Showing headlines posted by Sander_Marechal

« Previous ( 1 ... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 ... 120 ) Next »

BenQ to launch Linux ultramobile device in Q2

Taiwan's BenQ is showing off a new user interface on an ultramobile PC that it plans to start marketing in the second quarter of this year, a spokeswoman for the company said Tuesday. The device is being displayed at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona as part of BenQ's new mobile offerings. It was first shown at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this year. BenQ's MID sports a Linux operating system, but the company tweaked the user interface to work more closely with its functions.

From counterculture flag to corporate gold star

In today's IT environment, new applications and platforms are transitioning to Linux, and there is an underlying concern that this means new people have to go with the platform. According to David Christian, CTO of Mindbridge Software, when a client's operating system platform is to change from Windows to Linux, one of the main issues that concern them is whether their staffs have the ability to support Linux. However, surprisingly, he finds that many are already familiar with Linux.

GNU's upcoming 25-year anniversary

Bruce Perens' 10 year look back at the "Open Source" marketing campaign reminded me of another anniversary coming up. On September 27th, it'll be the 25-year anniversary of the GNU project's announcement, and thus, of the free software movement. That's a biggie. What to do?

Farmer gives low-cost laptop a proper field test

From his hot, dusty, locust-plagued property in the NSW outback, a software engineer who goes by the name Quozl is doing his bit to help educate 1.5 billion of the world's poorest children. James Cameron has spent the past two years testing prototypes of a low-cost robust laptop called XO designed especially for children in developing countries. He devotes up to five hours a day to his volunteer work for the US charity One Laptop Per Child, which began mass producing the "green machines" in November.

Debian & APT - Why I love it

don’t want to say its the best, but I’ve been using Debian, Ubuntu and other APT based Linuxes for years now. Ubuntu on desktop PC’s and Debian on Servers (only because I have a few servers already on Debian and keeping all identical is worth doing). I don’t run GUI’s on my servers. I pretty much use Debian in favour of other linuxes because it is free, and updates are also free. Why do I personally use Debian on my home servers - the main answer is APT.

Everex Zonbu Notebook Review

  • PC Magazine; By Cisco Cheng (Posted by Sander_Marechal on Feb 13, 2008 5:40 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Reviews; Groups:
The Zonbu PC, a $99 miniature desktop that debuted earlier this year, generated some excitement among those with shallow pockets—at least until they saw the fine print. You have to pay the two-year subscription plan (ranging anywhere from $12.95 to $19.95 per month) up front before you can call the desktop your own. In return, you get around-the-clock technical support, 25GB to 100GB worth of online storage, and the comfort of knowing that you'll never have to update your PC manually again. The plan worked well enough that Zonbu decided to take its subscription-based services on the road, in the form of a laptop. The Everex Zonbu Notebook, which launched earlier this year, loads Gentoo Linux and runs on green, or energy-efficient, parts furnished by VIA.

Sri Lanka to introduce one laptop per child

Two-million primary school children are to be provided with US$ 100-worth laptops under a farsighted initiative. Director OLPC Europe, Middle East and Asia Matt Keller, in an interview with The Sunday Times FT, said the World Bank has stepped into fund a pilot project to introduce laptops as an educational tool in nine provinces in the island. OLPC Lanka Foundation has been set up to implement this massive education project aimed at supplying this learning tool into rural children’s hands.

Citrix Puts the Xen Brand Everywhere, Previews XenServer 4.1

  • IT Jungle; By Timothy Prickett Morgan (Posted by Sander_Marechal on Feb 13, 2008 4:05 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: News Story; Groups:
With XenServer 4.1, Citrix is working to integrate its Xen hypervisor and the tools that wrap around it with the sophisticated snapshotting and replication software that is already part of the popular disk arrays that are in use by businesses today. The XenServer 4.1 update will also include support for 10 Gigabit Ethernet adapters, 64-bit Linux guest operating systems, and Ethernet network interface bonding.

First batch of LiMo mobile Linux devices readied for battle against Microsoft, Nokia

The LiMo Foundation is making steady progress on its goal to make Linux a popular mobile operating system. At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, several key LiMo vendors including Motorola, Samsung, NEC and Panasonic announced as promised the first set of LiMo-compliant handsets while LG, Aplix and Purple Labs showed off prototypes and reference handsets. A total of 18 LiMo models were launched at the event, including six from Motorola, four from Panasonic and NEC and one from Samsung. These included Motorola’s much anticipated RAZR V8 and V8 Luxury Edition and Samsung’s SGH-i800.

Linux Got Game: Alien Arena 2007 Review

Alien Arena 2007 is a free/open-source first-person shooter game based on source code released by id Software. Started by COR Entertainment in 2004, the game combines a 1950s-era sci-fi atmosphere with gameplay similar to the Quake, Doom, and Unreal Tournament series. Alien Arena is primarily an online multiplayer action game, although single player campaigns are also available against bots. I finally had the chance to set-up and play Alien Arena last weekend.

