Showing headlines posted by dcparris

« Previous ( 1 ... 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 ... 182 ) Next »

ARTiSAN Ships ARTiSAN Studio 6.1 as OMG Announces the Adoption of SysML

ARTiSAN Studio 6.1 Includes Support for New SysML Standard

Debian update for gnupg2

Debian has issued an update for gnupg2. This fixes a vulnerability, which potentially can be exploited by malicious people to cause a DoS (Denial of Service).

AIDE Integrity Checking

  • LinuxSecurity.com - Feature Stories; By Chris Parker (Posted by dcparris on Jul 23, 2006 10:09 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: GNU, Linux
AIDE, Advanced Intrusion Detection Environment, is a file integrity checker, a type of intrusion det...

Open Source Java-Baby Steps

  • Technocrat.net; By zogger (Posted by dcparris on Jul 21, 2006 4:45 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Sun
One of Sun's CTOs has said that they will *truly* be opening Java, but in stages, a piece at a time.

[This has an interesting comment from Bruce Perens - dcparris]

Tourism Calgary bucks Linux

Organization believes open source ’not ready for prime-time’

[From the article: "I have no Linux background — I’ve grown up in a Windows world and am used to the GUI..."
Let me guess. Novell's sales rep is one of those anti-GUI fanatics that refused to show Paul Scheirick Yast because it's a GUI tool - and we all know that real geeks use the CLI. The only other thing I can think of that would prompt this kind of remark would necessitate an investigation of Mr. Scheirick's finances. I suppose he could be related to Tuttle's City Manager.

Grep FOSSBiz Versora

LXer Feature: 21-Jul-2006

LXer's Don Parris got together with Versora, Inc.'s CEO, Mike Sheffey, Chief Software Architect, Nick Lassonde, and Vice-President of Marketing, Ray George to discuss Versora's role in helping businesses migrate from Windows to GNU/Linux.

A Gentoo diary part 1

A Gentoo Diary part 1 LXer Feature: 19-July-06

It's been a while since I promised to write about my Gentoo desktops. In the intro, I gave some general information about Gentoo, and explained my setup.
The reason I didn't write a bit earlier is, amongst others, not that much interesting happened the last few weeks. Anyway, let's talk about what did happen: I set up an old 300 mHz server with Gentoo, tried to make distributed compiling work, learned a bit more about Windowmaker, tried to get a Broadcom Wireless card working on a laptop, switched to Grub, and finally got rid of Xmms. Uhhm, the latter kind of unnoticeable.

Using sudo

  • LinuxSecurity.com - Feature Stories; By Dave Wreski (Posted by dcparris on Jul 19, 2006 1:56 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Tutorial; Groups: GNU, Linux
sudo is a mechanism of providing root prileges to an ordinary user

Zen and the art of software configuration management

  • Reg Developer; By Jon Collins, Macehiter Ward-Dutton (Posted by dcparris on Jul 19, 2006 12:51 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Community, PHP
Less is moreComment In the software development world, less would appear to be more. Attention continues to swing towards lightweight development methodologies such as extreme programming and agile development, and scripting languages such as Javascript and the three Ps of the LAMP stack”that's PHP, Perl and Python”are increasingly popular.

Rise in Healthcare IT Spending Spells Opportunity for IT Managers, Profit for Open Source Vendors

OSDL to Host First Ever Full-Day Event Dedicated to Healthcare IT at LinuxWorld San Francisco; Medsphere CEO Kenneth W. Kizer to Deliver Keynote

Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo) Celebrates ...

  • DirectionsMag.com (press release); By Press Release (Posted by dcparris on Jul 19, 2006 11:13 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Press Release
Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo) Celebrates Accomplishments at Six-Month Mark Mapbender is first officially approved project; Foundation reaches hundreds of members; OSGeo presents at OSCON and GeoWeb

Making the message stick

The Geek Freedom League is engaging in some "guerrilla branding" this month with a sticker competition. The person who finds "the most ingenious use" of a GFL sticker, will be given the choice of an iPod Nano or digital camera. Entries thus far have included GFL-branded beer bottles, pets and keyboards.

[Great idea! But why an Ipod? I mean, aren't Ipods manufactured and distributed by a company that takes from the community without giving back? - dcparris]

No way you can block blogs!

BANGALORE: Internet users woke up to an unusual Monday: Their favourite blogs were not available. What happened to the blogs? Slowly came the realisation that government had banned them. Banned ever-ything! Or ha-d they really?

[Here's to our kindred spirits in India! - dcparris]

Texas Instruments backs mobile Linux

Chipset manufacturer Texas Instruments has joined one of the mobile Linux alliances, in a further boost for the platform's development

Fujitsu introduces Itanium 2 servers for Linux and Windows ...

Fujitsu on July 19 introduced three PRIMEQUEST 500-series models that feature the 64-bit Intel dual-core Itanium 2 processor and delivers up to 2.5 times the performance of previous models. The PRIMEQUEST 500 series servers deliver the most advanced virtualization capabilities available along with extended system scalability for Linux and Windows environments, according to the company.

Which New Browser Is Best: Firefox 2, Internet Explorer 7, or ...

  • Extreme Tech; By Michael W. Muchmore (Posted by dcparris on Jul 19, 2006 7:58 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Mozilla
For a long time, there was nothing to talk about in web browsers. You used Internet Explorer, and that was it. Oh, to be sure, some Mozilla/Netscape holdouts clung to their ways, as did a smattering of users of Opera, Konqueror, and other obscurities. Internet Explorer itself hasn't had a major version change since the release of 6.0 in 2001, so there wasn't much to talk about there, either for five long years.

[Of the three browsers examined here, only Firefox is libre. - dcparris]

Share and share alike with Synergy

Struggling with more than one computer, and an overload of keyboards and mice? Try Synergy to tie it all together.

Getting started with dynamic DNS

Your ISP probably assigns your computer an IP address dynamically. It means one less thing for the both of you to think about, but it also puts you in a bind if you need to connect to your machine from the outside: you can't locate your PC amidst those of all the ISP's other customers. To overcome this obstacle, you can use dynamic DNS. Here's how to get started.

Red Hat's Gary Jordan appointed to Wake Tech Board of Trustees

Gov. Mike Easley has appointed Gary Jordan to the Wake Technical Community College Board of Trustees. Jordan is senior director of Global Learning Services at Red Hat. In this position, he manages technology training organizations in Europe, Asia, South America and the United States.

Dim3 v2.0: open-source game engine

Klink Software has released dim3 v2.0, an update to its free open-source 3D game engine.

The license is a very simple non-copyleft, free software license.

« Previous ( 1 ... 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 ... 182 ) Next »