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So is ChromeOS a desktop winner? I think not.

  • Free Software Magazine; By Ryan Cartwright (Posted by scrubs on Feb 17, 2010 8:20 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
When Google announced their ChromeOS there was a flurry of comment and opinion on what this could mean for the GNU/Linux user and the future of free software. Our esteemed editor, Tony Mobily made a bold statement (albeit framed as a question) at the time that Google’s ChromeOS could turn GNU/Linux into a “desktop winner”. I’m not sure that it’s true. Whatever happens of course the fact is that when somebody of Google’s size and impact enters a market, there will be winners and losers, losses and gains. Now that the dust has well and truly settled let’s have another look at the potential impact of ChromeOS. Read the full article at Freesoftware Magazine

Firefogg: Transcoding videos to open web standards with Mozilla Firefox

  • Free Software Magazine; By Gary Richmond (Posted by scrubs on Feb 12, 2010 5:46 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Mozilla
GNU/Linux has never been short of audio and video players, but they live in a world of multiple codecs, chief culprit amongst them being MP3, AAC, WMA and (Adobe) Flash. I say “culprits” because they are not free and open codecs. They are encumbered by patents; most websites with embedded audio/video use them and most of the people who view them are also using other patented software: Windows. GNU/Linux is a good alternative and all distros come bundled with free and open multimedia alternatives too: Ogg. You would not be surprised that these players can handle Ogg but what if I told you that Mozilla’s Firefox browser could not only handle this codec but could be used also to transcode videos to that format? Interested? Read on. Read the full article at Freesoftware Magazine.

The Morevna Project: Anime with Synfig and Blender

  • Free Software Magazine; By Terry Hancock (Posted by scrubs on Feb 12, 2010 10:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
The Morevna Project aims to create an animated film in a modern anime-style retelling a very old Russian folktale known as “Marya Morevna”. It’s a free culture production project pushing the envelope in several ways — entirely using free software tools and releasing under the free Creative Commons Attribution license. The project is purely community-based, without any foundation funding, so they can probably use your help. Joining could be a terrific learning opportunity, whether your interest is in literature, music, animation, or software development. Read the full article at Freesoftware Magazine.

Save "Sita Sings the Blues" from the Flash format: can you convert FLA?

Nina Paley’s “Sita Sings the Blues” is becoming a huge critical success, and may even succeed financially, which is unusual for any independent film, but virtually unprecedented for free culture films (“Sita” was released under the CC By-SA). There’s only one sad thing about this for free software fans, and that’s that “Sita” was made using proprietary software, and the “source code” is in a proprietary format: Adobe Flash’s “FLA” format, to be precise. Paley has posted these files on the Internet Archive, but she doesn’t know how to translate them into any free software friendly format (and neither do I). Can you help? Read the full story at Free Software Magazine.

Linux performance: is Linux becoming just too slow and bloated?

  • Free Software Magazine; By Mitch Meyran (Posted by scrubs on Jan 27, 2010 6:49 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Kernel
This is an aspect of FOSS that is regaining some measure of interest: for years, it was considered that writing production-ready FOSS meant lean and mean software. However, recent events have shown that, in the case of the Linux kernel, this is no longer exactly true: performance is dropping slowly yet steadily. Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

The Open-PC: one step closer to open-hardware

  • Free Software Magazine; By Ryan Cartwright (Posted by scrubs on Jan 21, 2010 8:26 PM EDT)
  • Groups: Community; Story Type: News Story
At the Gran Canaria Open Desktop Summit in July 2009, the Open-PC project was announced. The statement said the project aimed to “cooperatively design a Free Software based computer by and for the community”. Further this PC would use only hardware for which there are free software drivers available. This would be a PC with the minimal compromise required for running a free desktop. In January 2010 the project announced the launch of its first product. Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Web code is already open - why not make it free as well

  • Free Software Magazine; By Ryan Cartwright (Posted by scrubs on Jan 20, 2010 12:21 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
Oh dear. After the debacle with Microsoft Poland’s apparent racist photoshopping, Microsoft China went and got the company in hot water for allegedly “stealing” code. Yes you read that right: Microsoft and wholesale “theft” of code from another website. Of course it’s not “theft” it’s copyright infringement but tomayto/tomarto. Microsoft confessed blaming a vendor they had worked with. No surprise really but the damage to their name may have already been done. There’s more to discuss here than Microsoft’s already tarnished reputation though. The issue raises some important points in favour of free software and points to why more if not all code should benefit from free licencing. Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Question Copyright's "Minute Memes" challenge copyright rhetoric

