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Voipowering Your Office: Recovering SipX Passwords and DNS Done Right

Last week we downloaded and installed SipX, and logged into both the Web interface and the Linux command shell. Today we'll learn how to recover lost passwords, and then spend some quality time getting DNS (Domain Name Services) done right. DNS mistakes are among the most common problems SipX admins trip over, so we're aiming to eliminate the trip hazards.

Pquery, a New Tool for PHP

Dion Almaer in the Ajaxian web site informs you about the PQuery. For the uninitiated, PQuery is a set of helper classes for JQuery, the JavaScript library. This library allows you to integrate AJAX, Effects and other JQuery functionality into your PHP scripts. He says it has a small footprint and is compatible with PHP4 and PHP 5 versions.

Clipmarks - double-edged FireFox extension

In a bid to improve online efficiency with a handy note taking tool, James Archibald tries out the Clipmarks Firefox extension. Several hours later , after absorbing useless trivia from around the internet, he realises Clipmarks is a slick little extension.

Patents cut both ways for Microsoft

If I held Microsoft stock (which I don’t) I would be furious. Here is Steve Balmer focusing on Linux, making the tired claim that there is so-called Intellectual Property in Linux that violates patents held by Microsoft. Meanwhile Microsoft gets hit with a hefty patent violation of its own; 1.5 billion (yes, that is a “B”) for the use of the mp3 patent without payment of royalties. It appears that patent obligations are for others, not for Microsoft to worry about.

Note to new Linux users: No antivirus needed

One of the most common questions I hear new Linux users ask is "What program should I use for virus protection?" Many of them lose faith in me as a source of security information when I reply, "None." But you really don't need to fear malware on your new platform, thanks to the way Linux is built.

Small Player Scores Big Open-Source Win

1&1 Internet plans vast expansion of services using open-source software from a tiny newcomer. Can it really compete with Microsoft's Exchange?

European spend on open source software hits €22bn

The national value of Europe’s investment in free/libre or open source software today is €22bn, representing 20.5pc of the region’s total software investment, a senior UN researcher will tell an intelligence briefing on open source in Dublin later this week. Rishab Ghosh, a senior researcher at the UN University in Maastricht, will tell the Open Ireland conference in Dublin that the spend in the US on free/libre or open source software (FLOSS) stands at €36bn and accounts for 20pc of software spend in the US.

Oracle puts low-price on information

Oracle today makes its Information Lifecycle Management (ILM) Assistant available for free download. ILM Assistant is Oracle database-specific and will help database administrators (DBAs) plan and automate storage of data in email, content management systems and corporate applications. Previously, DBAs had to implement policies manually.

Open Source Expert Stephen Walli joins the Open Tuesday Team

Mr. Stephen Walli has joined the Open Tuesday team as an ''Open Source Strategist in Residence''.

"I've been fortunate to have spent time developing standards, developing products to standards, and using open source software to rapidly bring such standards conforming products to market. I look forward to being able to share my experience through Open Tuesday", says Stephen Walli.

Ten suggestions for free storage software that works

There's nothing like free software to save some drain on your storage management or data protection budget -- if that free software works, of course. Here are 10 storage utilities you can download and start using to manage your storage-area network (SAN), deploy network-attached storage (NAS) or monitor and assess the privacy of your network.

Get your jaws into Java 6

Site offer Another week, another offer. This week the techies atRegister Books thought we'd offer a helping hand to all those who ply their trade in Java, the OO, platform independent programming language.

FSM Newsletter 26th of February 2007

Hello everybody, and welcome once again to the fortnightly newsletter of Free Software Magazine: keeping you well informed about the realm of free software! Happy reading!

Vietnam is to pay billions of dollars for software copyrights

After a year of considerable success in IT and media, Vietnam will now have to face a series of issues, one of which is the software copyright problem. It wasn’t a coincidence that one of the 10 most important IT and media events chosen by Vietnam IT Reporters’ Club was Microsoft’s starting to “harvest” revenues in Vietnam. This is a good sign to copyright owners of course. Yet, at the same time, it signals the large amount of money Vietnamese computer users will have to pay for copyrights in the coming years.

Teamrecord Now On Linux

New VoIP call recording software, from Arcosoft works with any SIP-based VoIP system. The centralised system works with port mirroring and without desktop client installation. Previously available only for Windows, the VONaLink TeamRecord for Linux from Arcosoft offers a way to record VoIP calls for an entire workgroup.

First desktop motherboard supported by LinuxBIOS

The GIGABYTE M57SLI-S4 is the first-ever desktop motherboard supported by a Free & Open Source BIOS, thanks to AMD engineer Yinghai Lu who released GPL-licensed code last month. This state-of-the-art motherboard is based on the NVIDIA nForce 570 SLI chipset and AMD's latest Socket AM2.

Ubuntu is not a charity: Shuttleworth

The Ubuntu GNU/Linux project is not a charity. Rather, founder Mark Shuttleworth says his aim is to build a distribution "which is freely available, showcases the best of free software and is sustainable in its own right."

Linux users tell Ballmer to put his code where his mouth is

We're pumped for a real showdown in the upcoming months, since the Linux community has just launched Show Us the Code, a website / movement humoring Steve Ballmer's repeated claims of burgled Microsoft IP within the open source OS -- accusations he's been making ever since Microsoft and Novell went into cahoots with each other back in November. The grassroots organization challenges Ballmer to bring it on: if Microsoft forks over the evidence by May 1st, Linux developers will alter their code accordingly to maintain freeware status.

Alky project alpha release of game conversion software for Linux

Falling Leaf Systems, LLC is proud to announce the availability of the initial alpha release of their Alky converter software for Linux. While only eight months old, the Alky converter can already convert the Windows Prey Demo to run natively on most modern distributions.

Get Your Hands on Anúbis, the New PHP-GTK Tool

Frédéric G. Marand, in the PHP-GTK Community site informs you about Anúbis, a simple RAD / IDE tool which helps to build PHP-GTK applications and its interfaces in a simple way like Lazarus, Delphi, VB.

KDE Commit-Digest for 25th February 2007

In this week's KDE Commit-Digest: Solid gets support for NetworkManager. Support for changing the font colour of the taskbar. File format import work in KVocTrain. More KDE 4 porting takes place in KTorrent. Noatun now uses Phonon as its only backend. Work is begun on refactoring the user interface of Amarok 2.0. The Codeine video player is imported into KDE SVN and ported to CMake, Phonon and KDE 4. Progress in the 'krunner' element of Plasma. KAlgebra is imported into KDE SVN into the playground/edu module. Search improvements in Kate, with a move to the kdesvn module.

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