Showing headlines posted by hkwint
« Previous ( 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 14 ) Next »Dell advertizement: Ubuntu keeps getting better!
Quote: "Ubuntu is safer than Microsoft® Windows®
The vast majority of viruses and spyware written by hackers are not designed to target and attack Linux."
[This itself is an advertizement, not 'news'. and the link will probably go bad. However, the comparison they're making with Windows is interesting - hkwint]
Neelie Kroes (EU Commissioner): 'Openness at the heart of the EU Digital Agenda'
Exactly two years ago I spoke about interoperability and standards here in Brussels.
Here is a brief overview:
- Interoperability boosts competition and we need more of that.
- For devices or applications to be interoperable - to work together - all concerned parties must agree to a common way of "doing things".
- Formal standards are one way to get there.
- More transparency in formal standard-setting can lead to more efficient outcomes.
- Public and private procurers of technology should be smart and build their systems as much as possible on standards that everybody can use and implement without constraints: this is good for the bottom-line because it promotes competition between suppliers and prevents vendor lock-in.
In other words, as I said on that occasion: choosing open standards is a very smart business decision. That speech brought a general perspective to my work on competition policy.
Today I must apply that thinking in a more direct way, as the person who has proposed the Digital Agenda for Europe. Even though the whole Commission is responsible for its implementation I expect interested parties to mostly turn to me to demand progress – and rightly so.
Therefore let me explain what I have in mind when it comes to the topics of interoperability and standards.
FOSS-tablet Business Report: "Tear down this stair!"
LXer Feature: 08-Jun-2010
Even though all ingredients for a successful Linux tablet were ready, and the distributed software development used by FOSS is normally much quicker in replying to demands than a closed environment, Apple is already satisfying the tablet-PC market with their iPad. A viable FOSS-solution is not yet available, though Computex will ameliorate the situation.
This 'report' - provided for free to you by LXer Linux News - will show how Apple became the leader and what the competition needs to do to have a shot at all consumers who didn't buy a tablet yet. As an extra, at the end of the article, there's an explanation of why 'competition of standards' fails, harms society and screws customers.
Microsoft Cancels Innovative Courier Tablet Project
According to sources familiar with the matter, Microsoft has cancelled Courier, the folding, two-screen prototype tablet that was first uncovered by Gizmodo.
[ I'm wetting my pants ROFLing, this is the second Microsoft tablet cancelled in one day! - hkwint ]
Hewlett-Packard To Kill Windows 7 Tablet Project
The device was first unveiled by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer at CES 2010 in January and was supposed to hit the market in mid 2010. But our source tells us that HP is not satisfied with Windows 7 as a tablet operating system and has terminated the project.
[ Interesting: I've been preaching desktop-Windows and Intel x86 are not suited for tablets, smartbooks and smartphones for some months now. I've even called the JooJoo, WePad and Slate 'the Epic Fail of the decade'. Would I qualify as a TechAnalyst now? - hkwint ]
Install Multiple 'Bleeding Edge' Firefox Versions in Linux
LXer Feature: 24-Mar-2010
Whether you want to run the newest and safest version of Firefox or you want to test a new Alpha, it might happen the package manager of your Linux distribution doesn't include the version you want. In this article we'll look at ways to install the newest version beyond the package manager, and even better: Running multiple Firefox versions on the same system - even at the same time!
Eric Schmidt confirms Android (Marketplace?) for Tablets
Introducing the enTourage eDGe™ (hybrid Android eBook / Tablet)
Marvell announces $99 Moby Tablet to Revolutionize Education
Linux alternatives for the iPad - and the future of netbooks, tablets and smartbooks
LXer Feature: 19-Mar-2010
Apart from Apple, some other companies are bringing some interesting tablets. In contrary to the iTab, those other tablets do run Linux. Some are already available, such as the TouchBook from Always Innovating (AI), and some have supposedly better screens, like the Notion Ink Adam tablet. From the info available from Sola's blog on the Notion Ink tablet, from the Wikipedia-info on the iPad and AI Touchbook and from the website of the AI touchbook I made a feature table so you can compare features. Apart from that, let's take a look at the future: What technologies are coming to this market?