  • Free Software Magazine; By Terry Hancock (Posted by scrubs on Jan 19, 2010 6:59 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial
How do you deal with an entrenched content industry that tries to pump its twisted values down your throat with ludicrously illogical emotional appeals? Well, one way is to fight fire with fire by making your own emotional appeals, and trust to the viral amplification of free culture distribution to get the message out. This is the essence of the “minute meme” idea from Question Copyright, and animator Nina Paley has fired the first volley with her one-minute animation “Copying Is Not Theft.” Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Book Review: Geeks Bearing Gifts

  • Free Software Magazine; By Rudolph Olah (Posted by scrubs on Jan 11, 2010 7:48 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
The book Geeks Bearing Gifts, by Ted Nelson is a collage of computing history book. Not only does it directly cover computers, it also covers the origins of ideas that we see in computers. While short, it does go over many interesting things. Ted Nelson is a writer well-known for promoting his ideas for Project Xanadu, a hypertext system that was designed before the Web. Nelson, a self-proclaimed visionary, has been treated as a fringe figure in the computing industry even though his ideas are well-reasoned and well-thought out. Read the full review at Free Software Magazine.

Mastering a DVD using QDVDAuthor

  • Free Software Magazine; By Terry Hancock (Posted by scrubs on Jan 9, 2010 8:43 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
There are not a lot of free software options for mastering DVDs. One of the more complete solutions is QDVDAuthor, although it still has a number of rough spots. It’s a front-end to a collection of command-line free software tools that do each of the individual steps involved in going from a collection of digital video files, audio files, and images to a DVD with menus. As such, it’s quite complicated, and not as stable as some software. Still, it is a rewarding experience if you stick with it. Here I’m going to walk through creating a DVD for a collection of animated videos by my new favorite free-culture artist, Nina Paley (partly because the CC By-SA 3.0 license eliminates any questions about copying the material here, and partly because they’re pretty cool in themselves). Read the full tutorial at Free Software Magazine.

The rise of web applications and Chrome: it's all about timescales

  • Free Software Magazine; By Ian Lynch (Posted by scrubs on Jan 9, 2010 4:26 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Community
The significant thing about Chrome is that it sets a new way of thinking. It does not mean Chrome will dominate the world. Open standards mean that other companies could provide similar services. It’s the 80% scenario. 80% of what we do could be web based and probably will be in the future. It is near 100% for 80% of the population. It does not then make much sense to have everyone running a desktop OS just in case they might happen to want a specialist application that is dependent on that technology. Some people will still need this, but not the majority. Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Open Science and climategate: The IPCC/CRU needs to take a leaf out of CERN's Book

  • Free Software Magazine; By Gary Richmond (Posted by scrubs on Dec 16, 2009 6:33 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community
This is not the place to debate the immense subject of climate science but it is necessary to say something about “climategate” in order to explain what happens when scientists and politicians collude to distort, hide and even destroy critical (raw) data and methodologies which, unlike the output of CERN, have absolutely colossal financial implications for every man, woman and child on this planet. Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

When Javascript became the world's new CPU

  • Free Software Magazine; By Tony Mobily (Posted by scrubs on Dec 11, 2009 12:34 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups:
The computing world is always very unpredictable. That must be why there is a small number of people who make large amounts of money from it: they are in the right (unpredictable) place, at the right (unpredictable) time. Who would have ever guessed that Javascript, a simple scripting language initially thought as a simple means to make web pages “cooler”, would become… drum roll… the world’s new CPU? Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Google Chrome OS. Or, how KDE and GNOME managed to shoot each other dead

  • Free Software Magazine; By Tony Mobily (Posted by scrubs on Nov 26, 2009 2:26 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: GNOME, KDE
A lot of people at the moment are immensely intrigued by Google Chrome OS. I won’t hide that I am one of them. Google promises a much needed shift in the way small computers work. Problems like software updates, backups, installation, maintenance, viruses, have plagued the world for too long: a shift is way overdue. To me, however, the change about to happen shows us what many people have refused to believe for a long time: KDE and GNOME shot each other dead. I write this knowing full well that I am going to make a lot of people angry. This might be the first time a writer receives very angry responses from both camps — KDE and GNOME’s users might actually (finally?) join arms and fight just to show everybody how wrong I am! Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Open messaging for the Open Web: Installing and configuring Mozilla Raindrop on Ubuntu 9.10

