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The People Behind KDE is going on summer recess. We end the current series of interviews with a subject I am passionate about, and think it's one of the most important and underrated projects within KDE, accessibility. We'll meet the person behind the name with the Dt, one of the driving forces behind KDE's Accessibility Project, the man who loves Penguins and classical music, Gunnar Schmi Dt!
Big Blue's mainframe gathers no rust
Mainframe customers are taking a fresh look at the Big Iron that celebrated its 40th birthday last month. IBM is spurring things along with new pricing schemes; more powerful processors; support for non-proprietary technologies such as TCP/IP, Linux and Java; and on-demand offerings that put the mainframe in the reach of even the smallest customers.
Why I chose Firefox over Epiphany for my GNOME desktop
After all the recent announcements concerning cooperation and integration between the Mozilla Foundation and the GNOME Foundation, I decided to compare GNOME's Ephiphany Web browser to Mozilla's Firefox. I installed Epiphany 1.0.6 and Firefox 0.8 on a Debian "Sarge" GNU/Linux system. After about a week, I came away feeling that Firefox is unquestionably the better browser.
Fedora Core 2 looks like it's on schedule
It looks like Fedora Core 2, a project sponsored by Red Hat, is getting ready to roll. Over this weekend Core 2 is being pushed onto mirror sites and an official announcement may come as soon as this coming week.
Billing error overcharges some Mandrakesoft customers by $1000s
Mandrakesoft may be enjoying financial freedom by exiting bankruptcy protection, but at least a few of its loyal users have not been so fortunate this weekend. An apparent glitch in order processing has resulted in some customers being overcharged by thousands of dollars. Early reports indicate that only North American customers that made purchases through Visa in early May are affected.
Debian mourns the Loss of two Project Members
Recently, the Debian Project has lost two members of its community. Manuel Estrada Sainz (ranty) and Andrés García (ErConde) were killed in a tragic car accident while returning from the Free Software conference held at Valencia, Spain.
From Adam Smith to Open Source
In 1776, the British economist Adam Smith theorized in the "The Wealth of Nations" that "invisible hand" market forces are the primary influences in a free market economy. Does the economic model of the world, as predicted by Smith over 228 years ago, apply to the modern concept of free and open source software?
New book promises to explain the mysteries of Linux
NoStarch Press has released "How Linux Works -- What Every Superuser Should Know." The book targets competent Linux users who want to learn more about filesystems, the Linux boot process, system management, networking, shell scripts, and more. Author Brian Ward's previous books include "The Linux Problem Solver" and "The Book of VMware." He also authored the Linux Kernel HOWTO.
Metrowerks Tools to Play Host to Linux
Developers needing to build, debug and compile an embedded Linux kernel from a Linux-hosted workstation are the target for Metrowerks’ release this month of an edition of its CodeWarrior Development Studio IDE for ARM-, ColdFire- and PowerPC-based devices. The company demonstrated the new tool at the Smart Networks Developer Forum in Dallas in late April.
Opinion: The Changing Sun
Sun Microsystems, once a great enterprise computer company, has been shrinking. Sun is also shrinking in other ways, such as the enterprise-only part, by entering to the consumer markets. Sun has getting slow at some things, such as copying off competitors.
Linux stocks at lofty valuations - - analysts
Linux may be free software, but shares of Linux providers have become very expensive as investors bet that the fast-growing operating system can chip away at the dominance of Microsoft Corp.'s Windows. For stock investors looking to hitch their money to Linux, which is being more widely adopted by businesses seeking to lower their technology costs, analysts warned this week that there is no such thing as a free ride.
Why Linux Users Hate Red Hat, And Why It Really Doesn't Matter
Linux& Open-Source Center Editor Steven Vaughan-Nichols knows that many Linux fans hate Red Hat. His message to them: Get over it.
ANNOUNCE: GNOME 2.6.1 Desktop & Developer Platform
This point release from the stable branch of the GNOME Desktop and Developer Platform contains a lot of bugfixes and improvements over the previously released 2.6.0 version.
Red Hat updating both Linux versions
Red Hat, the top-ranked seller of the Linux operating system, has expanded chip support for its corporate version of the open-source operating system and plans a major change to Fedora, its hobbyist product, in coming days.
Will EJB 3.0 turn J2EE thinking on its head?
Developers got their first view into what may be the future of Java development during last week's TheServerSide Java Symposium. What's in store for Enterprise Java Beans, in fact, may put some long-held Java thinking on its head -- literally.
Is Linux at the gates of the factory?
[ A Linux intro story for automation fans, with a few errors (most notably the author asserting that Linus patented Linux. :) ]
gumstix Introduces Smallest Commercially Available Linux Boards And Computers
The world's smallest commercially available Linux boards and computers were officially introduced today by gumstix, inc., a start-up that produces and sells high performance Single Board Computers (SBCs) and peripherals. Based on Intel's PXA255 processor with Xscale technology, gumstix tiny boards measure 20mm x 80mm x 8mm. At nearly half the price of and a third the size of competitors, gumstix enables software developers to create smaller and more price conscious embedded devices, applications and products for the growing Linux market
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