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LXer Feature:Survival Guide For Women In FOSS: Drumming Up Customers

Striking out on your own means entering a whole new exciting, fulfilling world. You'll meet and handle new challenges, and develop self-confidence and poise worthy of a UN diplomat. You'll directly reap the rewards of your creativity and labor. Today we'll talk about how to develop a solid clientele, and finding customers that you enjoy working with.

Related articles:

Survival Guide For Women In FOSS: Striking Out On Your Own
Survival Tactics For Women In FOSS, part 2
Survival Tactics For Women In FOSS, part 1

Diggable

What? The Open Source Movement; a Socialist phenomenon?

Both of these guys are trying to draw a parallel between open-source and left wing politics that is just not there. Communism and Socialism are about central planning and imposing a system without property rights on a populace. Open Source is not about a lack of property rights, it's about distributed property rights, distributed responsibility and networked rather than hierarchical processes

Granny Finds Linux/KDE Easier Than Windows

. Linux/KDE is so easy to learn and use, even I can enjoy it! But please sit down, have some of my fresh cherry cobbler and tea! Would you like sugar with that? One lump or two? Speaking of lumps, let me share about the years of suffering I personally had with Windows. Using it was like stirring a pot of cold oatmeal. No matter how hard I tried, I could not un-stick things! Of course, there may be others who've not had such oatmeal experiences. But I personal had a lot of these before I started using Linux and KDE desktop.

Cyberattackers slither through software holes

  • USA Today; By Jon Swartz (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 22, 2005 1:11 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
From the Uh Oh, the Bandages Are Bleeding Dept.:

Cyberattackers, in a major new approach, are exploiting flaws in popular software programs — especially anti-virus and backup tools — to break into the computers of consumers, government agencies and businesses...Security provider Qualys, another participant in the study, found "significant vulnerabilities" in most anti-virus and backup software...

Related Story

All hail the speed demons

With the Open Source desktop getting larger and more complex, the world need a special type of hacker. Bow down to the speed demon and their abilities to make the world start-up quicker...

Linux Triple Crown?

  • Linux DevCenter; By Tara McGoldrick Walsh (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 21, 2005 2:53 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews
It may not have quite the same thrilling finish, but you need wait no longer for a new Triple Crown winner--we've just published the third jewel in our Linux Triple Crown: What Is a Linux Distribution, which follows the publications of What Is Linux and What Is a Linux Desktop, respectively. Each article is intended to introduce your friends, family members, and co-workers to the world you know so well, and maybe enlighten you in some untold way as well.

The environmental case for keeping the Internet and its markets free

  • Linux Journal; By Doc Searls (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 21, 2005 1:18 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story

The Generative Internet is more than a seminal brief on behalf of the Net. It provides the intellectual and legal foundations for many arguments to come.

Skype to make U.S. retail debut

  • CNet News; By Greg Sandoval (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 20, 2005 4:16 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Net telephone service Skype Technologies is set to make its first appearance in a U.S. retail store.

Novell hosts seminar on Linux and Identity Management solutions

Novell, aiming at creating Linux and IDM (Identity Management Solutions) awareness, held a seminar in Bahrain at Movenpick on November 14'th along with its GOLD partner Al Faris technologies.

PC stolen from Boeing packed with employees' personal data

  • Seattle Times; By David Bowermaster, Dominic Gates and Melissa Allison (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 20, 2005 6:15 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
From the Dept. of Duh:

Highly sensitive personal data on 161,000 current and former Boeing workers are missing after the theft of a company personal computer...."What's a guy doing with that amount of data on a laptop?"

Do Apache Projects come with too much overhead?

  • Planet Apache; By Susie (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 20, 2005 4:40 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Recently, I spoke with Peter Yared, CEO of ActiveGrid. I asked him why ActiveGrid chose to host their project at SourceForge instead of contributing the code to a foundation like Apache. He replied, “Because Apache comes with too much overhead.” He’s certainly not alone in this sentiment - it’s something I have heard from a few people.

Wex and Open Source Lawyering

  • Corante; By Dennis M. Kennedy (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 20, 2005 3:53 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
They've now moved into the new era of wikis and other collaborative tools by announcing their WEX project - an online collaborative legal encyclopedia. It's like the Wikipedia concept, but with some constraints on who may contribute to WEX.

EFF: Diebold Attempts to Evade Election Transparency Laws

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is going to court in North Carolina to prevent Diebold Election Systems, Inc. from evading North Carolina law. In a last-minute filing, e-voting equipment maker Diebold asked a North Carolina court to exempt it from tough new election requirements designed to ensure transparency in the state's elections.

Debates on Open Source So 'Last Year' Says Novell Exec

In Europe, for example, open source is much more common. "That's so last year," he says of the open-source versus proprietary software debate, in Europe. "It's not even a relevant conversation."

Post US intel on Internet: US lawmaker

As mountains of raw intelligence go unanalyzed, the chairman of the House intelligence committee said that posting it on the Internet could speed up translation.

"I would like to get these documents into the public domain in hopes that academics, journalists, bloggers and other interested people can help clear this backlog," Pete Hoekstra said.

Sony Hides Truth, Open Source Components In XCP

  • Playfuls.com; By Axxel (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 11:09 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Poor Sony. It's in big trouble right now. And the company's problems seem to be getting bigger and bigger, especially since there seems to be a completely new twist to the whole rootkit story.

What's GNU in Old Utilities

  • Linux Magazine; By Jerry Peek (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 10:22 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Utility programs like cp have new features you may not have seen. Here’s the third in a series about some of the handiest. Back in Unix Version 7, cp, mv, and ln had no options: they simply copied, renamed, or linked one or more files to a destination. Now, GNU cp has more than twenty options, and mv and ln aren’t far behind. Is this feature creep or innovation?

Using the GPG signature checking with apt 0.6

  • Debian Administration; By Steve Kemp (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 3:42 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Debian
If you're running a Debian Unstable installation you'll likely have noticed that new package installations, and upgrades, are now prompting for confirmation - warning about package checking. This is because the most recent version of APT supports checking package signatures with GPG...This is a useful thing, as it provides reasonable certainty that the packages you're downloading are the packages you were intended to get.

Cisco to buy Scientific-Atlanta for 6.9 billion dollars

Networking giant Cisco Systems said it agreed to buy cable set-top box maker Scientific-Atlanta for 6.9 billion dollars in a sign of convergence of the telecom and television industries.

CIO Jury: $100 laptop will boost Linux

  • Silicon.com; By Steve Ranger (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 1:11 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The hand-cranked laptop could be in the hands of schoolchildren in poorer countries by late 2006. The goal of the One Laptop Per Child project is to ship the devices in quantities of more than one million per order, for schoolchildren to keep...The group has already turned down an offer from Apple to provide the Mac OS X operating system for the systems because they want to use open source software instead - probably Linux.

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