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Sun desktop software exec moving to Linux specialist
Peder Ulander, the top marketing executive for Sun Microsystems' Desktop Solutions Group, is leaving the company to join embedded Linux specialist MontaVista Software, CNET News.com has learned.
Red Hat alums try new Linux angle
A group of former Red Hat employees have formed a start-up called Specifix that aims to lure customers who have customized software needs that the more established Linux company couldn't accommodate.
JBoss Application Server gets J2EE-certified
SAN FRANCISCO - Underlining the enterprise capabilities of its free, open source JBoss Application Server, JBoss Inc. on Monday plans to announce J2EE (Java 2 Enterprise Edition) certification for the product.
Commentary: Free software on Windows
I haven't used Windows very often in the past seven or eight years. I declared my independence on July 4, 1998, and I've never looked back. Recently I was issued a company laptop. It came with Windows XP preinstalled, of course, since it is an IBM ThinkPad and only Microsoft operating systems are available preloaded on IBM (and HP, and Dell) desktops and laptops destined for North American consumers. I decided for various reasons to make the ThinkPad a dual-boot machine. Color me surprised at what I've learned about the Windows platform since. Who knew there is so much free -- as in speech -- software available for Windows these days?
An Interview With Dave Wreski
LinuxSecurity.com editors have a seat with Dave Wreski, CEO of Guardian Digital, Inc. and respected author of various hardened security and Linux publications, to talk about how Guardian Digital is changing the face of IT security today.
Will open source software for Windows catch on?
Behavioral scientists will tell you that in the animal kingdom -- which includes Homo sapiens -- truly altruistic behavior is extremely rare, if it exists at all. Yet even behavior motivated by self-interest can work for the public good. There’s a cadre of historians who believes that the framers of the U.S. Constitution wrote it to protect their own landed interests, for example, yet few would deny that it worked out pretty well for the rest of us.
MySQL Moves to Quiet Licensing Critics
Open source database vendor MySQL AB is floating a new license exception among members of the Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) community in a bid to permit bundling of MySQL alongside PHP. In the view of at least one prominent member of the community though, the Free Software Foundation (FSF), backer of the GPL license that is at the root of the controversy, really doesn't represent the needs or opinion of the core base of PHP, the popular open source scripting language.
Project Looking Glass HOWTO
gclinux (Ricardo Wagemaker) has written an excellent howto so that you can install Project Looking Glass on JDS.
IBM expands job description for Linux exec
Jim Stallings, who has been general manager of corporate Linux at IBM, has taken over several other initiatives as well, IBM said Friday.
Ex-red Hatters Launch Specifix For Customizing Linux
Two former Red Hat executives said they will launch later this year a Linux platform, called Conary, that will enable customers to tailor their Linux distributions yet still get vendor support. Erik Troan, among the original employees of Red Hat who served as vice president of Product Engineering and director of Product Marketing, and Kim Knutilla, a former Cygnus executive and Red Hat vice president of Engineering Services, this week revealed their platform plans and launched the company they co-founded, Specifix. The company is based in San Jose, Calif. Knutilla is Specifix CEO.
Sun setting on an era?
Traditionally, the end of an era is marked by terrible portents and cataclysmic events. As signs go, the sight of Sun's Scott McNealy exchanging banter (and hockey shirts) with Microsoft's Steve Ballmer might seem mild enough, but the shift it represents is indeed epochal. The two companies come from very different backgrounds: Microsoft grew from the world of the first personal computers, Sun from workstations. But as their ambitions overlapped in the networked business world, Scott McNealy's strategy has been increasingly defined by his fierce and vocal opposition to Microsoft, especially once the latter took over from IBM as the driving force in computing.
ELX Linux Sets the Pace With Biz Desk 4.0
ELX Linux, the Hyderabad-based Linux distributor, is overwhelmed with the sales of its Biz Desk 4.0 Linux and claims that it is months ahead of the competition. Manojit Majumdar, head-sales, ELX, explained, "When we started selling three months ago over the Internet, the response was very encouraging and we set up a channel in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh. We will now be building our channel in Delhi and Bangalore as well."
Sun adds JES to open source candidates
Sun Microsystems Inc. said this week that it is thinking about offering some of its Java Enterprise System (JES) under an open source license, although no final decisions have been made.
Microsoft applauds open-source procurement memo
Opponents of open source software applauded a recent memorandum from the Office of Management and Budget that they claim puts proprietary software on competitive footing with open source software in federal procurements. “We think it’s a great memo,” said Bill Guidera, policy counsel for Microsoft Corp. of Redmond, Wash., referring to a letter issued to agency CIOs and senior procurement officials by OMB IT and e-government administrator Karen Evans.
Running free with Linux
As Wi-Fi become ubiquitous, Linux has jumped on the bandwagon. In this article, Roman Vichr explains how Linux has helped -- and been helped by -- a number of wireless tools and projects. Linux, Linux, Linux -- the versatile, stable, scalable, diverse, and competitive platform has gone wireless. It's becoming the universal tool for almost everything, and it has found its place in wireless solutions, from desktops and servers with wireless access to access point systems. Learn more about how Linux is enhancing wireless networking.
Apache's Maven Comes of Age
One of the most critical parts of Java development is understanding the complete state of a development effort as quickly as possible. That's the goal of Apache's Maven project, which released its milestone 1.0 release this week. "Maven has a long history of pushing out beta after beta, so this is definitely an important release," Jason Van Zyl, Maven architect release manager, told internetnews.com. "For users it means that they will have something reliable now for their production builds."
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