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MS bug of the day: Landware Pocket Quicken

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC is kind enough to inform us: If a category or class is added to Pocket
Quicken 1.01, it may not appear in the desktop
version of Intuit Quicken.

Aldec rolls out Linux-based mixed-language simulator

Author: JT Smith

Aldec Inc., a longtime provider of FPGA design tools,
will make its first foray into the ASIC market this week with Riviera, a
Linux-based mixed-language simulator. Riviera simulates VHDL, Verilog and
EDIF and comes with an HDL editor and source-level debugger, reports EEtimes. The simulation engine underlying Riviera is from Active-HDL, Aldec’s Windows
NT-based simulator. But Riviera is not a Linux port of Active-HDL, said Aldec
marketing vice president David Rinehart. “It’s native Linux. It’s the first step as we
move toward a Unix-based verification suite.”

Category:

  • Linux

Low cost gives Linux global appeal, says maddog

Author: JT Smith

From IDG.net: In places like China and Vietnam, low wages mean that some people
can’t afford brand new machines or proprietary operating systems
such as Microsoft Corp.’s Windows. However, they can afford older,
used machines, Jon ‘maddog’ Hall of non-profit organization Linux
International said at the “International impact of Linux” panel
discussion at Comdex. “Unfortunately, many of these systems aren’t powerful enough to run
Windows Me, or even Windows You,” he joked — but they do have
enough power to run Linux.

Category:

  • Linux

BSA sues 13 people in online-auction software selling

Author: JT Smith

The Business Software Alliance (BSA), which represents
software companies such as Microsoft, Macromedia and Adobe,
conducted the worldwide sting operation to fend off pirates and
educate consumers. “Many of the people who once sold pirated
software programs at flea markets have now moved to Internet
auction sites in the hopes of reaching online consumers,” said Bob
Kruger, vice president of enforcement at the BSA. “In the great
majority of cases, what you see is not what you get, and what you
get is illegal.” The Seattle Times reports.

Behlendorf outlines the future of Apache at Comdex–duplicate

Author: JT Smith

From IDG.net: It seems only natural that a man who spends a good
chunk of his life trying to give things away would be an extremely
busy individual. For Brian Behlendorf, cofounder and president of the
Apache Software Foundation (ASF), life as the chief spokesman for
the open-source movement’s killer application — the Apache Server
— poses almost infinite scheduling challenges.

Number of NT, 98/95 users decrease

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPlanet reports that when Microsoft Windows 2000 was released in February, many predicted that it would gain
marketshare at the expense of Linux and other advanced 32-bit operating systems. But, according to a
study to be released tomorrow by WebSideStory, growth for Windows 2000 seems to have come from
other Microsoft operating systems.

More Comdex: who needs fat clients?

Author: JT Smith

Gates or Ellison? Microsoft
or Oracle? Fat clients or thin clients? MSNBC asks the question: Whose
vision of the future of the software industry
sounds more convincing?

Category:

  • Linux

The many faces of Mozilla

Author: JT Smith

From The Linux Journal: In Part II of our Mozilla series, we look at that Mozilla face which is the multiplatform application programming framework upon which Mozilla-based software such
as the Mozilla 1.0 and Netscape 6.0 browser suites are built. These cross-platform browser suites demonstrate the scope and power of the underlying Mozilla
applications programming framework.

Category:

  • Open Source

Open Source Linux makes another strong push

Author: JT Smith

“More people are looking for ways to put Linux in their
solutions. At the OEM level, they’re looking for embedded
solutions. And at the enterprise level, they’re looking for
clustering and Internet solutions.” From TechWeb.

Category:

  • Linux

Texas company sues ICANN over future TLDs

Author: JT Smith

Australian IT is reporting that a Texas company is suing ICANN for warning people not to purchase future TLDs from the company, because there is no guarantee that the TLD (Top Level Domain – such as .com, .org, .ca, etc) that they registered would be introduced or that the company they purchased the domain from would be authorised to sell it.