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Gathering of Developers and Loki Software partner for more Linux games

Author: JT Smith

Tustin, California – January 4 2001 – Loki Software, Inc., the
leading publisher of commercial games for the Linux operating system,
announced today an agreement with developer-driven computer and
videogame publisher Gathering of Developers to bring the hit PC games
Rune and Heavy Metal: F.A.K.K.2 to Linux early this year.

Rune, developed by Human Head Studios, was recently released for
Windows and Mac OS to rave reviews. In this 3D heroic-fantasy action
game, players assume the role of Ragnar the Viking, a young warrior
about to enter into manhood and take his rightful place next to his
father as a warrior of his village. The game showcases 43
single-player levels, multiplayer deathmatch and team deathmatch
modes, 21 different multiplayer characters, and 5 multiplayer mutator
modes, among other unique and titillating options. Rune uses an
enhanced version of the Unreal Tournament Engine to offer a new
particle effects system and a new melee-combat focused AI. For more
information on Rune, visit www.runegame.com.

Heavy Metal: F.A.K.K.2 by developer Ritual Entertainment is an
intense third-person 3D action-adventure game based on Kevin
Eastman’s Heavy Metal 2000 movie, the sequel to the explosive and
groundbreaking animated film Heavy Metal. Players take on the role of
Julie, the legendary F.A.K.K.2 heroine, and battle against Gith
Industries’ army of freakish and deviant characters in an effort to
save Eden, Julie’s homeworld. Powered by an enhanced version of id
Software’s Quake III Engine, the game features detailed renderings of
indoor and outdoor settings with breathtaking realism. For more
information, visit fakk2.godgames.com.

Loki is now accepting beta tester applications for these exciting
titles. Interested participants should review system requirements on
www.lokigames.com and complete an online registration form at
odin.lokigames.com.

About Loki Software, Inc.
Founded in 1998 in Orange County, California, Loki works with leading
publishers and developers to port their best-selling PC products to
Linux. Game titles from Loki include SimCity 3000 Unlimited, Descent
3, and Soldier of Fortune. In addition to this arsenal of games, Loki
has initiated and continues to support several Open Source
development projects, including OpenAL ™, a cross-platform
3D-Audio Library, and SDL MPEG Player Library (SMPEG), a
general-purpose MPEG video/audio player for Linux. For more
information visit www.lokigames.com.
Loki Contact: Kayt Sorhaindo, press@lokigames.com

About Gathering of Developers
Founded in Dallas, TX in January 1998, Gathering of Developers is a
developer-driven computer and video game publishing company, and a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc
(NASDAQ: TTWO). The company’s mission is to be the worldwide leader
in the development and delivery of commercially successful computer
and video game software designed for a range of platforms. The
company’s pioneering partners are industry leaders and proven hit
makers 3D Realms, Epic Games, PopTop Software, Ritual Entertainment,
Terminal Reality Inc and Edge of Reality. For more information visit
Gathering of Developers Web site at http://www.godgames.com.
Gathering of Developers Contact: Andrea Schneider, (212) 696-2000 or
aschneider@tsicomm.com

Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.

SourceForge.net supports 100,000 developers in first year of service

Author: JT Smith

ACTON, MA — January 4, 2001 — Open Source Development Network
(OSDN.com), a division of VA Linux Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq: LNUX), today
announced that SourceForge.net, the world’s largest ASP for Open
Source developers, now supports over 100,000 registered users. Since
its official launch exactly one year ago, SourceForge.net has expanded
its base of supported projects to more than 13,000, including major
projects such as MySQL, Tcl, Python, XFree86, KDE and Squid. (SourceForge and NewsForge are both owned by VA Linux.)To accommodate the rapid expansion of SourceForge.net, OSDN has added
significant resources to the site, including additional personnel,
bandwidth and VA Linux servers and storage systems. SourceForge.net’s
user base has grown at an average rate of more than 30% per month.

Further, SourceForge.net has entered into a collaborative agreement
with University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill’s online library,
ibiblio (www.ibiblio.org), which will serve as a mirror and partial
ftp site for SourceForge.net. With its roots in the former SunSITE
(SunSITE.unc.edu) and MetaLab (MetaLab.unc.edu), ibiblio.org has
historically played a key role in helping to expand and improve the
archiving of information on the Internet, with a significant library
of Linux and Open Source software.

“The rapid growth of SourceForge.net during its first year of service
demonstrates the growing popularity of the Open Source development
model across a wide range of platforms, as well as the popularity of
the SourceForge toolset,” said John “Tiberius” Hall, vice president of
strategic planning, VA Linux Systems. “By working with ibiblio, we
hope to further improve SourceForge.net’s ability to catalog, archive
and distribute Open Source software and documentation.”

