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For Linux Lovers, Safety Comes in Groups

  • Earthweb News; By Clint Boulton (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 26, 2005 5:53 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
If Microsoft is the big cat prowling the Serengeti of software with its Windows operating system, companies that promote Linux are playing the part of elk, banding together in protective herds. In a 30-day span, four groups backed by a number of companies pledging their allegiance to open source software launched with an emphasis on propagating Linux in a world where Windows reigns.

Open source gives South African farmers a leg-up

  • Tectonic; By Basheera Khan (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 26, 2005 4:18 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: KDE
From the list of attendees, it was obvious that open source in Europe is A Really Big Thing(TM) - several hundred delegates from the UK and continental Europe converged on Amsterdam's classiest hotel to receive the wisdom there imparted....In each standalone terminal, the server runs FreeBSD while the client runs Debian Linux with the KDE windows manager. All user software is free or open source, and KDE language modules have been added for isiZulu, isiXhosa, tshiVenda, Setswana, and Afrikaans.

Black Friday Feature: PCs Under $500 $400

  • Hardware Central; By Christopher Saunders (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 26, 2005 2:44 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
New or Refurbished, Windows or Linux

Stores these days move directly from back-to-school sales to animated Santa displays, but the official kickoff of the holiday shopping season -- the day after Thanksgiving, dubbed Black Friday for retailers whose businesses get into the black with fourth-quarter sales -- is the time to find some tremendous savings on desktop PCs. Combine seasonal savings with ever-lower component costs, and the $1,000 price limit of HardwareCentral's regular Grand Openings reports looks much too lavish. In fact, you can find a good PC for well under $400.

Can You Spot The Phish Attack?

  • Internet News; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 26, 2005 1:09 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
According to data from e-mail security firm MailFrontier, only 4 percent of users can spot a phished e-mail 100 percent of the time.

Marcel's Linux Walkabout: Ruling the IRC!

  • InformIT; By Marcel Gagne (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 25, 2005 10:47 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
In today's Walkabout, Marcel Gagne shows you how to set up and run your own IRC server.

LynuxWorks Tackles Embedded Migration

  • Internet News; By Sean Michael Kerner (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 25, 2005 10:00 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Embedded Linux play LynuxWorks is tackling migration with a new partnership announced this week with embedded software solutions provider MapuSoft. LynuxWorks will use MapuSoft's OS Changer and OS Abstractor applications to help embedded developers port code from proprietary embedded operating systems to Linux.

Networking 101: Understanding Subnets and CIDR

  • Enterprise Networking Planet; By Charlie Schluting (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 24, 2005 12:52 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
In the olden days, there were Class A, B and C networks. These could only be divided up into equal parts, so VLSM, or Variable Length Subnet Masks , were introduced. The old Class C was a /24, B was a /16, and A was a /8. (Check out Understanding IP Addresses if you're not clear on what that means.) That's all you need to know about Classes. They don't exist anymore.

EFF's Sony Complaint - as text

  • Groklaw; By Pamela Jones (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 24, 2005 8:55 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The EFF complaint asks that Sony BMG be required to fix the damage to victims' computers, and it says the EULA is unconscionable, listing specific things the Plaintiffs allege are unconscionable in the EULA that accompanies both XCP and MediaMax. When you read the list, I think you will agree it's hard to argue with EFF that this list is anything a reasonable man would agree to without duress, and as you read them, ask yourself: What do they have to do with copyright rights?

Here's the list:

Why Slackware DOES still matter!

Alan Canton simply took nearly 500 words to express what could have been summarized in one sentence: "Linux, as an operating system, is too complex for me." Rather than simply bash him in defense of Slackware, I prefer to take on his arguments point-for-point. Given the tone of the article in question, please forgive me if my rebuttal is similarly tongue-in-cheek.

Diggable

Beyond The Big Three BSDs, BSD Alternatives

  • ServerWatch; By Martin Brown (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 24, 2005 6:33 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Although Linux gets much of the attention in the Free and open source operating system world, the BSD operating system is also very popular. BSD has a longer history, and its roots go right back to one of the original Unix implementations that spawned commercial Unix variants like Solaris and Mac OS X...This article, therefore, will look at some of the less-mainstream, yet equally valuable, BSD variants available.