The World Watches As OSIW Kicks Off In Bengaluru!

ndia's premier event on Linux and Open Source -- Open Source India Week 2008 (OSIW) -- has just got under way, with the stage set and the big shots of the open source world in at Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru. The CTO Summit -- the first and one-of-its-kind session -- kick-started with the keynote of one of the open source powerhouses, Brian Behlendorf. He is the man behind Apache Web servers that run more than 60 per cent of the world's website.

Red Hat gunning for $1 billion in revenue

Newly appointed Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst is aiming to bring Red Hat, an open-source vendor with just below $500 million in revenue as of last year, into the billion-dollar range in the next three years. If you recall, Jim Whitehurst left his position as COO of Delta Airlines, replacing Matt Szulik who stepped down after nine years for family health reasons on January 1. Matt Szulik is now the chairman of Red Hat’s board of directors.

Lock-In

  • Schneier on Security; By Bruce Schneier (Posted by Sander_Marechal on Feb 13, 2008 12:27 AM EDT)
  • Story Type: Editorial; Groups:
Computer companies want more control over the products they sell you, and they're resorting to increasingly draconian security measures to get that control. The reasons are economic. With enough lock-in, a company can protect its market share even as it reduces customer service, raises prices, refuses to innovate and otherwise abuses its customer base. It should be no surprise that this sounds like pretty much every experience you've had with IT companies: Once the industry discovered lock-in, everyone started figuring out how to get as much of it as they can.

Trolltech blesses Qtopia with finger-friendly touch, Outlook sync support

Mobile Linux flagbearer Trolltech appears to be carrying on at a nice clip in the wake of its acquisition by Nokia, and for its Qtopia Phone Edition platform, things just got a little sweeter. The company is using MWC as its stage to announce version 4.3, which is actually a good deal more revolutionary than its one-tenth increment would lead on.

Punct Contrapunct

“The Burton Group has denigrated the work and the members of the OASIS Open Document Format Technical Committee (of which I am Co-Chair) with published statements that have been shown to be false. The Burton Group owes us an apology and an immediate retraction. Waiting until after February, after the DIS 29500 process concludes, to make corrections is unacceptable. Since your stated purpose in making this report public was to "advance the debate" in the current OOXML ISO process, withholding factual corrections until after that process concludes would imply that you and the Burton Group see no problems with knowingly persisting in influencing an ISO ballot with false information published under the Burton Group name.”

[Them's fighting words! - Sander]

Sun nabs innotek's 20MB of open source, virtualized goodness

Sun Microsystems has gone very granola by buying desktop virtualization software player innotek. (The small 'i' stands for big innovation or something like that.) Innotek pushes software called VirtualBox (less than 20MB) that lets developers run multiple operating systems and display them side-by-side on their screen. So, you can hop back and forth, testing your code across Windows, Linux, Mac and OpenSolaris. Beyond the development angle, VirtualBox handles basis PC and server virtualization tasks.

Small-scale SNMP reporting

The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is a useful tool for examining the state of devices on a network. The open source world offers a number of consoles designed to manage the information from these devices and produce reports. However, there are circumstances in which access to the devices at a more customizable level is more beneficial. Given that the programming involved is minimal, it is worth considering custom applications for SNMP reporting.

DFAT rolls out Linux-based management appliances

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has started deploying Linux-based Opengear console servers to remotely monitor and manage its international locations, including Australian Embassies, Consulates, High Commissions and territories. DFAT has already installed 16 Opengear CM4116 console managers to eight international sites with over 200 scheduled for installation over the next three years.

More heavyweights join mobile Linux group

Orange and Access have become the latest companies to join the LiMo Foundation, a consortium aimed at promoting mobile Linux. The companies announced their LiMo memberships here on Monday at the Mobile World Congress. Both companies come bearing gifts. The European operator Orange plans to launch a "fully open, Linux-powered handset" in partnership with Access and fellow LiMo member Samsung Electronics. Japanese Linux company Access brings with it an established developer network that was acquired when it bought PalmSource and its Palm OS (which became Garnet) in 2005.

Tux Love

  • PCWorld New Zealand; By Geoff Palmer (Posted by Sander_Marechal on Feb 12, 2008 2:05 PM EDT)
  • Story Type: Humor; Groups: Linux
From the Propeller Head Dept. Call me a propeller head, but I recently found myself chuckling at a collection of Linux compile and configuration messages on a German site.

[An older article, but I haven't seen it before. It made be laugh quite a bit :-) - Sander]

« Previous ( 1 ... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 ... 120 ) Next »