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Linux: Four weddings and a funeral stock market

Author: JT Smith

SearchEnterpriseLinux: “The year 2000 was the year for weddings and a rosy afterglow as major systems vendors embraced Linux. In 2001, the real work of making those marriages work begins in earnest.” -Anonymous Reader

Category:

  • Linux

We’ve got brain cancer and we want your money

Author: JT Smith

From The Register: “Mobile phone companies and manufacturers are to be served with billion-dollar lawsuits from US brain tumour victims, according to The Times. The cases are being brought forward by the same legal firm that won record damages from the tobacco industry for smokers with lung cancer.”

.comment: Ain’t anti-aliasing amazing?

Author: JT Smith

“If there’s a rumor floating round that I’ll do any damn thing to my computer that anyone suggests, I’d be hard pressed this week to offer evidence to dispel it. That’s because for a little over a week now, all the buzz in KDE circles has been a series of hacks designed to enable the text anti-aliasing provided, sort of, in XFree86-4.02. The KDE mailing lists were bursting with delighted testimonials from persons who had gotten this marvel running. Okay, I thought, I’ll bite.” Full story at LinuxPlanet.

Category:

  • Linux

Red Hat to shift sales strategy

Author: JT Smith

TechWeb reports: “Despite the company’s slumping stock price, Red Hat CEO and president Matthew Szulik expects partners to get squarely behind the Linux software company, so much so that they will tip the balance of software sales generated by the company to third parties.”

Category:

  • Linux

For privacy experts, 2000 looked more like 1984

Author: JT Smith

CNET News.com takes a look back at this year’s leading privacy issues.

Category:

  • Programming

The Linux Internet dream

Author: JT Smith

“Linux is currently going through the same stages the Internet did. It started off as a geeks-only area, but some very smart companies — IBM and so forth — saw the potential for the OS, just like very smart companies — Netscape — saw the potential for the Internet. These companies are the ones that are going to bring Linux to the home user. This business method has much in common with those early adopters that brought the Internet to the home user. Linux will become easier to use because, like the early days of the Internet, the difficulty in using it turned off a lot of people.” Kelly McNeill

Category:

  • Linux

Free links, only $50 apiece

Author: JT Smith

Wired News reports: “Online news sites are turning to a novel way to make some extra cash: requiring fees for links. The Albuquerque Journal charges $50 for the right to link to each of its articles. Localbusiness.com and Latino.com are more generous, and permit one to five links without payment. There’s just one catch. Legal experts say no U.S. law or court decision allows a website to successfully demand payment for links to its content.”

TurboLinux security announcement: fetchmail

Author: JT Smith

TurboLinux has released a security advisory for fetchmail-5-5.0-2 and earlier versions. “The updated IMAP server released in errata advisory RHSA:102-04 exposes a bug in fetchmail’s
implementation of the AUTHENTICATE GSSAPI command.” Details and patches available at LinuxToday.

Category:

  • Linux

IBM embraces Linux throughout its line

Author: JT Smith

From PlanetIT: “Jockeying to cut to the front of the Linux world, IBM has
demonstrated an uncanny affinity for the once-renegade
operating system, sinking not only dollars and
engineering time but also unimpeachable corporate
reputation into Linux products and enhancements.”

Category:

  • Linux

Linus Torvalds: 2.4.0-test13-pre5

Author: JT Smith

LinuxToday has posted Linus Torvalds latest update to the kernel.

Category:

  • Linux