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Your home directory is the place where you keep your own files. Good organizational skills and some foresight will help keep your "home" in order. Here are some hints for organizing your home directory.
Linux sales growth beats Windows
Linux is gaining in popularity as a server operating system, according to the latest market data from research company IDC.
Why Modern Marketing Loves Open Source
For Modern Marketeers the Open Source Movement provides some great lessons in the power of online communities. It may all sound like a geeky cult but open source is actually a way of working that involves huge, web-based collaborations among far-flung individuals and a shared, or open, approach to intellectual property rights. Instead of maintaining a tight grip on any findings resulting from a project, open sourcers share new knowledge in a central bank of information (often programming code) that anyone else can access and use for free, albeit within a set of usage criteria.
Linux slashes costs for bank giant
Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein uses Linux on Intel servers to cut running costs by 45% One of the biggest investment banks in Europe is using Linux for up to 70% of its new IT projects after finding that running the open source operating system on Intel-based servers cut running costs by nearly half.
Sybase taps IBM to help sell database software
Sybase said Tuesday that it will partner with hardware vendor IBM to market its Linux database software, potentially dealing a blow to Sun Microsystems, another long-standing partner.
The Secrets of Open-Source Managing
Computer-game maker Valve Software had high hopes for Half-Life 2, an eagerly anticipated sci-fi shoot-'em-up thriller that had been five years in the making. And when the game finally became available over the Internet last year, fans were ecstatic. There was just one problem: Valve hadn't actually released the game. Instead, the code had been snatched by hackers, who'd posted it online for anyone to download. "This could have been a real hit to our bottom line," says Valve marketing chief Doug Lombardi.
Linux for Suits: Grass Roots vs. Giant Roars
While big-name companies scramble to protect business models, this company is making open-ended devices that give customers the right to control their own telephone and media experiences.
Microsoft's Beijing win raises concerns in China
There is growing disquiet about public sector IT contracts being awarded to Western vendors in China, a country long known for its fondness of open-source and homegrown companies.
Father Of Linux Pushes No Patent Movement
Linus Torvalds (Linux), Michael Widenius (MySQL) and Rasmus Lerdorf (PHP) have urged the EU Council not to adopt a draft directive on software patents that they consider "deceptive, dangerous, and democratically illegitimate." They also called on the Internet community to express solidarity by placing NoSoftwarePatents.com links and banners on their websites.
The open source wiki behind Wikipedia
A wiki is a software platform for contributing, sharing, and managing content. Any group that has a need for a collaborative user driven content environment can benefit from using a wiki. Perhaps the most prominent example on the Web of a wiki in heavily active, popular usage today is Wikipedia, which is, as you might expect, a wiki-based encyclopedia. The Wikimedia Foundation uses as the basis of Wikipedia a GPL-licensed application called MediaWiki, and so can you.
Sun And Open Source
We don't even yet know what Sun means by "open source", but already the pundits are arguing about whether making Solaris "open source" (whatever that turns out to mean) will help them or hurt them.
Official Launch Of The "Open Source Consortium"
A coalition of over 60 European Open Source service providers have united to form the Open Source Consortium, (OSC) an independent reference point to give an unbiased “proprietary-vendor free” voice for all organisations deploying or contemplating the Open Source alternative. The consortium which is borne out of a fusion between the Open Source movement and prime-mover demand from areas such as the Public Sector, aims to bring impartial clarity to the debate.
IBM signs Brazilian Linux training pact
IBM has signed a deal to provide training in Linux and open-source software to 980 employees in the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, the company said Monday. Brazil is an aggressive adopter of the operating system and other open-source software.
Say hello to XMPP
The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is the formalized incarnation of the Jabber instant message protocol. But what exactly does that formalization mean? And why should you care?
New open source industry group opens its doors
A coalition of service providers claims it will shake up the open source market by offering an alternative to the larger vendors. It also aims to counter the claims made by Microsoft that open source is the more expensive option. The Open Source Consortium, a grouping of more than 60 companies has been established to offer, what it claims is an unbiased "proprietary-vendor free" voice for all organisations contemplating an Open Source roll-out.
Hackers deface SCO site
Hackers defaced SCO Group's Web site on Monday, targeting the company's controversial claims to elements of the Linux operating system.
OpenOffice.org Grows Up, Gets Help
OpenOffice.org's namesake suite turned 4 last month, and in a sign of just how far the open-source productivity suite has come, a commercially supported version of the software for Windows is now available.
Open source community attacks Sun
SUN CEO Jonathan Schwartz's claim that his Java Community Process is the only true open source has greatly miffed the open source movement. Eric Raymond, president of the Open Source Initiative, has hit out in an open letter that Schwartz's claims that Linux didn't even get a vote when it came to being close to the open source ideals.
Veterans Dept checks open-source options
The Commonwealth Department of Veterans Affairs is considering installing open-source software on its desktop computers as it continues a wide-ranging technology revamp that has taken in almost all of its information systems.
Flash Linux released
Flash Linux is a compact distribution designed to run off 256Mb USB keys. It includes hardware detection, auto configuration, a fairly complete Gnome 2.8 desktop, and associated office tools. Ideal if you want to try out Gnome 2.8 without touching your current system with over 50Mb of storage left after installation. Note that this is a first release, it should however be pretty usable and stable.
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