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NewsVac: News from around the Web

  • As OpenSocial matures, the cloud becomes a focus 4 days, 3 hours ago
    What started out as Google's effort to create a common API for developing gadgets for social-networking services is becoming more of a full-fledged, cloud development platform.
  • CUPS: How to Manage Multiple Printers 1 month, 3 weeks ago
    In this article by Ankur Shah, you will see how to manage multiple printers at a time. Unlike other printing systems, CUPS features a way to let you select a group of printers to print a job instead of selecting just one. In that way, if one printer is busy or down, another printer can be automatically selected to perform the job. Such groupings of printers are called printer classes.
  • Is DNSSEC the answer to Internet security? 4 months, 1 week ago
    The technology to secure the DNS system has been around for four years, yet many servers don't use it.
  • Samba team receives Microsoft protocol documentation 11 months, 1 week ago
    "Today the Protocol Freedom Information Foundation (PFIF), a non-profit organization created by the Software Freedom Law Center, signed an agreement with Microsoft to receive the protocol documentation needed to fully interoperate with the Microsoft Windows workgroup server products and to make them available to Free Software projects such as Samba. Microsoft was required to make this information available to competitors as part of the European Commission March 24th 2004 Decision in the antitrust lawsuit, after losing their appeal against that decision on September 17th 2007 .... "
  • Advanced Message Queue Protocol to Commoditize Messaging 2 years, 5 months ago
    Floyd Marinescu writes "The Advanced Message Queuing Protocol (AMQP) has been announced today by JP Morgan Chase, RedHat, Twist, Cisco, Iona, and others. AMQP is an open specification for queue-based messaging that is technology agnostic and completely interoperable; it aims commoditize the messaging middleware industry and provide true interoperability across technology stacks in any language or operating system. RedHat will also be implementing AMQP into their operating system much like SendMail implements SMTP."
  • RFCs repository with keyword indexes 2 years, 11 months ago
    Miloslav Nic writes "RFC-Ref.org - a repository of 4000+ crosslinked RFC documents with KEYWORD INDEXES has been opened. Click at protocol keyword in RFC 2324 to learn more about Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol. The site features indexes both to serious as well as humorous RFCs."
  • The Gospel of Secondaries by Protocol 3 years ago
    Guest writes "Clouds of Darkness gather above the Internet as Vendors make it ever easier for the Unannointed to Lay Hands upon the Arcane Protocols that protect Humankind from Anarchy. Email Battles goes biblical..."
  • Feds slacking in shift to next-generation IPv6 3 years, 4 months ago
    The federal government is hoping to shift all of its computers to run on the next-generation Internet by 2008, but so far only the Defense Department seems to be ready for the switch.
  • A new mail protocol Please.... 4 years, 8 months ago
    Kelly McNeill writes "If you're frustrated with the current status of e-mail innovation you're not alone. The growing number of e-mail insecurities and exploits seem to grow exponentially every day. Has e-mail innovation hit its peak for innovative technology or is there opportunity for new advances? The following osViews editorial contributer has some compelling ideas for advancements in the way of e-mail communication that are worth hearing."
  • NC State Scientists Develop Breakthrough Internet Protocol 4 years, 8 months ago
    Researchers in North Carolina State Universityâs Department of Computer Science have developed a new data transfer protocol for the Internet that makes todayâs high-speed Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) connections seem lethargic.
  • Who Will Win the SMTP Authentication Wars? 4 years, 8 months ago
    Probably the single biggest news out of last week's RSA conference was Microsoft's announcement of its Caller ID for E-Mail standard. Caller ID may be the third of the three major proposals that have been announced, but now that Microsoft has put its cards on the table, a great experiment will begin. Over the next year or so, the big players in e-mail--ISPs, software vendors, major corporate users and the government--will see which of them works best.
  • IEEE Inadvertently Forcing Consumers to Adopt Alternate 802.11g Standard 5 years, 6 months ago
    Eric peterson writes "Earlier this week, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. (aka. IEEE) finally approved an official standard for 802.11g. Unfortunately, the new standard is one third the speed that was previously promised by the organization.
  • Where are the Zeroconf IM clients? 5 years, 7 months ago
    Eric Peterson writes "Oscast published an interesting editorial about an individual being turned on to Zeroconf networking and wanting to utilize the technology in an IM client due to the technology's ability to remain confined to an internal network (tight security) all while never having to install an IM server. Because of these reasons, Zeroconf IMHO is the most ideal instant messaging solution for business. Unfortunately, you'd never know it. PC client software is virtually non-existent."
  • TightVNC: Remote X the fast, easy & secure way 5 years, 9 months ago
    Joe Barr writes "All in all, TightVNC was as easy to configure and use as it was to install, even when I opted for extra privacy by using a secure tunnel between Susan's machine and mine. Here's how I did it."
  • Portable.NET Now 100% Free Software 5 years, 12 months ago
    Slashdotr discussion: rhysweatherley writes "Finally after months of hard work and bucket loads of caffeine, the DotGNU community has finally got Portable.NET to the point of...
  • More News

Linux.com : Protocols

Samba Project to provide Windows protocol access to all open source developers

By Bruce Byfield on December 27, 2007 (6:22:57 PM)

Thanks to the Samba project, documentation about Windows networking protocols is now available to free software developers who want it. With the help of the Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) and the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE), Samba has hammered out an agreement for obtaining the documentation and has set up the new Protocol Freedom Information Foundation (PFIF) to make it accessible to other free software projects.

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The Etherboot/gPXE BoF from LinuxWorld 2007 (videos)

By Robin 'Roblimo' Miller on August 23, 2007 (9:00:00 AM)

EtherBoot isn't an application you install on your Linux desktop, but if you run computers that boot over a network -- or would like to explore network booting for either fun or profit -- it is an essential free software project.

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OpenSSH's de Raadt: We've passed SSH.com in usage

By JT Smith on February 25, 2002 (8:00:00 AM)
- By Grant Gross -
A year after a trademark fight between SSH Communications Security and the Open Source OpenSSH project, the use of OpenSSH has skyrocketed, at least according to numbers from OpenSSH.

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Bluetooth basics: What the heck does it do?

By JT Smith on November 20, 2000 (8:00:00 AM)
- by Dan Berkes -
If they build it, will you buy it? In the year to come, many computer manufacturers are pinning their hopes on a new wireless technology named Bluetooth. The amount of hype generated for this product is extraordinary, especially when you consider that this time around, it's not a closed source-only party.

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