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Eazel to ship second GUI preview today

Author: JT Smith

The Register reports that Eazel will release a second preview version of its Nautilus GUI later today. Designed as a network user environment for GNOME, Nautilus promises to tie file management, Web browsing, and system management into a single interface.

Category:

  • Linux

Sony adds Basic to Euro Playstation 2

Author: JT Smith

To sidestep a European tax on gaming machines, Sony has added YA-Basic, an open source distribution of the classic programming language, to its new gaming system. This bundle will be exclusive to Playstation 2 consoles distributed in Europe. From a report at The Register.

Category:

  • Open Source

Crackers hit GOP site

Author: JT Smith

A Reuters story posted on News.com reports that the Republican National Committee’s Web site was cracked just hours before polls opened on Tuesday.

Category:

  • Linux

Transmeta soars in IPO

Author: JT Smith

Stock of Santa Clara, California-based Transmeta (TMTA) rose 100 percent to $42 in first-day trading. Shares priced Monday night at $21 each, substantially above a recently raised expected price range of $16 to $18. From Wired News.

Category:

  • Open Source

Compaq rejects Transmeta’s Crusoe

Author: JT Smith

InfoWorld.com is reporting that Compaq has confirmed it will not use Transmeta’s low-power Crusoe chip for its next generation of Armada laptops.

Category:

  • Unix

Rambus on a rampage: part 2

Author: JT Smith

Christopher Robato Yao of 32BitsOnline comments on the Rambus legal stragety: “Half of the memory market is the consumer; the other half consists of the devices that interface to the memory. In short, you can’t sell RDRAM if you don’t have devices that use them: processors, motherboard and graphics chipsets. So why isn’t RAMBUS suing the likes of AMD, VIA and nVidia? Perhaps it’s the limitations of financial resources.”

Category:

  • Unix

After first security breach, MS mistakes linger

Author: JT Smith

After further review, says ZDNET, security experts last week
said enterprises can glean some new lessons from
the Microsoft Corp. hacking saga. First and
foremost, if you get hacked, don’t do what
Microsoft did.

Comdex preview: Gates to provide keynote

Author: JT Smith

CNN.com reports that Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates will open the show
Sunday evening with his traditional state-of-the-industry speech. As well as
highlighting initiatives in the smart phone and handheld-computing arenas, the
Microsoft chief is expected to offer one of the first public glimpses of Whistler, the
codename for Microsoft’s next operating system for consumer PCs due next year.

Category:

  • Linux

Seagate named to make MS Xbox drives

Author: JT Smith

The Scotts Valley, Calif.-based
company said it won a contract to provide hard
drives from June 2001 through midyear 2003
for the Xbox, which is scheduled for release in
fall 2001. From Reuters and ZDNET.

Executives call for delay in cybercrime pact

Author: JT Smith

Networkworldfusion.com reports:
“It’s an issue where if we move too quickly to ban the
tools used by hackers, we also may ban the tools used by
investigators,” said John Patrick, vice president for
Internet technology at IBM, and chairman of GIP.

Category:

  • Linux