  • Free Software Magazine; By Gary Richmond (Posted by scrubs on Nov 13, 2009 2:08 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Ubuntu
By the time you read this Karmic Koala will have been released to a waiting world, but I couldn't wait. A felicitous combination of a desire to do a distribution upgrade to the release candidate and a Twitter arriving on my laptop giving me a link to Raindrop kept me busy for the day. I was intrigued by Raindrop and having used other Mozilla lab experimental software I was determined to see what all the hype was about. If you like the idea of combining a tool for aggregating Twitter, e-mail, RSS and other social Web 2.0 stuff with free and open standards then read on. Read the full howto at Freesoftware Magazine.com

Keeping score in test-driven development with Python, PyLint, unittest, doctest, and PyRate

  • Free Software Magazine; By Terry Hancock (Posted by scrubs on Nov 12, 2009 4:01 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: Linux
Programming is more fun when you keep score. The extreme programming (XP) development model popularized the idea of test-driven development (TDD) with professional programmers in mind. But TDD turns out to be even more useful for lone amateur programmers, because it provides much needed motivation in the form of more visible rewards for your work. This is true even when simple test runners are used, but I decided to make things a little snappier by including a couple of other types of measurement and generating a “scorecard” for the present state and progress of my Python software projects. Here’s how it works, and a download link for my script, which I call “PyRate”. Read the full howto at Free Software Magazine.

A response to "free software major league or minor?": Unjustified dismissal?

  • Free Software Magazine; By Sam Tuke (Posted by scrubs on Nov 12, 2009 5:10 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Linux
I just read Terry Hancock’s artilce on Is free software major league or minor?. Great article, and I’m very glad to see articulate discussion about these core subjects. Not enough is said about these matters. However, I disagree strongly on several points that your article raises. I’ll take it point by point in an effort to not misrepresent your views and keep focussed on the statements that you have made. Read the full response to Terry Hancock's original article at Free Software Magazine.

Are Microsoft to blame for "hidden" malware costs and will Windows 7 make any difference?

  • Free Software Magazine; By Ryan Cartwright (Posted by scrubs on Nov 8, 2009 1:53 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Microsoft
A couple of stories have hit the headlines this year concerning the huge cost that some UK Local Governments incurred when dealing with malware attack on their Windows machines. If you missed them, Manchester City Council had a single USB infected with the infamous Conficker worm and it cost them — brace yourself — £1.5m ($2.4m) of which £1.2m (US$1.9m) was spent on IT, of which a staggering £600,000 (US$980k) went on consultancy fees including money to Microsoft. A while later, Ealing Borough Council were hit with a cost of £500,000 (about US$ 800k) when they were also hit by a single USB stick containing conficker. Some in the industry tweeted and blogged this as being a “hidden cost of using Microsoft Windows”. In the ensuing discussion, many pointed out that the high cost was really due to the lack of a proper patching and disaster recovery policy at the council. So which is right? Is dealing with malware a hidden cost of using Windows or of a poor IT strategy? Read the full article at Free Software Magazine.

Discovering "Sita Sings The Blues"

  • Free Software Magazine; By Terry Hancock (Posted by scrubs on Nov 6, 2009 6:34 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Community
“Sita Sings The Blues” by self-taught animator Nina Paley, may be the first feature-length animated film released under a free license (the Creative Commons By-SA). Presented through a variety of animation styles and narrative tones, it fuses apparently disparate ideas and sources into a unified whole. An ancient Hindu epic, The Ramayana, is retold largely through the songs of a 1920s American singer, Annette Hanshaw. The mode of storytelling also mirrors aspects of the world-wide collaborative potential of twenty-first century art, reflected also in the film’s real life controversies, including copyright entanglements and censorship concerns. Read the full article at Freesoftware Magazine.

RepRap, the replicating machine: The Free and Open Source Factory on the Desktop?

  • Free Software Magazine; By Gary Richmond (Posted by scrubs on Nov 6, 2009 1:48 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community
RepRap (replicating Rapid-prototyper) is a 3D printer and it is impeccably free and open source under both the GPL and the Creative Commons Licence. It’s early days but the implications and the promise are potentially enormous in their own right — but the fact that it is resolutely not proprietary is what caught my attention. Read the full article at Freesoftware Magazine.

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