Showing headlines posted by tuxchick

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Linux Today Editor's Note: Putting Away the Welcome Mat

I'll admit it: I found some of anti-virus for Linux software announcements mildly interesting. After all, there seemed to be some logic in the notion that once Linux got more popular on the desktop, it would become a bigger target for the virus-writing crowd. And there seemed to definitely be a need for running AV software on Linux servers that dealt with Windows clients. No argument from me there.

Until now.

Now my attitude has shifted from a neutral "what harm can it do" stance to outright opposition.

Asterisk 1.2 Released

Asterisk 1.2 is now available for download. This is the second major release of Digium's open source PBX and telephony platform since the 1.0 release in September 2004. The latest release includes over 3,000 bugfixes and upgrades...

World's largest commercial Linux data warehouse runs Oracle ...

The survey, which identifies the world's largest and most heavily used databases, found that the largest commercial data warehouse in the world runs a 100 terabyte Oracle Database. That's more than triple the size of the largest database in the previous TopTen Program survey, which was also powered by Oracle.

[The complete results of the survey are here. -tuxchick]

'Literary' texts no more?

  • 'Literary' texts no more? (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 8:04 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
From the who-needs-silly-old-literacy-anyway dept.:

Dot mobile, a British mobile phone service aimed at students, says it plans to condense classic works of literature into SMS text messages....John Milton's epic poem "Paradise Lost" begins "devl kikd outa hevn coz jelus of jesus&strts war." ("The devil is kicked out of heaven because he is jealous of Jesus and starts a war.")

House Passes TV Digital Speed-Up Plan

  • Yahoo News; By Jennifer Kerr (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 5:21 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The House on Friday backed a plan to require television broadcasters to switch to all-digital transmissions by December 2008, three months earlier than they would have to under provisions of a Senate bill.

House lawmakers also voted to set aside $830 million to help millions of Americans with older, analog TV sets pay for converter boxes so they'll continue to get service in the digital era.

Enterprise Unix Roundup Tips of the Trade

You don't have to spend big money to get nice, robust, reliable RAID arrays for Linux. Linux's software RAID implementation lets you set up RAID arrays with almost any block device - SCSI, PATA, or SATA hard disks. You may create arrays with entire disks, or individual partitions, which is something you cannot do with a hardware RAID controller. You can even create arrays from arrays. This, in fact, is how you get RAID 10, and exotic RAID-5 over RAID-5 "matrix" arrays.

["Tips of the Trade" is a regular weekly feature highlighting useful FOSS applications, and various syadmin/netadmin tips and tricks. - tuxchick]

Getting the Video out of Your New iPod--for Cheap!

  • Mac DevCenter; By Erica Sadun (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 4:16 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
So I buy a video iPod, figuring it would be a cool toy. (Gotta get those toys.) It arrives and I'm ready to give it a whirl. I pony up my two bucks, download the pilot episode of Desperate Housewives, insert a standard A/V-to-RCA cable into the earphone jack and try to play it back on my TV.

No Luck. Damned Apple.

I'm here to tell you not to worry.

Write a Webserver in 100 Lines of Code or Less

  • O'Reilly Network; By Jonathan Johnson (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 3:11 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
Network programming can be cumbersome for even the most advanced developers. REALbasic, a rapid application development (RAD) environment and language, simplifies networking yet provides the power that developers expect from any modern object-oriented language.

Enterprise Unix Roundup: Supercomputing Transformed

  • Enterprise Unix Roundup; By Amy Newman and Brian Proffitt (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 2:38 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Community
At this week's Supercomputing show (known by the catchy moniker, SC 05) in Seattle, Linux was king and Microsoft announced its plans to sell some supercomputing bling-bling, which is as sure a sign as any that supercomputing isn't what it used to be. Sure, it's faster and more powerful, but it's not contained solely in the exotic realms of academia. Redmond taking interest is perhaps the greatest litmus test that something has gone mainstream.