“The compatibility of the goals and key directions of SourceForge.net
and ibiblio, as well as complementary research and service interests,
make this relationship a great boost for the Open Source Community,”
said
ibiblio.org director Paul Jones. “Our relationship with
SourceForge.net
will help us bring the state of contributor-run archives and libraries
to a high level very quickly. There are no limits in sight.”

About ibiblio.org
ibiblio.org, the public’s library, is home to one of the largest
“collections of collections” on the Internet. ibiblio is a conservancy
of freely available information, including software, music, literature,
art, history, science, politics and cultural studies. ibiblio.org is
a collaboration of the Center for the Public Domain, a non-profit
foundation, and the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
(www.unc.edu) with institutional support from the School of Information
and Library Science, the School of Journalism and Mass Communication and
the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Information Technology. Founded
in 1992 as sunsite.unc.edu and known more recently as MetaLab.unc.edu,
ibiblio.org was one of the first sites on the World Wide Web. ibiblio.org
is the home of the Linux Documentation Project (www.linuxdoc.org) as
well as a variety of other information sharing projects.

About OSDN
OSDN (Open Source Development Network), a division of VA Linux Systems,
Inc., is the leading Linux and Open Source destination on the Internet.
OSDN is a network and community outreach organization committed to
accelerating Open Source software development, which also serves as a
gateway for individuals and organizations worldwide to understand and
join
this revolution. Serving over 80 million page impressions to more than
3 million users each month, OSDN includes the leading Open Source sites
for news, information and discussion (Slashdot, NewsForge and
Linux.com),
the largest sites for collaborative Open Source development and support
(SourceForge.net and QuestionExchange), the most popular sites for Open
Source software distribution (Freshmeat.net and Themes.org), online
shopping for technical enthusiasts (ThinkGeek), a new print publication
(Open magazine), and community discussion forums and personalized
content
on the beta site for OSDN.com.

Certain statements in this press release, including statements about
future growth related to SourceForge.net, are forward-looking
statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could
cause results to be materially different from expectations. Such
risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the ability
of VA Linux and OSDN to attract and retain qualified personnel to
perform software development; results of SourceForge.net and
ibiblio.org’s collaborative efforts; industry trends related to Open
Source and Linux; and other risks detailed in VA Linux’s filings with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, copies of which may be
accessed through the SEC’s web site at www.sec.gov.
Note: VA Linux Systems, “Open Source Development Network (OSDN),”
SourceForge, Slashdot, Freshmeat, QuestionExchange, ThinkGeek and
NewsForge are trademarks of VA Linux Systems, Inc. Linux is a
registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other trademarks are
property of their respective owners.

Pondering an AMD-Transmeta merger

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet’s Inter@ctive Investor has commentary on why Transmeta and AMD, which are planning to work together in the server market, should go even farther than that.

Category:

  • Open Source

Why we should all test the new Linux kernel

Author: JT Smith

From Advogato: “Ladies and Gentlemen, we are approaching an important point in the history of Free Software – the imminent release of a major
revision to the Linux kernel. Being the foundation to the systems the vast majority of us depend on for our own work, the
correctness of the kernel is vital to the proper functioning of the programs those of us on Advogato develop. Please grab the latest
2.4.0-prerelease sources from the Kernel.org mirror site nearest you and give it a thorough test on your equipment, and with your
programs.”

Category:

  • Linux

Globe and Mail: Linux – Are you experienced?

Author: JT Smith

The results are in on the Globe and Mail’s “Have you used Linux” survey with a whopping 75% of Globe respondents reporting that they have Linux experience. Not that you should believe anything you hear out of bogus polls like these, but, hey, it’s worth a moment’s gloat … as is this Simon Tuck piece on “The Linux Paradox”. Go, go 2.4! garym

Category:

  • Linux

Bush says hi to tech leaders

Author: JT Smith

Wired.com reports: “The president-elect will surround himself with more than a dozen technology leaders, nearly all of whom were campaign supporters, at a meeting today in Austin, Texas.”

Opera 4.0 beta5 for Linux!

Author: JT Smith

The new version of Opera beta is ready!
Go and get the changelogLinuxNews.pl

Category:

  • Linux

Millions pay not to log on

Author: JT Smith

From Wired: “Americans are getting connected in fantastic numbers, but a recent study reveals that more than a third are paying for services they don’t even use. Why stay and pay? ‘It’s the old health club model. It takes too much effort to disconnect it,’ says one analyst.”

Category:

  • Linux

Britney Spears wins 2000 search terms battle

Author: JT Smith

“After leading the weekly and monthly charts of various Internet
search engine lists all year, teen singing sensation Britney Spears
ended 2000 as the most popular search term entered into portals
Yahoo! and Lycos. Spears also took seventh place on the
AltaVista search engine.” ZDNET.co.uk reports.

EBay down for several hours

Author: JT Smith

NandoTimes: “Sales of Beanie Babies and Pez dispensers on the eBay Web site were stilled Wednesday as the auction service went down for hours.”