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Linux thrives in the Netherlands

Author: JT Smith

Linux Today article reviewing linux2000, a two-day conference held in
`de Reehorst’, Ede, the Netherlands.

Category:

  • Linux

HTTP compression speeds up the Web

Author: JT Smith

The volume on the Web is forecasted to more than triple over the next three years and the category expecting the fastest growth is data.
Data and content will remain the
largest percentage of Web traffic and the majority of this information is dynamic so it
does not lend itself to conventional caching technologies, the solution reports Apache Today, compression.

A spoonful of Internet medicine

Author: JT Smith


ZDNet UK article presents the arguement
that the Internet is splitting into two distinctive factions, on the one hand, there is the ‘hippy’ spirit of the Internet as a unifier of communities and people and on the other is the world of business, busy branding and marketing the Net for its own ends.

Who else released GCC 2.96?

Author: JT Smith

When the GCC steering committee made its October 6 announcement
regarding the unofficial release of its 2.96 development version, the
announcement’s first sentence left some people scratching their heads, reports Linux Today.

Category:

  • Linux

Boss Design releases Boss Commerce Pro V3.0

Author: JT Smith

This new version adds extended functions to this completely customizable open-source e-commerce software, reports Enterprise Linux Today.

Apache 1.3.14 released

Author: JT Smith

Apache Today announces, Apache 1.3.14 is the best version of Apache currently available; everyone
running 1.2.X servers or earlier should upgrade to 1.3, as there will not be
any further 1.2.X releases.

Union label showing up on Linux PCs

Author: JT Smith

By Tina Gasperson
News Editor

Al Gore committed one of his now famous “Gore-isms” when he claimed to have grown up hearing and/or singing that “Look for the Union Label” song. It turned out that he was already 27 when that song was written. I, on the other hand, could have grown up hearing and singing that song. I’m a lot younger than he is.Anyway, have you heard of a company called Union Friendly Systems? They distribute union-made computer systems and union-programmed software, both to the general public, and to union shops. The prices aren’t too bad, either.

My dad was part of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW). The IBEW symbol was a part of my childhood. Eventually, Dad went back to school and got a desk job as an estimator, but he always knew he could fall back on the hall if times got tough. He said he would go back and work with his tools. But I digress. Union Friendly Systems sells systems to individuals, and mass quantities of computers to places like Daimler-Chrysler.

The prices aren’t too bad, either. Here’s a few of the basic lineups available on the site:

Intel Pentium III Central Processing Unit (CPU)

     Intel Pentium III Motherboard with 815 Chip Set

     133 Mhz System Bus

     128 Meg Ram Standard 

     256k Advanced System Cache

     8MB AGP Video Card (32 MB Optional)

     50x CD-ROM Drive

     Built-In 128-Bit Soundblaster Sound Systems

     7200 rpm Hard Disk Drives

     10/100 Lan Adapter

     UNION MADE by IUE Local 127 - ATX form factor Mini-Tower chassis

     1.44mb Floppy Diskette Drive

     

Prices on this system range from $1395.00 for a 20 gig HD and a Pentium III-667 processor, to $2450 for a 45 gig HD and a Pentium III-933 processor.

Here’s another that they call the Space Saver – less power but a pretty good price:


Space Saver Book PC
Small Size 11-3/4 x 10-3/4 x 3-1/4"
Intel i810 Chipset System Board
Intel 500mhz Celeron Processor
64 Meg Memory
CD-ROM Drive
1.44 MB Floppy
8.4 GB Hard Disk Drive
Keyboard, Mouse, Speakers
Built-in Graphics System with
MPEG2 decoder & TV Output 
Built-in Lan Adapter
Sound and Game System
56k V90 Fax/Modem Module
High Speed DSL Ready
Printer Port
USB Port for additional devices

With a 15″ monitor, this system is about $750, with a 17″ monitor, it’s about $850.
There are a few add-ons you can pick on the way out, like a Canon Bubble Jet printer for $75.00, a DVD-ROM upgrade for $125.00, or an additional 64 MB of ram for $95.00.

If you believe unions are of the devil, you might not want to purchase a union-friendly computer. But then again, you might not care, as long as you can get a good deal. In any case, don’t shoot me! As they say, I’m just the messenger. Have a great weekend.

Author’s note: I am available to respond to questions, comments, and criticisms. Please post your thoughts in our discussion forumTG.

Category:

  • Unix

Sun: Open source for the masses

Author: JT Smith

Developers, rev your engines. Sun is jettisoning nine million
lines of StarOffice code into open source on Friday. It is billed as the biggest project in open source
history. From ZDNET.

Category:

  • Open Source

Musician Rundgren tries posting tunes (securely)

Author: JT Smith

IDG.com reports: The music industry isn’t exactly warming up to the Internet, especially when it involves applications that allow online file transfers. But there’s a new process which allows an artist to retain control over his or her digital music even after it’s downloaded.

Review: ATI Radeon 32MB SDR

Author: JT Smith

ATI’s answer to NVIDIA’s GeForce2 MX is here. Can ATI’s HyperZ technology save it from the same memory bandwidth limitations that have been holding back the GeForce2 MX? The review is at Anandtech.

Category:

  • Unix