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Will Sun lose shining software star?

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Sun’s vice president of Webtop and application software has submitted his resignation. This leaves the Sun-AOL iPlanet Web service in a tight spot, and may even affect current development of Sun’s Open Source offic suite, Star Office.

Category:

  • Linux

DivX team: We want to do right by Open Source community

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross
How better to get your video compression software recognized as the standard across all platforms, even video-game consoles, than to Open-Source the code to the world? That’s the hope of the team that’s created DivX, a program that allows users to create and sent high-quality video across the Internet.

The team announced Tuesday that the DivX code, based on a next-generation MP3-like video standard called MPEG-4, has been released at the Project Mayo Web site, and OpenDivX’s forums already have more than 100 posts and hundreds of page views.

“What we’re aiming for is for DivX to be a video-playing standard,” says Joe Bezdek, director of product definition for Project Mayo, the company built around the DivX product. “We’re movie lovers, and we want to see it work on as many platforms as possible.”

The Project Mayo site has DivX projects set up for Linux, Mac, Windows, even Playstation, in response to many requests the team as gotten in the past six-plus months for a game-console version, Bezdek says. Binaries are now available for the Windows version and for a Windows player, called the Playa.

“What’s next is to build this online community and DivX, to have it work well on all the platforms listed on the site and maybe even ones we haven’t even thought of,” Bezdek says. “We’re just getting into the community and enjoying talking to people.”

Here’s what the site says for the DivX for Linux project: “OK guys, this is it. An open video codec for Linux. There are only about 10,000,000 posts to every Slashdot thread that mentions an open source MPEG-4 codec, so we assume you want one. We are working on everything for Linux – the encoder, the decoder, you name it … We have some internal versions running on Linux but we need to blow them out.” Project Mayo is looking for a Linux forum moderator who “has the love.”

Project Mayo has created its own license for the Open-Sourced project. Like the Apache license, the DivX Open License allows the DivX team to retain the right to release versions under the “DivX” name. The license also addresses video patent issues — basically, the user is responsible for getting a patent release to play a video.

That wording may help Project Mayo avoid lawsuits that have plagued other technologies such as the DeCSS DVD-playing software. And Bezdek is careful to distinguish DivX from file-sharing services such as Napster, which uses the MP3 format to allow users to trade music.

“DivX is comparable to MP3,” he says. “It’s a high-quality video compression format that a lot of people like to use. We don’t have any control over how people use it.”

David Ulevitch, a sysadmin for Project Mayo and advocate for its Open Source release, says the team wants to do right by the Open Source community. He told Slashdot readers that the Open Source release of DivX isn’t meant to drum positive press. “This code works, but we are making it better,” he wrote to Slashdot. “We are developing this code still, not just throwing it to the open source world for the hype, we just thought others would want in … all of our developers are on the mailing lists and actively post in our forums.”

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

Net worm hobbles Linux servers

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that an Internet worm called Ramen, “cobbled together from generally available hacking tools” has compromised at least hundreds of Linux servers. Apparently, the worm uses two security flaws in applications set up during the default installation of Red Hat Linux. However, the worm doesn’t really do anything destructive, it’s just annoying.

Category:

  • Linux

Hollywood wants to limit taping of digital programming

Author: JT Smith

An article from the Albany Times Union reviews Hollywood’s efforts to stop you from taping TV shows in the privacy of your own den.

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.