Showing headlines posted by tadelste

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CLI Magic: Securely deleting files with shred

  • Linux.com; By Shashank Sharma (Posted by tadelste on Mar 6, 2006 8:58 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
I used to think a simple format of a hard drive was enough to make data recovery impossible, but I was wrong. To ensure that details of your secret love affair, bank account passwords, and daily porn site visits cannot be recovered, use shred.

View and edit graphic files with XnView

I've tried many image browsers over the years, including IrfanView and ACDSee, but after using XnView, I can almost forget about the rest.

Review: StarOffice 8: Office Killer?

StarOffice incorporates five components, called StarOffice Writer, StarOffice Calc, StarOffice Impress (a presentation package), StarOffice Base, and StarOffice Draw. This thorough article is a combination of a review of the functionality and Martin Brown's experiences of using StarOffice 8 for day-to-day tasks.

Sun Cashes in on Open Source

Sun Microsystems' Simon Phipps reflects on company's new software strategies.

Fedora Weekly News Issue 36

Welcome to our issue number 36 of Fedora Weekly News.

Open source routing reality check

Open source software has become an integral part of an array of network and IT products, but making a business out of a free Linux-like WAN router operating system and commodity PC hardware will be a challenge, observers and experts say.

Open source not ready for higher education?

  • Ars Technica; By Ryan Paul (Posted by tadelste on Mar 6, 2006 11:45 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
In reality, the report itself found that open source software is being used on a massive scale by universities. According to the study results, 57 percent of all American higher education institutions are using open source software products somewhere within their infrastructure. 53 percent of all American higher education institutions use Apache, 51 percent use Linux, 38 percent use MySQL, and 35 percent use Firefox. Those numbers clearly show that open source software is widely used by American universities.

Ibm's Support To Open Source Voice Applications

Eclipse-based software aims to unite development community with new application programming interface and IBM multimodal tools that build on the Voice Tools Project.

Linux: Defect Scanning with Coverity

Ben Chelf, CTO ofCoverity Inc., offered access to the bugs discovered by the Coverity tool, previously known as the Stanford Checker, to a select few interested developers.

Firebird in 60 seconds

With the recent aquisition of Netfrastructure by MySQL AB, also bringing Jim Starkey (InterBase creator) to work for the company, the Firebird database got a lot of exposition in the media.

Mozilla is making money from Firefox

Jason is excited to know that Mozilla Corporation has made $72M last year from the popular Firefox browser, I clearly remember I read about that last year somewhere.

No backdoor for Vista?

A BBC report last month suggested the Home Office was in talks with Microsoft over ways to overcome any obstacles Windows Vista's wider use of encryption might pose to criminal investigations. Vista is due to feature hardware-based encryption, called BitLocker Drive Encryption, which acts as a repository to protect sensitive data in the event of a PC being either lost or stolen.

Speaking before a Commons home affairs select committee hearing, Professor Ross Anderson reportedly urged the government "to look at establishing 'back door' ways of getting around encryptions". Provactive stuff but, as previously reported, a careful review of the rest of Anderson's comments reveal he has talking about the challenge posed to police forensic investigations by hard disk encryption. Not too much should be read into one particular phrase.

Teenager claims to find code flaw in Gmail

  • NetworkWorld; By Jeremy Kirk (Posted by tadelste on Mar 6, 2006 9:19 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
A teenage blogger claims to have discovered a flaw in Google's Gmail service that allows JavaScript to run, potentially allowing a malicious hacker to gather e-mail addresses or compromise an account. The supposed flaw may already have been fixed, however.

Go Open Source For E-Governance: NKC

Monday, March 06, 2006: New Delhi: If the recommendations of the National Knowledge Commission (NKC) are accepted, India will surely be on its way to adopt a `free software community’ model for its country-wide e-governance programmes. According to Economic Times, open source is all set to usher in a real IT revolution in the country. The NKC has sent in a list of 10 recommendations of the special group on e-governance to the prime minister, Manmohan Singh.

Should DeLay's New Job Concern FSF?



With the Free Software Foundation beginning to take an active role in prosecution of Microsoft, perhaps they should look at the new guy in charge of appropriations for the Justice Department, the FBI, FTC and Intellectual Property Enforcement and possibly the future of GNU/Linux.

Hp & Novell are partnering across the Enterprise

HP and Novell have announced a specially priced software bundle for customers deploying Novell's SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 on HP ProLiant and BladeSystem servers.

Redhat's RHCE the hottest cert for 2006

The Redhat Certified Engineer qualification trounced Microsoft and Cisco to be voted the expected fastest grower of certifications for 2006 by Certcities.com. The LPI's level two exam managed to take position 10.

The Ultimate Media Server - Apache+SSL , PHP, MySQL and Jinzora

  • Howtoforge; By Bsdguy (Posted by tadelste on Mar 6, 2006 4:58 AM EDT)
I started out on this project to create the ultimate multimedia server using all opensource tools and applications. Some of you may be thinking along the lines of a TIVO device, no this was to create a hosting server on my business broadband connection so that I can have access to and listen to my MP3's from anywhere that had an Internet connection while keeping it all secure as possible.

RSA: Sun to end Trusted Solaris

  • ComputerWorld; By Robert McMillan (Posted by tadelste on Mar 6, 2006 3:19 AM EDT)
  • Groups: Sun; Story Type: News Story
Sun Microsystems Inc. is changing the way it produces a secure version of its Solaris operating system, a decision that will mark the end of the product known as the Trusted Solaris Operating Environment. Developed for governmental agencies that require a certain level of security certification, Trusted Solaris had developed separately from its flagship Solaris product. But starting this August, Sun will instead offer Solaris Trusted Extensions as an add-on to its standard Solaris product, said Chris Ratcliffe, Sun's director of Solaris marketing.

The knowledgeable way to manage documents

  • Tectonic (Posted by tadelste on Mar 6, 2006 2:22 AM EDT)
One of South Africa's top open source exports, KnowledgeTree, just keeps getting better. The document management system has added new workflow features, integration with Microsoft Office, and can help companies meet legislative and best practice compliance requirements.

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