LXer@FOSDEM 2010: Anyone else going?
LXer Feature: 05-Feb-2010
Tonight FOSDEM 2010 starts with the beer event, and tomorrow the main conference starts. It's held again at the University 'ULB' in Brussels south-east (near the embassies) in Belgium.
Just like last year, LXer will be there. I will try to go both days to cover some talks for you. The schedule promises some interesting talks like that of Greg Koah Hartman, another talk about the RepRap 'cheap' 3D printer that prints its own parts. There's also a Mozilla-room, a distro-room, an embedded room. a KDE and a Gnome room, the Drupal room, the 20-minute Lightning talks which could be about anything and many more.
Thoughts on Youtube 'abandoning' Firefox and Opera
LXer Feature: 23-Jan-2010
A new test version of Youtube offers HTML 5 video support, meaning watching videos without Adobe Flash, but only when browsing with Chrome or Safari. While this might seem strange at first, and might sound like Google is abandoning its Firefox users, things are a little bit more complicated.
YouTube, Vimeo Ditching Flash for HTML5
(FR) IE market share drops below 60% in EU, Chrome gains
Quick stats for period between July / Dec '09:
IE loses the most in Ireland (7%), Greece, UK and the Czech Republic.
FF still around 30%, Chrome from 2 to 4%, Opera stable at ~2%, Safari from 4 to 5%.
Follow the link 'Full story' to see the full report.
English translation of the entire article will probably follow later.
iPhone & HTML5 bring "streaming Silverlight content" to Linux
LXer Feature: 26-Nov-2009
Here's a quick blog, because I'm really in hurry, so please forgive any mistakes.
Microsoft worked together with Apple to bring Silverlight video to the iPhone. What this solution basically does is take a video at the server side, cut it in parts and convert the parts to separate H.264 streams. Then stream those files to end users with IIS Media services. These have .ts extensions, a format mplayer understands.
DK: Rødovre municipality: OpenOffice will be cheaper to maintain
"OpenOffice will be cheaper to maintain and will run better than Microsoft's proprietary alternative", expects Lars Roark, IT manager at the Danish municipality of Rødovre, according to reports in Danish media.
According to Business DK, the Rødovre municipality has kept its move to OpenOffice under wraps, fearing criticism from Microsoft. According to the news site, the company is trying to get fired a colleague of Roark in the municipality Lyngby-Taarbaek, Jens Kjellerup.
FR: Internet Explorer sérieusement bousculé par ses concurrents en Europe
[Quick & dirty translation: IE8 didn't reverse the tendency of the decrease of Market Share of IE in the EU. In the contrary, the market leader is still losing ground, and is even surpassed by Firefox in certain countries (SK/HU that would be - hk). - Translation ends. If you don't read French, just look at the tables, they speak for themselves. An English translation is normally released about one month after the French article - hkwint]
Ubuntu "Stick" Blues - or USB for short
LXer Feature: 29-Oct-2009
There could be several reasons why your PC doesn't have a CD-ROM. For example, the next scenario:
- 1) You damaged the mobo fan while hoovering dust,
- 2) The new fan you bought featured adhesive tape which didn't last at 60 degrees (C), and an iron cord didn't fix it, causing the fan to fall of,
- 3) The northbridge burned,
- 4) The new 'green' AMD780G mobo you bought could not facilitate both your CD-ROM and IDE drives,
- 5) Given your IDE drives were part of a RAID array, you decided not to connect your CD-ROM drives.
OK, your reasons will probably be different, but these are mine. "Not a problem" I thought. "After all, it's 2009. Who needs CD-ROMs anyway?" The answer is: Mandriva, Gentoo, Tinycore and even Windows 7 don't, but Debian derived stuff does. It makes your life really hard, while Ubuntu is meant to make your life as a human being simple.
FR: 130,000 PCs at tax authority to get open source email client
Autodesk cannot stop you re-selling your copy
[ Note: The article is not about FOSS, but about DMCA abuse by AD - hkwint ]