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Analysts: Athlon bests Pentium 4, Intel beats Transmeta

Author: JT Smith

From a PC World story about chip tests: “The Athlon’s victory is just one of several that seems to indicate the analysts’ preference
for chips with tried and true technologies over sweeping new designs. In addition to
choosing the Athlon instead of the P4, analysts picked Intel’s Mobile Pentium III with
SpeedStep over Transmeta’s much hyped but poorly reviewed Crusoe CPU, and Sun’s
UltraSPARC III over Intel’s highly anticipated new Itanium.”

Category:

  • Unix

Linux Weekly tabloid to be published

Author: JT Smith

From BusinessWire: Product, Company and Technology Focus

SYS-CON Media, the world’s leading i-technology publisher, announced today that the first issue of Linux Weekly (www.LinuxWeekly.net), its
latest title, will be available March 15, 2001. Linux Weekly will initially be published on the first and the fifteenth of each month and a 24 times per year
schedule. Starting in October 2001, the tabloid will be published weekly, and will also be available on the newsstands in Germany, Austria, and
Switzerland under the name Linux Woche.

NVIDIA 0.9-6 drivers; blessing or bane?

Author: JT Smith

Avatar writes: “Evil3D would like to inform you that we have posted a driver comparision for the new Linux drivers from NVIDIA. Currently it only takes in benchmarks for a Geforce2 Ultra card, but we decided to post it anyhow as a problem has been discovered when using in conjunction with GeForce2 GTS & GeForce2 Ultra cards. Card owners may want to check this out before upgrading.”

Category:

  • Unix

Apple readies Mac OS X Server update

Author: JT Smith

MacWeek reports that the other version of Mac OS X, Server, is due for a “technical and cosmetic facelift early this year.” The OS will probably end up with the Aqua desktop interface and an updated version of AppleShare IP.

Category:

  • Unix

Caldera on proprietary trail

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet UK reports on Caldera’s new proprietary Linux code, commenting on “a growing trend among Linux distributors to
develop proprietary code to differentiate themselves.”

Category:

  • Linux

Defenses still weak against DDoS attacks

Author: JT Smith

A year after several high-profile sites were hit with distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, most sites are still unprepared to deal with intrusions. ZDNet reports that defenses are almost so uniformly weak that it probably wouldn’t take much work to repeat the damage of last year’s attacks.

Category:

  • Linux

Investment in Ximian will help bring Gnome to the masses

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

With a new $15 million investment to play with, the Gnome services company formerly known as Helix Code has more resources to convert non-believers to the Open Source/Free Software desktop and to give those potential converts even more reason to make the switch.

The commercial face to Gnome, which recently changed its name to Ximian, announced this week that Charles River Ventures and Battery Ventures invested the money, and CTO Miguel de Icaza seems to have dozens of ideas to improve the Open Source desktop experience.

“We can tackle problems we couldn’t tackle before,” says de Icaza. “This opens the door to many developments … and we can help bring Gnome to more people.”

One of the top priorities, de Icaza says, is to develop relationships with companies such as hardware vendors, so that Open Source software can come pre-installed. “We’re trying to win users over from Windows, and we’re trying to get people to make the choice for Free Software,” he says. “We need to have the tools for people to actually make the choice, instead of saying, ‘We don’t have the resources to train millions of users.’ “

Among the features this investment will help Ximian speed along:

  • Ximian set-up tools, a group of easy-to-use system administration tools that would replace the “really, really bad” tools that each Linux distribution now has, de Icaza says. Simple things, such as setting the date, are still too difficult for the end user in most distributions, he adds. The Ximian tools would work across Linux distributions and other operating systems that run Gnome, including Solaris and *BSD.
  • Location management for laptops: A set of tools that would allow a laptop user to save his laptop settings for different locations where he uses the laptop. The user could change all the system settings including the Internet connection commands and the printer configuration — even the time zone — with a click of the mouse.
  • Time travel: Have you ever messed with your computer, hoping to make it work better, only to mess something else up? Time travel would allow you to “snapshot” your computer at any point, so you could reset your computer’s settings to the way they were two days ago, or a week ago. “It lets you travel back in the configuration of the system,” de Icaza says.

de Icaza says end users no longer seem to be scared off by the old perception that Linux lacks a human-usable desktop, but are still worried by mysterious warnings in the command line interface, by setup problems, and by lack of plug-and-play support. These are among the issues he plans to tackle with the new investment.

“I think Gnome has reached the point in which, yes, we do have the applications, and yes, we do have the usability, yes, we can right now replace the desktop system if you are an expert systems administrator,” he says. “But we need to work together with other companies, we need to work together with other distributions to make sure that the distributions people pick are end-user enabled.”

NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.

Category:

  • Linux

Netscape has new president

Author: JT Smith

Network World Fusion reports on the appointment of Netscape’s next president, Jim Bankoff. The article says that “Bankoff will be responsible for directing business operations and managing the continued growth of Netscape.com and for the Netbusiness initiative, an online business resource Web site targeted at smaller business owners.” Oh, and don’t forget the Web browsers.

Category:

  • Open Source

Sex appeal in a computer

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet wants to know if your next computer will be a Mac. Specifically, will it be the new G4 PowerBook released at San Francisco’s Macworld conference? With a titanium case, long battery life, and screamingly fast processor, will Apple’s new hardware become the sexiest consumer machine ever to run UNIX? For $4,000 and the patience needed to deal with Apple’s online store, you can find out for yourself.

Category:

  • Unix

Net privacy legislation gets some industry support

Author: JT Smith

TRUSTe, one of the Internet industry’s larger privacy organizations, has done an about-face, stating that it will now support laws regulating Internet privacy. Full story at Computer News Daily. In privacy activist circles, TRUSTe has a reputation for looking the other way when its members violate voluntary policies; any legislation it might endorse will be interesting, to say the least.

Category:

  • Programming