Showing headlines posted by Scott_Ruecker
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Open source software giant Red Hat has claimed its ISV partner ecosystem has experienced ‘record’ growth in the past six months. The firm, which earlier this year announced plans to shift to a 70 per cent indirect model in Europe (CRN, 10 April), said the numbers of certified ISV partners have increased by 122 per cent in the past six months.
I’m Saint iGNUcius: Stallman tells NIT students
“He is coming”, “He is coming”, the posters shouted from every nook and corner of the National Institute Technology (NIT) Hamirpur campus. Curious and inquisitive to know more, I stared hard at the picture of a benevolent looking man with an affectionate smile on his countenance. His long flowing hair and beard adding more mystery to his persona. Who is he? An apostle! I thought. What would he teach us about? I was surprised to know that he would teach us a lot about the moral and ethical issues that face the world of Free Software.
Edgy upgrade pains and fixes
Upgrading an operating system is always a chancy thing. An application can stop working, a modem can freeze up, and then, when upgrading to Ubuntu 6.10, Edgy Eft, you can lose your graphical user interface: windows, icon, mouse pointer, and all... Not good.
Scientific Linux rolls out live CD/DVD update
The Scientific Linux project today released a set of live CDs and DVDs of the latest version of their Red Hat-based distribution, v4.4, for both i386 and x86_64 architectures. The live CD/DVD, featuring a 2.6.9 kernel and the GNOME desktop environment, can also boot from a USB port, the team said.
Security firm punctures Vista's Patchguard
Analysis Security vendor Authentium has discovered a mechanism to get around Microsoft's controversial Patchguard kernel protection technology, which is due to ship in the 64-bit version of its forthcoming Windows Vista operating system.
Brazilian government faces challenge over proprietary tax software
The Free Software Foundation - Latin America (FSFLA) is campaigning against the Brazilian government's regulations that some citizens must use non-free software for paying taxes. Referring to the software as "Softwares Impostos," a term that puns in Portuguese on "taxes" and "imposed," FSFLA has launched a letter-writing campaign against the requirement, arguing that it is both contrary to current social policies and a violation of the Brazilian constitution.
EMS releases DB Comparer 2006 ver. 2.2
EMS Database Management Solutions has announced version 2.2 of DB Comparer 2006, a powerful tool for comparing SQL Server, MySQL, PostgreSQL and InterBase/Firebird databases and discerning differences in their structure.
HP: Open source can be more profitable than proprietary
HP claims it has started to make higher margins from open source than proprietary software in some instances, due to the support costs associated with migration.
OpenSUSE 10.2 beta 1 has improvements, bugs
With all the big news about new Linux releases -- Fedora Core 6 and Ubuntu 6.10 -- the release of the first beta of OpenSUSE 10.2 might easily be missed. The latest beta of this popular community-based Linux distro emerged Oct. 26.
Release-critical Bug Report for October 27, 2006
Release-critical Bug Report for October 27, 2006
Mozilla Wants Your Super Powers
Mike Shaver, co-founder of the Mozilla project, believes that everyone has a super power that can be used for open source good. Don't worry if that super power isn't big. Though Mozilla is a big project, it wants people to start small. Shaver delivered the opening keynote at the fifth annual Free Software and Open Source Symposium here today.
Panda trials Linux anti-virus software
Security company Panda has launched a beta version of Panda DesktopSecure for Linux. The suite includes a signature-based detection mechanism for malicious code, the Genetic Heuristic Engine, and a powerful firewall. Panda aims to contribute to the Linux community by offering a free product to protect these systems.
Linux Professional Institute Offers Discounted Certification Exams at LinuxWorld Cologne
The Linux Professional Institute will offer discounted certification exams to attendees of LinuxWorld Conference & Expo Cologne 2006 at 11:00 and 15:00 on November 14-16, 2006
A Snarly little graph of Ruby's Grammar
Nick Sieger, who attended the RubyConf 2007 implementers' summit has startedexploring the seedy back alleys of Ruby, and is taking notes for the rest of us. After he spent some time with the yacc grammar, he came up with a nice little graph. Follow the link to see his travelogue, then you can do what I'm doing— waiting impatiently for the next iteration.
Report: New Linux Security Products Glimmer On Horizon
Beyond displaying an extensive slate of existing Linux products, vendors at this week's InfoSecurity show pointed to possible future offerings ranging from a Linux client for a CD-ROM encryption system to a Linux-enabled all-in-one device for securing both physical access and video surveillance.
How to share a scanner on your network
After hours of research and tweaking, all your computers are connected to each other and the Internet, and you can print your documents on a printer connected to another system -- but you still must take a break when someone else wants to use the scanner connected to your system. Save the money additional scanners would cost by sharing your scanner on your LAN.
Red Hat Announces First Red Hat Developer Day In India
Red Hat announced the commencement of the first Red Hat Developer Day in India. An exclusive Red Hat event, the Red Hat Developer Day aims to bring together Linux developers and users to help grow open source technologies, development, techniques, tools and standards through the sharing of technical knowledge and expertise. This first of its kind event marks Red Hat's continuous efforts to encourage open source development in India.
Fedora Core 6 Released with KDE 3.5.4
Fedora Core 6 (Zod) has been released this week. Among other current software (Kernel 2.6.18.1, glibc 2.5, GCC 4.1.1, X.Org X11 7.1), Fedora Core 6 includes KDE 3.5.4. KDE 3.5.5 will be available as an official update soon.
Hiring FreeBSD
It’s nothing personal, you see. Human Resource (HR) directors don’thire people; actually, they hire skill sets. Naturally, that skill setincludes the ability to get along, a skill even the most evil sociopathcan learn. It’s not how good someone is, but whether they exhibit...
Zotero: A seriously useful research tool
If you spend most of your time doing research on the Web, you need Zotero, a Firefox extension that helps you manage research sources. With Zotero installed, Firefox is not confined to the Web, and you can use it as a standalone application for all sorts of online and offline research.
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