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Apple’s not eating its own dog food

Author: JT Smith

From a ZDNet column: “Apple doesn’t want OS X in the enterprise, that much is clear. Nary a mention has ben made of the forthcoming Mac OS X Server release …”

Linux plus Itanium: Whoosh!

Author: JT Smith

Wired.com reports on the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana’s announcement Tuesday NCSA will install two IBM Linux clusters, creating the the fourth fastest supercomputer in the world.

“NCSA’s new clusters will have 2 teraflops of computing power and will be used by researchers to study some
of the most fundamental questions of science, such as the nature of gravitational waves first predicted by
Albert Einstein in his Theory of Relativity.”

Category:

  • Linux

Open Source Development Lab seeks board members

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot readers talk about who to nominate for the Open Source Development Lab’s board of directors. Nominate yourself! Nominate your neighbor!

Category:

  • Migration

One in five UK employers snoop on staff email

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk reports: “One in five employers may be snooping on their staff emails without informing them or gaining their consent, according to a new report published Tuesday.” Now we know why the suits have been spending so much time with netops lately.

Category:

  • Programming

VA Linux “overoptimistic” on earning forecast

Author: JT Smith

From an article at Fairfax IT:
“Linux software and support company VA Linux Systems (ed. note: VA owns Newsforge) today more than halved its expected revenues for its 2001 fiscal year, boding of tough times ahead and showing how tough it is to make money off open source software.” Yeah, it’s so hard to make money off Open Source that we didn’t even realize VA Linux was a software company. Go figure.

Category:

  • Open Source

Government smashes own online targets

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET reports that the U.K. “government claims Tuesday to have smashed its own targets for the delivery of services via the Internet.

The original target — for 2002 — was to have a quarter of government services delivered electronically, but the Cabinet Office claims that more than 40 percent are already available.” Now, why can’t the U.S. government beat a deadline for a change? Oh yes, because it’s the U.S. government. We forgot.

Hackers’ video technology goes Open Source

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET reports: “The developers of hacker video technology DivX are going public, opening up much of their work to the open source community.” Not exactly public, not exactly mainstream, but probably good news for us.

Category:

  • Open Source

Intel dubs 2000 a record year, but near-term future not good

Author: JT Smith

Network World Fusion: “Despite dubbing fiscal 2000 overall a “record” year for both earnings and revenue, Intel Tuesday announced revised fourth-quarter financial results and said it expects first-quarter results to be adversely hit by current economic uncertainty. The company also revealed that it plans to close a manufacturing plant in Puerto Rico as a way to cut costs.”

Category:

  • Open Source

So long shrink-wrap?

Author: JT Smith

“If you haven’t heard all the hype yet about Web-based software offerings,” says PCWorld, “brace yourself–because you’re
going to be hearing a lot about them in coming months. Numerous companies have recently cropped up offering
Web-based programs, which they tout as the successors to traditional shrink-wrapped software.”

Preaching Big Blue in Ireland

Author: JT Smith

From Wired: “Nicholas Donofrio, a senior VP at IBM, stops off in the Emerald Isle on his way to a prestigious lecture. He had many words for his guests, but one that resonates: ‘voice.'”

Category:

  • Open Source