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The Post-Modern Manifesto

  • CIO Australia; By Christopher Koch (Posted by dcparris on Jun 5, 2006 2:02 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Linux
If there's anything harder than predicting the future, it's reaching a consensus about it. The trends affecting IT today are easy enough to spot - outsourcing, globalization, increased regulation, increased complexity and never-ending demands from the business for growth and revenue - but it's much more difficult to figure out how all these trends will converge to determine the size, composition and strategy of the IT department over the next few years.

Red Hat chief executive Matthew Szulik

Linux distro chief outlines new products and future directions

What Sucks About DEs, pt. I: Ubuntu's GNOME

I enjoy using many different desktop environments and operating systems. On a day-to-day basis, I use Finder, Explorer, GNOME, and KDE. They all have their good sides, but obviously, they have their fair share of bad sides as well. The next couple of columns will be about the latter. This week, I take a look at whatever bothers me about Ubuntu's GNOME/Linux combination (Dapper, obviously).

Easier JavaSE for GNU Linux Leads to Wider Open Source Opps

What started in the 1990s as a contractual protection for Java against forays from Microsoft turned out to retard JavaSE on GNU Linux. A team from Sun last month remedied the long-standing legal problem, forging new license terms for JavaSE on GNU Linux.

People Behind KDE: Gilles Caulier

  • KDE Dot News; By Jonathan Riddell (Posted by dcparris on Jun 4, 2006 8:37 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: KDE
Tonight's People Behind KDE interviews the developer of KDE's premiere photo management application Digikam. Gilles Caulier started out as a French translator for KDE but is now busy programming for hours each day. Find out his development tools of choice and his most influential photographer in our interview.

The Second International Conference on Open Source Systems

The goal of OSS2006 is to provide an international forum where a diverse audience of OSS researchers and practitioners can come together to examine the culture, technology, and organization of OSS systems, work practices, development processes, community dynamics, tools and applications.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 Beta 1 Due In July

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 will enter beta testing in late July and ship in December, executives said Wednesday.

Java licence issues still have a part to play

Five years to Java on Linux, next is Java open source

The law, some say, is an ass and it is quite possible that mule-like legal stubbornness has lain at the heart of the time it has taken for Sun Microsystems to get Java on Linux.…

Dear Adelie

Dear Lord, you people are highly focused on mating issues. Just because I walk on two feet, don't confuse me with a mammal. However, I will do my best to answer your questions.

Are GNU/Linux distribution choices a fad, or favouritism?

Are we choosing GNU/Linux distributions based on their quality, or is it the media hype?

OpenOffice.org virus debunked by experts

Kaspersky Lab, a manufacturer of anti-virus software, claims to have discovered a macro virus for StarOffice and OpenOffice.org. The claim has received widespread media attention on the Internet as the first of its kind. However, according to experts, the alleged virus is nothing more than the use of a long-existing capability in the StarBasic macro language (also known as OOo Basic). Although the potential for malicious macros exists, they can be easily guarded against.

UK's ESR migrates to Linux and OSS

ESR Technology's computer network was based on a combination of Novell NetWare and Microsoft Windows when the company was still a subsidiary of AEA Technology, an environmental and technology consultancy based in the UK. After Coller Capital purchased the risk management company last October, ESR had six months to select, design, and implement a brand new infrastructure that would support more than 100 users all over the world. It decided that Linux was the safest bet.

The much-awaited breakthrough year for the open source desktop may ...

  • ITBusiness.ca; By Evan Leibovitch (Posted by dcparris on Jun 3, 2006 1:07 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Linux
The much-awaited breakthrough year for the open source desktop may never come. But that doesn't mean that Linux won't slowly work its way onto your PC. Progress may be slow, but it's happening

'mugshot’ Premiers – It’s Red Hat’s Open Source Counter to ...

'MugShot’ Premiers – It’s Red Hat’s Open Source Counter to MySpace Phenomenon and More, Hatters Say

Truth, justice and the open source way

  • ITBusiness.ca; By Shane Schick (Posted by dcparris on Jun 2, 2006 10:45 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Red Hat
Free software isn't communist, but does that make it American?

[It may not be especially American, but that doesn't mean it isn't American - dcparris]

Frontier Takes Off With Massively Parallel Flight Management ...

  • InformationWeek; By Charles Babcock (Posted by dcparris on Jun 2, 2006 12:06 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story
To stay competitive, Frontier has adopted Greenplum's Bizgres MPP business intelligence tools, which act on data in a PostgreSQL open source database.

KDE 4 Multimedia Meeting exceeds expectations

  • NewsForge; By N. Sanders (Posted by dcparris on Jun 2, 2006 11:09 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: KDE
KDE members associated with the desktop environment's major multimedia components and marketing efforts met last weekend in Achtmaal, The Netherlands, at the KDE 4 Multimedia Meeting (K4M, previously known as K3M). Attendees discussed goals for their projects and wrote a fair amount of code that promises exciting improvements in KDE 4's multimedia components.

Linux News Urges Action on Net Neutrality

  LXer Feature: 2-June-06

I would not be where I am today without a free and open Internet. The same could be said for many, if not most, Internet users. Whether you use the Internet to engage in business, education, politics or religion, or you just want your fill of sex, hacking and multi-media, a free and open Internet is an absolute must.

Microsoft offers security service

from the I-am-not-making-this-up dept:
no, really, I'm not:
Microsoft is starting an anti-virus and security service for PC users. The service would be on a yearly subscription basis, just like other anti-virus protection services.

The service is designed to automatically patch-up security holes, as well as beef up anti-virus and spyware protection. It will also help maintain the health of a user's PC generally, according to Microsoft.

[Even if you don't believe in God, this would be a great time to start praying for Windows users - dcparris]

Tax authorities in Lower Saxony switch to Linux

The State of Lower Saxony has begun switching the PCs its tax authorities use from Solaris x86 to Linux. According to a press release, 12,000 computers are affected. Since the end of April, all tax authorities have been involved in migration. By the end of September 2006, the desktop systems are all to be running on Linux except for telecommuters and servers.

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