Showing headlines posted by Herschel_Cohen

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Firefox security (Really Windows Security or Lack Thereof - ED)

What would happen if Mozilla's Firefox suddenly became the browser that everyone was running? What would happen if it was as big a target for hackers and for virus and spyware authors as Internet Explorer is now. How would Firefox's reputation for security hold up? One has to wonder how secure a default Firefox installation is, and if there are things that can be done to make a Firefox deployment more secure?

[ED: Oh, the horror - well this really is more about the lack of Windows IE security than the supposed object of interest. In physics scattering probability from a given nucleus is measure in terms of "barns" that if compared to the content here would be strictly proportional to the physical size and packing density, i.e. size of the program and how dense the number of targets in use on the internet. In nuclear physics and here too on a more mundane topic the interactions are much more complex than simple a priori probability. To be a worthwhile target in the case of a browser it must allow a pathway to either control or damage the target system, hence, even were the numbers reduced the integration of IE directly to the OS makes it still a more tempting target. Moreover, being more easily compromised just adds to its inherent attractiveness.

So if you like to read why IE, Windows are not inherently at fault, this is a simple minded article for you - HC]

HP server exec leaves for Linux firm

Penguin Computing plans to announce Monday that it has hired Pauline Nist, who long led HP's NonStop server group.

[ED: CEO of Penguin and Nist are both from Tandem that was purchased by HP. Another big Unix to Linux move? - HC]

Apparmor for Linux goes open-source

Novell has open-sourced the commercial AppArmor security tool for Linux, first developed by Immunix. The release brings application security features with high transparency and low overhead to the enterprise Linux community.

[ED: Repeat, yes but it's Novell and they are so much better than I expected - HC]

Study: 40% of Irish companies choose open-source

More than 40% of organizations in Ireland will use some form of open-source software in 2006, according to a study by iReach, a research company in Dublin.

[ED: Much less significant than the raw numbers might seem to imply. Within the EU Ireland is a friend of patents and MS goals. Hence, I would bet many of the companies and entities just do not carry the clout of 40% usage should imply due to many being small or not politically well connected. - HC]

Older Hardware, Windows and Linux

Opinion: Bill Hilf, director of Microsoft's Linux and open-source lab, makes some pathetic claims about Linux. (Linux-Watch.com)

[ED: Just one more instance where a Microsoft "Get The Facts", is overly selective of the facts - what do you expect the truth? Well you can't handle the truth! They are just trying to protect you. - HC]

Microsoft Touts Windows On Linux Site

Old news to readers of LXer, but though a light wieght item it does warrent repeating: Microsoft Everywhere Pushing Questionable "Facts".

Driver education for Linux novices

LA Times (original source News Day a Long Island, NY paper) readers introduced to DSL Linux and how to get it running with some words of warning: " ... left out the first rule of DSL Linux as it pertains to inexperienced computer users: It may not work with your hardware. All companies that manufacture printers, mice, video and sound cards - pretty much everything that gets plugged into a computer - also create drivers, little chunks of software that make the hardware gadget work with an operating system. In most cases, that operating system is Windows XP."

[ED: So be polite. if you cannot be helpful yourself do something better than "RTFM" that is known to have endeared many new users to Linux. Stories like this will do more to get some to try to escape miind control. So just remember the problems you had as a newbie or turn them over to someone less skilled than yourself that has social skills that you lack - HC]

Winning the Linux Wars

[ED: How MS is going to Win the Linux Wars, not quite there yet but with these wise words of warning how cannot they not Win? - HC]

"Raising the caution flag:

Linux is still a maturing platform, and with youth comes uncertainty. "The [Microsoft] value proposition is always a good sell, but it doesn't hurt to back that up with a really long hard look at what the risk factors are," notes Tim Beamer, technology ... "

[ED: Be assured Windows is rock solid, and when it's not it gets fixed, and when it's fixed late it's fixed mostly right, and when it's not right it's done over until it's done right! Who could ask for anything more? Windows is a mature insecure system. It will be even better when it's fixed per incident fee - HC]

"Competing with Linux once filled Microsoft partners with dread, but now many are taking on the open source operating system with growing self-confidence -- and success. Here are the tactics for winning the fight."

[ED: Even here they note they are not winning every battle, so they buck up the troops letting know of all the Linux shortcomings and how they can Win with Win(dows). They cite some big independent sources, e.g. Gartner, etc. It's always good to know your enemies plans - HC]

How one reviewer approaches the art of reviewing

[ED: Here is an author that has caught a lot of flak due to his errors reviewing Ubuntu/Kubuntu in the comments section when his review appeared on LXer. Since he is one of the few that seems to "get it", as a matter of fairness, he deserves his chance to reply - HC]

I've been receiving a fair amount of e-mail from people who are sure that I don't know Linux, but their notes are really showing me that they don't know reviewing. I don't hold that against them. Few people know how reviews really work.

