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Debian Weekly News: Bug reports in the 2.4 kernel

Author: JT Smith

LWN.net has posted the Debian Weekly News newsletter: “Linux 2.4.0 is out, and Debian has suddenly received a lot of 2.4
compatibility testing. Unstable supports the new kernel without many
difficulties. The main source of problems is devfs, and a number of
bug reports have been filed on packages that need devfs support.
Testing and stable don’t quite [1]support the new kernel yet.”

Category:

  • Linux

Sun sees big future for NFS v.4 in Linux

Author: JT Smith

An anonymous reader tells use that SearchEnterpriseLinux has a story:

“If Sun Microsystems’ dream comes true, the Linux community will embrace the latest version of its Network File System protocol. Sun’s director of Solaris Data Technology Jon Lee is championing the message that Sun NFS, which began as a workgroup file sharing solution, fills enterprise Linux’s need for a scalable Internet file access protocol.”

Spreading the GNUs: Interview with Stallman

Author: JT Smith

The Dallas Morning News interviews Richard M. Stallman about many things, including the difference between Open Source and Free Software: “They (Open Source people) don’t think proprietary software is bad. They just
think it’s suboptimal, so fundamentally our goals are different. For them,
proprietary software is a suboptimal solution. For us, proprietary software is
the problem and free software is the solution.”

Category:

  • Open Source

TheKompany.com releases Windows/Linux deployment environment for Python

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR: theKompany.com,
producers and distributors of high-quality open source and commercial Linux
software, announces the release of its Windows/Linux GUI development
environment for Python, BlackAdder. BlackAdder combines a visual design
environment with debugging, syntax highlighting, ODBC interfaces and extensive
HTML documentation into a comprehensive platform for developing Python
applications, announces president and CEO Shawn Gordon.

On Wine, awards, and alliances

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes: SearchEnterpriseLinuxhas a news roundup including information about an a new Open Source software converter, an award to a Linux company by PC World Magazine in Denmark and the latest on company alliances.

Category:

  • Linux

So you think you want to use Linux

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPlanet: “Last Friday in this space I took Mark Kellner to task for an article he wrote in the Los Angeles Times about a two-week experiment with Linux. At bottom, it seemed to me that two weeks is not enough time to tell anyone very much that’s useful about Linux; even if one were in an enterprise and an expert came in and set it up and trained the brigades, it would probably be more than two weeks before people became sufficiently accustomed to it to form the beginnings of valid opinions. Qualitative issues aside, Linux and Windows are entirely different, and skills gained in one do not translate to the other.”

Category:

  • Linux

Swedish Slashdot-clone released

Author: JT Smith

Mikael Pawlo writes “A Swedish Slashdot-inspired forum for news and discussion on free software and Open Source has opened. It’s called Gnuheter which is a combination of the words Gnu and “Nyheter”. Nyheter is Swedish for news.

The web site is run by Patrik Wallstrom and Mikael Pawlo. Wallstrom has a background in hardcore Commodore 64 programming and today is the chief technical officer for Sonox.com. He’s obviously publishing most of the technical news. Pawlo is a lawyer and thus publishing news on GNU GPL-related issues and policy making. Visit the site at Gnuheter.com

Category:

  • Linux

Things to say when you’re losing a technical argument

Author: JT Smith

“Crackmonkey and Mr. Bad collaborate on a fine Mr. Bad’s List. We put together ALL the
TECHNOLOGY you ever need to know in order to STUMP your OPPONENT in a technical
argument. Use these only when your back is against the wall — they’re definitely desperation
tactics.” Read and laugh at Pigdog.

Category:

  • Management

Sun sees big future for NFS v.4 in Linux

Author: JT Smith

From SearchEnterpriseLinux: “If Sun Microsystems’ dream comes true, the Linux community will embrace the latest version of its Network File System protocol. Sun’s director of Solaris Data Technology Jon Lee is championing the message that Sun NFS, which began as a workgroup file sharing solution, fills enterprise Linux’s need for a scalable Internet file access protocol. He is sure that NFS v.4 does that job so well that it will become the file-sharing standard on the Linux operating system. Lee and David Brittle, Solaris Data Technology senior software engineering manager, outlined their company’s plan to promote implementation of NFS on Linux.”

Category:

  • Linux

MS bug of the day: BIOS update issued for IBM ThinkPad 1200

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC tells us that in Windows, pressing the F12 key was not bringing up the temporary boot device menu as it should.