Distributing Content with BitTorrent

  • Linux DevCenter; By Robert Bernier (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 2:06 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
There are many peer-to-peer protocols, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. Some of them are not well known, others are infamous, while still others have faded away and gone out of use. This article shows how easy it is to publish your content online by using BitTorrent.

Sony, Amazon Detail CD Buyback

  • Washington Post; By Brian Krebs (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 19, 2005 1:00 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Newsletter
Sony BMG has just posted a series of Web pages that should help consumers who have purchased music CDs tainted with its flawed anti-piracy software exchange them for the same titles without the software.

[Isn't that special.-tuxchick]

MIT's Free Patent Online Course

  • Groklaw; By Pamela Jones (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 18, 2005 11:23 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Groklaw's akStan found something truly useful. He was looking for a paper on symmetrical-components analysis of three phase electricity, he tells me, but he found a patent course instead, on MIT's Open Courseware web page.

Dr. Robert Rines, who has been inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, taught the class from his book, Create or Perish, and the book is available, by chapters as PDFs. The course homepage has a graphic showing Thomas Edison's 1879 patent application for an "Improvement in Electric Lights." The final chapter is interesting, because he talks about some of the problems with the patent system, but you know about all that already. What is probably the most valuable chapter for us to read is the one on how patent law works, chapter 3 [PDF]. It explains what can and can't be patented. They keep stretching that line, of course.

Linux for Video Production

The GStreamer technology at the heart of PiTiVi has been in development for six years. It provides a means of stringing together different components to satisfy various multimedia needs. As an example, an application can read in a file, send it through a decoder plugin, run it through an effects plugin, and then display it to the screen or create an encoded file. GStreamer provides a comprehensive means of hooking together these different plugins in an infinite number of combinations. The plugin architecture opens up the development process to allow anyone to make GStreamer plugins for a range of different needs

'Nightmare' drove desperate user to open source

  • Computerworld; By Rodney Gedda (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 18, 2005 10:17 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
"We saved seven salaries worth over one year. It was so dramatic they gave me a big raise and I was promoted from system administrator to IT manager. And because of the savings we get more productivity out of old hardware."

IPv6 Forum chief: the new Internet is ready for consumption

  • Computerworld; By Dahna McConnachie (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 18, 2005 9:45 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
IPv6 is not a pipedream. Founder of the IPv6 Forum Latif Ladid took time out from the IPv6 summit in Canberra to talk to Computerworld about why the new Internet Protocol is a pie to be consumed here and now.

Network Operating Systems: Hard(ware) Choices

  • Enterprise Networking Planet; By Charlie Schluting (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 18, 2005 8:05 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial
If switching operating systems is something you're considering, don't forget to think about how your decision might limit future hardware purchases. There are tons of things that Linux and BSD will run on, but like all other ventures into the untested waters, you can never be certain that everything will work. Perhaps it's beneficial to purchase hardware from a manufacturer that has tested these devices alongside their operating system?

Novell Defends SUSE Against MS-Sponsored Study

In a company Weblog posting, Novell Senior Manager of Public Relations Kevin Barney said the report "aims to confuse the market about the value of Linux and downplay the various reliability, security and TCO issues Windows users are facing."

Laser etched Powerbook!

  • Make; By Phillip Torrone (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 18, 2005 2:09 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
I didn't really plan using a $20,000 laser cutter on my 17" Powerbook to etch a 19th-century engraving of a tarsier, a nocturnal mammal related to the lemur (also the vi book cover image, from O'Reilly), but it seemed like it had to done. The results are stunning - photos and more...

Google Base: Toward a Walled Garden

  • Earthweb news; By Susan Kuchinskas (Posted by tuxchick on Nov 18, 2005 2:07 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
Anyone can search the Web. Now, Google aims to create its own invisible Web, which will be invisible to anyone not using Google.

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