Four Linux softphones reviewed

  • Linux.com; By Paul Virijevich (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 24, 2005 12:43 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
If equipment costs are stopping you from experimenting with VoIP, softphones can provide an inexpensive way for businesses to get up and running with VoIP, as I recently discovered by putting Kiax, Linphone, Twinkle, and CounterPath's X-Lite to the test.

Related article:
Need VoIP? DIY with Asterisk

Hardware Today: Year-End Server Room Wish List

  • ServerWatch; By Drew Robb (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 23, 2005 11:55 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Roundups
For those long on funds and short on ideas, this article introduces some interesting possibilities to forward on the the powers that be. In addition to servers, storage, recovery, monitoring, and security devices, as well as power quality management gear can simplify data center issues.

Internet entrepreneur to take on traditional journalism

  • New Zealand Herald; By David Usborne (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 23, 2005 12:48 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The American internet entrepreneur who has single-handedly siphoned tens of millions of advertising dollars from newspapers in the United States by creating a wildly popular online alternative for classified listings warned this week that he intends to launch a similar challenge to the relevance of traditional journalism.

Serving notice to trained reporters everywhere to watch their backs is the thoroughly estimable Craig Newmark, who established himself as a pioneer of the cyber-era ten years ago when he launched craigslist.org, in volume terms now the seventh-most visited internet site in America just after eBay.

New Sony Litigation Page

  • Groklaw; By Pamela Jones (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 23, 2005 11:51 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
You know you've made it to the Pinnacle of Badness when you get your own page on Groklaw. Well done, Sony! And thank you, PJ! The world would be a much less-informed place without you, and certainly worse off. -- tuxchick

ThinkFree's Newest Microsoft-Compatible Office Suite Now Available for Linspire Desktop Linux

ThinkFree's Newest Microsoft-Compatible Office Suite Now Available for Linspire Desktop Linux.

ThinkFree Office 3 Offers Linux Users Cross-Platform Productivity Tools for Home and Business

A Linux User's perspective in installing FreeBSD 6.0

  • All about Linux (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 22, 2005 10:43 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
I have been a Linux user way back from the first time I was introduced to an alternate OS than windows. Even though I was aware of other Unices like FreeBSD and Solaris, I hadn't come around to installing them on my machine. Two days back, things changed when I downloaded the latest FreeBSD version 6.0 from their official website.

Putting Open-source Software to the Test

"You're not going to lock me in by having a data format where you dictate which other people can or cannot potentially manipulate my data," he said. "So would this be of interest to other governments? Why wouldn't it be?"

NAND vs. NOR flash -- tradeoffs and strategies

  • LinuxDevices.com (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 22, 2005 7:45 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Foreword: This high-level whitepaper compares the relative strengths of NOR and NAND flash memory, and discusses software strategies for mitigating each type's weaknesses. Topics include avoiding data loss, improving performance, and increasing media longevity. The article was written by DataLight, a vendor of embedded filesystems, flash memory drivers,

Open source gives South African farmers a leg-up

Fresh from its successes rolling out open source software-based information hubs in farming communities, the South African department of agriculture is now looking at its own infrastructure and readying for a shift to open source software. Basheera Khan caught up with the department's Kugan Soobramani during a recent visit to EuroOSCON.

Need VoIP? DIY with Asterisk

  • Enterprise Networking Planet; By Carla Schroder (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 22, 2005 1:20 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Because Asterisk is both Free Software and free of cost, you can dink around with it in all kinds of ingenious ways. Like building a phone system for your home with all the features of commercial PBXs that cost thousands of dollars. You can have very cheap long distance, internal extensions, transfer calls, and something that I like a whole lot- sophisticated voice mail under my control, and not costing me a monthly fee. Callers will never get a busy signal; they'll either get a human or the voicemail. You can even torture them with complex phone menus with too many options: "To record a compliment, press 1. To leave a complaint, press pi divided by the radius of the Earth's orbit around the sun."

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