Author: JT Smith
Itanium-based systems. It’s available for public download at Red Hat’s ftp site:
ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/ia64.
Category:
- Linux
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
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.”
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
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.
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
A longtime Linux user hopes a petition will convince British Telecom to back off its claim of having a patent on hyperlinks.
Rick Collette, a Unix system administrator and Webmaster of the Linux community site deepLinux.com organized the petition Friday, after hearing that British Telecom was suing Internet service provider Prodigy on BT’s claims that it should be compensated for the use of hyperlinks.
“Just think of the impact it could have on anybody’s day-to-day life,” Collette says of BT’s claim. “I don’t know if anybody can grasp how big this is. This could affect the way we do business — this could affect everybody.”
Collette says he’s not sure what he hopes the petition will accomplish, short of the unlikely event that BT will back down from its claims. He plans to give the petition to Prodigy, as a show of support, and he plans to distribute it to as many media organizations that will listen — “online, offline, it doesn’t matter, just anybody and everybody.”
BT researchers developing text-based information services, applied for a patent in 1976 . The U.S. Patent Office granted the company a patent in 1989. But Collette says it’d be chaos if all the creators of the many Open Source projects that help run the Internet would sudden decide they want royalties. “I’m puzzled why anybody would want to do this,” he says of BT’s actions.
Collette, a Linux user since 1993 or ’94, says the petition isn’t a publicity stunt for deepLinux.com, a hobby site he launched in mid-November. The petition is hosted away from his site, at i-Charity.com. The petition announcement on his site does include a link to some hypertext history.
As of Tuesday morning, the petition had more than 150 signatures, many including comments. A German resident wrote: “Hypertext is the digital equivalent to footnotes, which are even older than the British Telecom!”
Another comment, from someone in the U.K.: “The only good thing about this whole issue is that it highlights the stupidity of software patents.”
Collette hopes that anyone who uses hyperlinks on the Web will consider signing the petition.
NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.
Author: JT Smith
Peacefire, a free-speech group, on Monday announced software that can disable filtering programs
such as SurfWatch, Cyber Patrol, Net Nanny, CYBERsitter, X-Stop, PureSight, and Cyber Snoop.” Full story at PCWorld.