developers. Over the past year, we have conducted many usability tests on different parts of the KDE and GNOME desktops. We created this site to serve as a place where developers can watch videos of these tests. Here you will find over 200 videos of people using Mozilla Firefox, Evolution, Open Office, Banshee, F-Spot and other applications. All of these can be found in the data section of this site. The video repository on this site is growing. We will continue to add video as we produce...
  • Should Linux vendors think differently?

    10/11/2005 6:04:05 AM PDT · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 23 replies · 203+ views
    Computer World ^ | 11/10/2005 | Neil McAllister
    That's right, I'm thinking iMac. With the Mac OS, Apple sticks to a tightly controlled upgrade path that emphasizes backward compatibility. But more importantly, Apple has the advantage of owning the hardware. A Mac always knows how to work its graphics card and its speakers, because Macintosh computers ship with a very limited selection of hardware components. No matter how many people still clamor for Mac clones, it's a strategy that has always paid off for Apple in terms of customer satisfaction. Could it work for desktop Linux? Suppose a single vendor took the big gamble and offered the whole...
  • Linux stars in MS movie

    10/10/2005 5:04:05 AM PDT · by Salo · 28 replies · 632+ views
    Stuff ^ | 10/10/05 | Reuben Schwarz
    In a stroke of irony, Microsoft's Halo movie will be produced in Wellington by servers running the open-source Linux operating system. Universal Pictures and Twentieth Century Fox announced last week that Peter Jackson and his partner Fran Walsh will act as executive producers for the film, based on the best-selling game for Microsoft's Xbox gaming console. Bungie, the Microsoft-owned development firm which created the game, confirmed that Peter Jackson's post-production firm Weta Digital would be involved in the movie. Weta Digital uses more than 1000 dual-processor IBM blade servers running the Fedora version of the Red Hat distribution of the...
  • SCO v. IBM: IBM drops patent claims, and a deposition hearing

    10/07/2005 7:00:07 PM PDT · by Khym Chanur · 15 replies · 506+ views
    Several pieces of SCO v. IBM news. First, IBM has dropped it's patent counterclaims. According to IBM: While IBM continues to believe that SCO infringed IBM's valid patents, IBM agreed to withdraw its patent counterclaims to simplify and focus the issues in this case and to expedite their resolution. The little discovery that SCO has produced regarding IBM's patent claims makes clear that there is insufficient economic reason to pursue these claims. Since SCO's sales have been, and are, limited, a finding of infringement would yield only the most modest royalty or award of damages and would not justify the...
  • IBM Calls SCO's Bluff Over "Need" For 25 Additional Depositions

    10/07/2005 2:41:40 PM PDT · by ShadowAce · 18 replies · 602+ views
    Groklaw ^ | 7 October 2005 | Pamela Jones
    As you know, SCO has filed a motion with the court, asking for permission to take 25 more depositions. IBM has now filed its Memorandum in Opposition to SCO's Motion for Leave to Take Additional Depositions [PDF], and it's a breathtakingly bold chess move. SCO argued in particular that IBM's complex patent counterclaims made it essential that it have more depositions. I thought they kind of had a point. IBM maybe does too, and apparently it smells more attempted delay on SCO's part, and that has got to be a nauseating prospect. Anyway, if SCO's game is delay, delay, delay,...
  • Microsoft's Linux-related patents rejected

    10/06/2005 8:45:52 AM PDT · by ShadowAce · 141 replies · 1,394+ views
    Cnet ^ | 5 October 2005 | Ina Fried
    The U.S. Patent Office has rejected two Microsoft patents over the FAT file format, but the software maker said Wednesday that it's not ready to give up its battle to protect its widely used method for storing data. The patent office delivered its ruling late last month but made it public this week. With one of the patents, the decision is what's considered a final rejection, while with another it's considered nonfinal. In both cases, Microsoft has the ability to pursue its claims further. The rejections come after a re-examination of the patents was sought by the Public Patent Foundation,...
  • Japan aims to boost state use of free Linux software

    10/06/2005 4:52:10 AM PDT · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 17 replies · 436+ views
    Yahoo News ^ | Oct 6, 1:46 AM
    Japan aims to switch some government computers to the free Linux operating system and reduce its dependence on Microsoft Windows. Japan is drawing up guidelines for its ministries recommending open source software such as Linux as an "important option" in government procurement, said an official at the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.
  • Microsoft: No Office software for Linux

    10/05/2005 10:40:42 AM PDT · by Panerai · 23 replies · 638+ views
    Macworld ^ | 10/05/2005 | Jeremy Kirk
    Microsoft Corp. is not going to release a version of its Office suite software for open-source rival Linux, although the company is actively studying how Linux works and how it can integrate with the platform, a Microsoft representative said Wednesday. “The simplest way I can answer the question is that Microsoft is 100 percent focused on Windows,” said Nick McGrath, director of platform strategy for Microsoft in the U.K. “We have no plans at this present moment in time to deploy or build a version of Microsoft Office on Linux.” McGrath participated in a roundtable debate on whether free software...
  • Microsoft Windows Officially Broken

    10/04/2005 5:33:08 AM PDT · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 103 replies · 3,623+ views
    Smartoffice News ^ | 27 September 2005 | David Richards & WSJ
    Windows was broken and Microsoft has admitted it. In an unprecedented attempt to explain its Longhorn problems and how it abandoned its traditional way of working, the normally secretive software giant has given unparalleled access to The Wall Street Journal, even revealing how Vice President Jim Allchin, personally broke the bad news to Bill Gates.
  • Political hackers deface Novell SUSE sites

    10/03/2005 4:01:39 PM PDT · by Golden Eagle · 186 replies · 2,208+ views
    Security Focus ^ | October 3, 2005 | John Leyden
    Three Novell OpenSUSE community web site were defaced on Sunday by politically motivated hackers. Defacement archive Zone-H reports that a group called IHS Iran Hackers Sabotage broke into OpenSUSE.org, wiki.novell.com and forge.novell.com to post a message stating that it was Iran's right to develop nuclear power. All three sites were defaced in the same way.
  • Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.7 Released

    10/01/2005 5:32:13 PM PDT · by zeugma · 29 replies · 1,570+ views
    Mozillazine ^ | 9/29/2005 | Mozilla Foundation
    Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.7 Released Thursday September 29th, 2005 Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.7 is now available for download. Amongst other changes, this minor release includes fixes for a return receipt regression introduced in version 1.0.2 (bug 289091) and the Linux command line URL parsing security flaw.Thunderbird 1.0.7 can be downloaded from the Thunderbird product page or the Thunderbird 1.0.7 directory on ftp.mozilla.org. Refer to the Thunderbird 1.0.7 Release Notes for more information. We expect details of the security fixes in this release to be added to the Mozilla Foundation's list of known security vulnerabilities soon.