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Why Napster could be a tragedy for the net

Author: JT Smith

A BBC article questions the impact of services like Napster. “Some experts are starting to ask if Napster-type services
have any long-term future, and if the attitudes they
encourage are doing more harm than good.

A study by US researchers has revealed the inequalities
of Napster, and the weaknesses of copycat systems that
try to avoid legal action by being more loosely organised.”

Linux 2.4 true to form

Author: JT Smith

eWeek reviews the 2.4 kernel. It “delivers much-needed improvements in core operating system functions such as memory management and performance scalability.”

Category:

  • Linux

LAND-5 certifies ICP vortex RAID controllers

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR: LAND-5 Corporation announced today that it has
certified ICP vortex Corporation’s PCI RAID controllers with its Linux-based iceNAS
software for network attached storage. Users can easily establish and manage up to 20TB
of RAID storage from an Internet browser using the iceNAS graphical interface.

Digital Creations partners with bayMountain

Author: JT Smith

Fredericksburg, VA (January 16, 2001) – Digital Creations, creator of Zope and developer of content management business solutions, announced a new partnership with bayMountain, the leading provider of Linux-based managed hosting services. As part of this partnership, bayMountain will provide server clustering expertise and services in support of Zope.org, Digital Creation’s high-traffic Open Source development site. In addition, bayMountain will provide the infrastructure foundation for Digital Creations’ new content management solution, to be released later this year.
Digital Creations and bayMountain will work together to deliver a fully clustered Open Source solution to the marketplace. With this solution, corporations with high-traffic sites can have confidence that their system will have the reliability and scalability essential for an enterprise-level application.

Both companies will showcase their solution at the upcoming LinuxWorld Expo in New York, January 31 through February 2. Digital Creations is located at booth #857; bayMountain is across the aisle at booth #751.

“Scalability has always been a concern, because Zope.org is one of the most highly trafficked Open Source development sites on the web,” said Paul Everitt, Digital Creations CEO. “With our focus on addressing enterprise-wide content management needs, scalability is no longer just a concern – it is a necessity. This unique clustering combination maximizes scalability, and provides the benefit of end-to-end development, hosting and management of enterprise-level Internet infrastructure.”

“This partnership brings together the best of Digital Creation’s Zope application server cluster and our bayCluster( high performance computing offering. To maximize the benefits of clustering, application and infrastructure need to work hand-in-hand,” said Mark Wensell, bayMountain CEO. “Clients of both companies will greatly benefit from this tight partnership. They will now have a talented, responsive team for both development and hosting, with seamless transition between the two. Clients should also benefit from improved time-to-market as a result of the clustering integration.”

About Zope
Zope is the leading Open Source application server, specializing in content management, portals, and custom applications. Since Digital Creations introduced Zope as an Open Source product in late 1998, Zope has quickly become the platform of choice for demanding application developers and content managers. As an Open Source solution, Zope is available free of charge and comes with complete source code.

About bayCluster
bayCluster is a high-performance computing solution that leverages expertise in load-balanced cluster technology to deliver performance on a sliding scale ahead of demand. Configurations are built based on existing IT needs and are scaled up or down based on the amount of resources needed to serve requests for capacity. bayCluster provides a fully scalable, reliable and cost-effective alternative for dynamic web site and e-commerce transaction requirements. These configurations are hosted and managed in bayMountain’s data center or at any partner location.

About Digital Creations
Digital Creations develops next-generation web applications, particularly content management solutions, based on the Open Source Zope development framework. Using Zope allows Digital Creations to rapidly create and deploy large-scale systems, and to deliver reliable, high-performance, scalable web sites that are easily maintained, even by non-professionals. Customers include the Gannett Company, WebMD, the U.S. Navy and HomeGain.com. Digital Creations recently received $12 million in funding from a group of investors including Whitney & Co., the Intel 64 Fund and Opticality Ventures. Digital Creations, which is headquartered in Fredericksburg, Virginia, maintains a web site at www.digicool.com.

About bayMountain
bayMountain is the leading provider of comprehensive Linux-based managed hosting services for small-to-medium sized businesses. bayMountain’s core competencies include server clustering, load balancing, and proactive monitoring and management. This expertise ensures a scalable growth path for its clients, providing both high-availability and high-performance. Building on the management team’s previous experiences with commercial Internet services and computational clusters, bayMountain has an initial client base utilizing its technology in a variety of business applications. Founded in March 2000, bayMountain is based in Richmond, Virginia. More information about bayMountain is available at www.baymountain.com.

Submitted by Melissa Light.

Linux in Science Report No. 7 released

Author: JT Smith

It’s at Seul.org. Among the items: “Many research labs have what can best be described as a heterogenous computing environment. In the limnology group that I worked in as
a graduate student, we had a few machines running the MacOS, others running Win 95 or NT, with a DOS machine or two thrown in for
good measure. Although Linux can integrate nicely in such an environment (I had run Samba on an old 486 machine running Linux to
facilitate file sharing for my research work at the time, and was planning on trying out Netatalk with our mac box in the lab, for instnace), it
would be very useful to be able to make use of the potential of X in such a setting. WeirdX presents itself as a Java-based X-server which
can be used on these and other operating systems.”

Category:

  • Linux

Slash’s Bender becomes a beta

Author: JT Smith

Krow writes: “At some point this morning we ran a regular expression
against the main branch of slash and a new beta was
born.
What’s new? We now have themes, plugins, an abstacted
database layer, a journal system for users, a spiffy
template language, better mod_perl usage, and ways now for other languages
to talk to our authentication layer.
We don’t make toast, yet, and while MySQL is now
beta, postgreSQL is still alpha. You can find a copy
here.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Red Hat CTO talks live to Linux users about clusters

Author: JT Smith

An anonymous reader tells us about an announcement at SearchEnterpriseLinux: “Confused about clusters? Wearing his classic red fedora and no protective armor, Michael Tiemann, CTO of Red Hat, promises to answer all your cluster questions in a live cyber-conversation on SearchEnterpriseLinux.com on Jan. 17. This pre-event report offers info on Tiemann and high availability for Linux.”

Category:

  • Linux

Why I chose Windows NT over Linux: Not this time!

Author: JT Smith

Sensei writes: ”
In early January 2000, I wrote at LinuxNewbie.org about my decision to use Windows NT in the creation of a new network. I detailed why I chose Windows NT, after performing an evaluation between it and Linux.
I’m here today to tell you why I reversed that decision, and how I used Linux to give me the functionality I required.
Check out the new story at LinuxNewbie.org.”

Category:

  • Linux

LinuxPPC gives away 1,000+ CDs at Macworld

Author: JT Smith

At LWN.net: LinuxPPC Inc., the leading
developer of Linux for PowerPC computers, continued its tradition of
massive CD giveaways at the Macworld Expo. The company gave away more than
1,000 copies of the install disc from the company’s latest release,
LinuxPPC 2000 Q4. LinuxPPC has given away CDs at trade shows since 1997.

SLT 2001, a seminar of the Linux and TeX user community

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR: Qbizm is a proud sponsor of a Linux user community seminar held in Central
Europe from February 15th to 18th, 2001.

Rene Michalek, the Qbizm’s CTO will give a speech on component oriented
technologies and HyperQbs, followed by a workshop. The place and times aren’t listed, but there’s contact information in the full press release.