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DB2 for Linux supports clusters – try it for free!

Author: JT Smith

DB2
UDB Enterprise-Extended Edition (EEE) can exploit symmetric multiprocessors (SMP), clustered SMP,
and massively parallel processors (MPP) on platforms as diverse as Microsoft Windows NT, IBM AIX*,
HP-UX, NUMA-Q, Sun Solaris and now on Linux. IBM.com offers the download for free.

Linux gets down to business

Author: JT Smith

The good news for businesses considering implementing Linux is that it continues to evolve and
has wide support among independent developers, distributors, and value-added resellers, but, according to CNET News, that’s
also the bad news.

Category:

  • Linux

Best Linux 2000 R3 with KDE 2.0 released

Author: JT Smith

The new release of
Best Linux includes, in addition to many other improvements, support for the
Portuguese language, improved sound card support, modem configuration,
and the brand new KDE 2.0, from Linux PR.

Users vent complaints about Oracle application upgrade

Author: JT Smith

Several attendees of the Oracle Applications Users Group (OAUG) said they had received notices of about 5,000 patches that Oracle has released for 11i, reports Computerworld on NetworkWorldFusion News
The software “is not ready for prime time,” said
Donna Rosenstrater, an OAUG board member who
works at San Jose-based electronics contract
manufacturer Sanmina Corp. A lot more cleanup
work is required before many users can safely go live
with the new applications, she added.

Hollywood vs. the cracker

Author: JT Smith

New York Magazine profiles Emmanuel Goldstein, the editor, activist, and sometime
cult figure at the helm of the sixteen-year-old
hacker journal 2600: The Hacker Quarterly.

Category:

  • Linux

‘Cracking’ to be declared illegal

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC reports, European Union nations, and perhaps even the
United States, are about to make nearly any form
of cracking — even security research — illegal
by treaty.

Category:

  • Linux

Fork gets Samba back in tune

Author: JT Smith

From UpsideToday: Not since the rancorous Open BSD/Net BSD split in 1994 had the community witnessed a
breakup — or “fork,” in developer parlance — of this magnitude. While members of both the
Samba-TNG — an offshoot of the Samba group that develops for the latest versions of
Windows NT and Windows 2000 — and the main Samba teams did their best to put a happy
face on this affair, there was no hiding the concern, even among those closest to split.

Category:

  • Open Source

First international DefCon set to start in Amsterdam

Author: JT Smith

The difference between the American and European hacking
worlds will be a hot topic this week in Amsterdam, as the first
international version of Def Con, the annual hacking convention in
Las Vegas, gets underway. From ZDCOUK.

Category:

  • Linux

Scourge of the Internet age is ID theft

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET reports that The Federal Trade Commission is currently hosting a two-day
workshop to look at how victims restore their good names with
the US’s three national consumer reporting agencies — Equifax,
Experian, and Trans Union — and other bureaucracies.

Usenet sale: sounds to silence?

Author: JT Smith

From Wired.com: Deja.com is about to sell its Usenet archive — six years of Internet communications chiseled into digital stone. The pending change of owner raises the question: Is there a future for the Internet’s oral history?