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What next for Crusoe?

Author: JT Smith

A recent article in MIT’s Technology Review said that the Crusoe chip had put most of the functionality normally expected in hardware into a software layer. With a 128-bit bus, it was consequently capable of running 32-bit Intel applications at a comparable speed to native Intel hardware. A quick examination of the Transmeta site indicates that Technology Review was merely giving a review of what Transmeta had succeeded in doing. Transmeta had succeeded in placing much of the operating functionality of the commonplace or garden variety silicon into software. The column is at OS Opinion. Kelly McNeill

Category:

  • Unix

Aimster sets sights on MSN, Napster messengers

Author: JT Smith

From CNet: “A new release of the Aimster instant messaging and file-swapping software, expected as soon as
Tuesday evening, will support new plug-ins that could tap into services such as Microsoft’s MSN
Messenger or even Napster’s chat service.”

Red Hat releases beta of Red Hat for Itanium systems

Author: JT Smith

LinuxToday has a short article on Red Hat releasing the Beta version of Red Hat Linux for
Itanium-based systems. It’s available for public download at Red Hat’s ftp site:
ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/ia64
.

Category:

  • Linux

Point. Click. Flush.

Author: JT Smith

From Fortune.com: “Now there is a wireless
service that meets an even more urgent
need: finding a public toilet.

Covering New York City and ten other
major metropolitan centers, this wee
little download is available to Palm VII
users as Where2Go on www.palm.net, and
to other modem-equipped handhelds as
Bathroom Finder at www.yadayada.com.”

Open Source software firm enters wireless territory

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports on Sendmail’s acquisition of Nascent Techologies, which makes software for accessing email from cell phones or the Web. Read the press release from BusinessWire.

Credit card cracker has struck before

Author: JT Smith

From MSNBC: “MSNBC.com has learned that the hacker who
recently tried to extort CreditCards.com has been at it before.
Another site victimized by the hacker has stepped forward,
telling MSNBC.com it suffered a similar extortion several
months ago. The hacker followed the exact same routine,
demanded $20,000, and used the same e-mail address as the
CreditCards.com hacker. What’s more, the owner of this site
told MSNBC.com the hacker is suspected in more than a dozen
other hacking extortion attempts.”

Category:

  • Linux

Andamooka adds two open content books

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxPR:
Andamooka, which provides open support for open content, has added two more
books to its growing library of open content.

Linux Kernel Module Programming Guide, by Ori Pomerantz, teaches
readers how to write modules for the Linux kernel version 2.2. It is geared
toward readers who know C and have written Linux programs.

Linux From Scratch, by Gerard Beekmans, shows how to build a Linux system
directly from the source code included with Linux distributions. Readers will also
learn deeply about Linux and about operating systems in general.

EMBLIX consortium elects officer corps

Author: JT Smith

From BusinessWire: EMBLIX, the Japan Embedded Linux Consortium, today announced their first elected officer
corps, the results of an election process that was initiated at Japan’s largest embedded systems conference, MST 2000 last month. Today, the
consortium also established three working groups designed to initiate discussion within the embedded Linux community about platform and
interoperability issues.
The new EMBLIX officer corps will consist of leaders in the Linux community who are well versed in the issues surrounding the Japanese
embedded Linux market.

Emusic sues MP3.com

Author: JT Smith

From Reuters: Online music service Emusic.com says it has filed a copyright
infringement complaint against MP3.com, an Internet music service
that earlier resolved similar litigation by five major record labels.

Fear what? The success of Open Source?

Author: JT Smith

From a guest column on ZDNet News by Lutris Technologies’ David Young: ” Mary Jo Foley’s recent column “Open-source backers:
Are you afraid?” gets it all wrong. The suggestion that big companies pose a threat to open
source misses the big picture, focusing instead on a
worn-out generality that positions Microsoft Corp.’s
competitors against the open-source movement in a way
Bill Gates himself would envy.”

Category:

  • Open Source