Read on.

Red Hat rebuts CERT vulnerability figures

The open source community is up in arms after the publication of a 'misleading and confusing' report that said more vulnerabilities were found in Linux/Unix operating systems than in Windows last year

[ED: Pretty good write up with a nice ending - HC]

"You should look at the number of critical vulnerabilities. It's a better comparison to look at the critical vulnerabilities that affect customers due to the platform they use. There are fewer critical vulnerabilities, and they are fixed faster in Red Hat Linux," said Cox.

"There is also the issue of timing. With Linux products, critical updates are available within a day. If you look at Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3, the average patch time is under a day. With the recent critical WMF (Windows Meta File) vulnerability, it took Microsoft seven days."

Microsoft was not available for comment at the time of writing.

Temporary CIO Steps into Mass. OpenDoc War

Massachusetts has appointed an acting CIO to fill in for Peter Quinn, who's walking away from the job after bringing OpenDocument and a concomitant fire of controversy to the Commonwealth.

[ED: This is an evolving story where some ID* is really needed - HC]

[* ID == "Intelligent Decisions"]

Quest Software picks up AfterMail

Californian applications and database management firm Quest Software Inc is adding more flexible messaging capabilities to its email archiving system after buying-in technology New Zealand-based AfterMail Ltd.

[ED: Here is the key phrase that perhaps make this item have some significance - HC]

" ... archiving email data to make it more accessible to knowledge workers and adhere to corporate compliance regulations."

Firefox Soars and Apple's Safari Jumps as 2005 Browser Share Race ...

[ED: I know this is a duplicate, however, rather than being a simple recitation of a subset of questionable facts some pertinent items are mentioned explicitly. From those you can see these figures are incomplete, measurements with no idea given as to the margin of error -HC]

"NetApplications, ... measure, monitor and market Web sites for Small to Medium Enterprises (SME)"

[ED: Meaning they measure a fraction of the total market and of that fraction - what portion they have as clients that are measured? How random is its subset or how typical are its clients are unaddressed issues, hence, these are near meaningless numbers to advertise themselves without the slightest nod towards statistical error. If you believe these figures, we need to talk business (I really have a sure money making proposition for you on the East Coast ...)- HC]

Regarding marketing see the lower portion of this article: "HitsLink(tm) is NetApplications' flagship product, providing advanced website statistics and analysis for webmasters and eMarketers alike."

DCC Alliance 'close to end' claims Ubuntu founder

The attempt to bring several Linux distributions together under a single core is doomed. That’s according to Mark Shuttleworth, founder of the startlingly popular Ubuntu distribution of Linux, who has predicted that the DCC Alliance initiative will ultimately fail.

[ED: More extensive explanation of the reasoning behind this conclusion than I have seen elsewhere - HC]

The Print Shop: Linux Drivers Made Easy

  • ABC News (Appears to have been abstracted from PC World); By Danny Allen, PC World (Posted by Herschel_Cohen on Jan 5, 2006 4:38 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Community, HP
More of a blurb about Linux becoming more main stream in regards to readily available, functional printer drivers. If reading that Linux is on the road to World Domination gives you the warm fuzzies this it an item for you. For many others this is skippable.

Essentially this is a mini review where Cups now stands.

OOo Off the Wall: Find and Replace

As with most tasks, OOo offers several options for searching and replacing text or strings in your documents. Doing a little research beforehand can save time and frustration later on.

Nice set of images for easy to follow instructions with some depth on structured searches.

Linux vs. Windows security

A qualitative assessment of operating system security is subjective and your 'mileage may vary' based on present and past experience. The overall finding of this analysis is that Linux provides more secure capabilities than Windows. Taken from a IBM White Paper by Stacey Quandt.

[ED: A reasonably worded look at some security issues pertaining to both systems - HC]

Mcfadden's Free Software For XML Services

If embedding OSS in consumer applicances excites you, i.e the inevitable march to "World Domination", here's a blurb for you. It has XML, a gui front end and it's friendly.

My sysadmin toolbox

After reading an article on system administration utilities, I started thinking about the utilities I find most valuable in my day-to-day work. A few were mentioned in the article, such as Vim and GNU Screen, but most were not. When thinking over my list, I was surprised by how many were recent additions.

Court library AMPs up (a.k.a. Apache, MySQL and PHP)

Dr. Ronald E. Diener, the systems librarian for the Supreme Court Library of North Carolina, has spent his career developing cataloguing systems. His work on a complex library catalogue for the legal profession, where reliability is de rigeur, provides insights into why the Apache/MySQL/PHP combo was his software of choice.

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