Author: JT Smith
Broadband push: Games, MP3 swapping
Congress mulls forced Internet filtering
Author: JT Smith
force schools and libraries to use Internet filtering software or lose federal
dollars intended to help buy Web access.
Americans doubt government’s ability to keep computer info private
Author: JT Smith
computer security and privacy, according to a poll released
Monday as reported by Reuters. Eighty-one percent of Americans were either “very concerned” or “somewhat concerned” that government-held data about them may be
misused some day, according to the survey conducted for the
Information Technology Association of America, a
trade group. Another 72 percent said they would not feel
safe signing a contract over the Internet using a “secure
digital signature.”
Category:
- Linux
e-Vantage Host Access Server 2.3 released
Author: JT Smith
Open and free lessons from Red Hat’s 7.0 release
Author: JT Smith
that very few people in our industry, especially programmers, seem to remember:
Learning from our own mistakes is always a good thing, but learning from the
mistakes of others is even better. After all, if we’re open-minded enough we can
still get the benefit of the lesson without having to endure the
pain/embarrassment/inconvenience/whatever of making the error. Think of it as
open source learning.”
Category:
- Linux
Unix password management
Author: JT Smith
Category:
- Unix
New Italian version of Linux released
Author: JT Smith
very start an ambitious project: become a reference point for Linux and Open
Source technologies in Italy. The press release is at Linux PR.
Sun releases StarOffice, but Web version delayed
Author: JT Smith
Category:
- Open Source
NewsForge back up after 12 hours of down time
Author: JT Smith
The server, which had been rebooting randomly late Sunday, refused to boot up about 6 a.m. Monday, said Jamie McCarthy, head programmer at NewsForge. “It was stuck on fsck, waiting for someone at the console
to tell it what to do,” he said.
Server administrators pressed a quad-Xeon 550 into service, and McCarthy spent most of the day copying files over and configuring it — a complete Slashcode installation.
McCarthy wasn’t sure NewsForge needed the power and size of a Type III server, but it does have multiple backup power supplies. “But it turned out that it helped us again already,” he said. “Around 3 p.m., we had a hell of a scare when one of the hard drives apparently flaked out. But since it’s parity RAID, and since the others are working fine, nothing was corrupted.”
NewsForge began posting news again shortly after 6 p.m. Monday, and our service should be back to normal. We’ll try to catch up on all the Open Source news that happened while we were down.
As always, we welcome readers’ input on everything we do at NewsForge. We apologize for the down time Monday.
— Grant Gross, managing editor
grant@newsforge.com
SDMI: More secure than you think?
Author: JT Smith
Initiative (SDMI) insiders as saying that all six technologies were
successfully mastered after the organization issued a public
challenge to code-breakers last month. However, the SDMI is saying
this week that it is not yet sure whether challenge participants, who
were competing for $10,000 prizes offered for each technology, have
actually defeated the six methods.”
Category:
- Linux