Showing headlines posted by dcparris

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Dunc-Tank continues to make splash

Dunc-Tank, the unofficial organization set up to fund selected Debian activities, has made its first experimental payment to release managers, but community members are still debating whether a missed deadline and the alleged demotivation of some programmers make the experiment a failure.

The Real Firefox-Killer

Firefox fans will be facing 2007 with more tranquillity than they did 2006. A year ago, it was clear that Firefox's free ride was about to end: after an astonishing five years of inactivity, Microsoft was finally launching an updated version of Internet Explorer. There seems little doubt that much of Firefox's success is down to the fact that Internet Explorer was so bad, both in terms of the eternal round of security problems and its general technical tiredness (half a decade is a very long time in computing.)

Pull in HDTV with Linux and the HD-5500

  • Linux.com; By Paul Virijevich (Posted by dcparris on Jan 3, 2007 5:59 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
I've spent the past few years using an ATI TV Wonder analog video capture card running under Linux. Although this card has served me well, times and technology have been a'changin'. That's why I recently purchased a pcHDTV HD-5500 to see if HDTV was all it was hyped up to be. I can report that HDTV under Linux is not only possible, it's downright fantastic.

Linux File Services: Good Things Arrive in Fours

  • EnterpriseNetworkingPlanet; By Carla Schroder (Posted by dcparris on Jan 3, 2007 4:54 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups: Linux
Neither the ext4 filesystem nor Samba 4 are ready for prime-time yet, but they are chock-full of promise and potential, so let's take a look at what they are promising to deliver.

Ajax-enabled Animated Flash Charts for Web Applications From ...

FusionCharts v3 Lets Users Create Animated, Interactive and Data-Driven Flash Charts & Graphs for Web Apps

Ubuntu User and Member Ryan Lortie Writes Open Letter to Free ...

He raises some big points dealing with the goals of the FSF and how to accomplish them

Best OF ECT NEWS Copyright Law Key to Global Free Software Model

The existence of legal systems without robust enforcement of copyright law, in countries where software development is a highly robust enterprise, is a serious threat to the free software model.

The year of the Linux desktop!

You'll see these words in more than one article penned by the pundits. Every year since about 2003 has been called the year of the Linux desktop - and then, when that fails to transpire, those who predict these things set about rehashing their predictions for the next year.

Firefox 3 To Support Microformats

We first looked at microformats back in September at the Web Apps Summit, but in spite of the promise of microformats, not many sites have been quick to adopt them. However that may change soon since Mozilla says that Firefox 3 will support microformats. But before we get into Firefox 3, there’s a new add-on, Operator, available now that brings the power of microformats to existing versions of Firefox.

Audi's new luxury cars engineered on Linux

For several years, German automobile manufacturer Audi AG, a subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group, has been steadily migrating its engineering systems over to Linux. The company hopes to finish the job in 2007 and have the bulk of its servers and workstations running 64-bit Linux by the end of the year.

Market analyst predicts enterprise Linux surge

Nearly half the world's large businesses will use Linux on desktops or in servers by the end of 2011, Saugatuck Technology predicts. "The data are especially impressive when looking at the expected growth in the number of companies moving beyond 'proof of concept' by the end of the decade," the analyst firm said.

Big Blue cheaper than Red Hat

Fresh light on mainframe total cost of ownership reveals Big Blue's big iron is cheaper than a roomful of servers. Research house Illuminata's report, "IBM System z TCO: Man Bites Dog," shows that running 10 to 50 applications on a mainframe costs less than running the same workload on a one server/one application basis where the servers run Linux or Solaris.

Long-term Fedora Linux support ending

Lack of contributions from outside programmers, funding among reasons why Fedora Legacy project is winding down.

64-bit beta of SimplyMEPIS Linux arrives

MEPIS LLC released Beta 1 of its SimplyMEPIS-64 Version 6.0-4 last week, a mere seven days after the project team released its 32-bit version of the same system. The release features a security-patched 2.6.15 kernel and the KDE 3.5.3 desktop.

Mozilla Discloses 2005 Revenues: $53M

While the most interesting thing about Mozilla is most definitely its excellent Firefox browser, it’s also noteworthy that the non-profit makes quite a bit of money. Today, Mozilla CEO Mitchell Baker wrote on her blog that the Mozilla Foundation (which owns the subsidiary Mozilla Corporation, created in part to deal with the cash flow) made $52.9 million in revenue in 2005.

Let's hope Amsterdam's Linux interest

It's heartening to see so many large Dutch public sector organisations looking at open source.

Wish List for the New Year

  • Linux DevCenter; By Carla Schroder (Posted by dcparris on Jan 3, 2007 5:48 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups: Linux
I’m not going to indulge in the shopworn habit of doing a year-end review or making predictions for the new year. Feh. Old mold and who cares. Instead, I am going to share my list of Most Wanted Computer Things.

Linux Group to Simplify Software Installation

  • LinuxWatch; By Steven J. Vaughn-Nichols (Posted by dcparris on Jan 3, 2007 5:15 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups: Linux
Developers are uniting to create an API intended to make it easier to install software on Linux systems for ISVs and users. (Linux-Watch)

Women at the 8th International Free Software Forum in Brazil

From the WikiChix mailing list, Drica Veloso writes to say that G2G, a women-only group, will be going en masse to the 8th International Free Software Forum, April 12-14, in Porto Alegre, Brazil.

[Now, if we can get them to a LUG meeting in Charlotte... - dcparris]

Exit Interview: Why Open Source Guru Left Novell

Jeremy Allison is a hero in the open source community these days. After spending two years at Novell, he decided to leave the Waltham, Mass.-based software company for reasons of principle right after the Linux-vendor signed a deal with Microsoft (see Microsoft, Novell in Linux Pact and Open-Source Guru Goes to Google).

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