Author: JT Smith
Category:
- Unix
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
playing is now available on the Internet as a free reference source.
It can be found by clicking on SEARCH SCORES at:
http://www.twingalaxies.com.
This body of information is essentially the statistical history of video game and pinball
playing from 1977 to present and has already been used as a reference source by many news
agencies and Hollywood producers, including the Guinness Book of World Records, ABC-TV’s
That’s Incredible and Jeopardy, the TV game show. In the next month, this data will be
supplemented with 15,000 further high scores which represent the new world records on
today’s current game titles.
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
The big story of the week was not exactly an Open Source story, but it was a subject near to many Open Source users’ hearts: File trading over the Internet. MP3.com, one of the heavyweights in the file-trading world, lost a lawsuit brought by music publishing giant Universal Music Group.
A judge ordered MP3.com to pay between $118 million and $250 million in damages to the Seagram-owned music company. The fallout was quick and painful, with MP3.com stock plummeting to a 52-week low Thursday, the day of the ruling.
Several perspectives on the case soon followed. Upside.com called the ruling “lunacy.” Music-trading company Napster immediately tried to distance itself from MP3.com.
If sharing music isn’t your bag, maybe sharing DVDs is. The DeCSS copying software can’t seem to stay out of the headlines. The Motion Picture Association of America has been sending cease-and-desist orders to people who post or link to the from their Web sites. And Copyleft, a company printing the DeCSS source code on T-shirts, was also hit with a lawsuit.
The dangers of doing business
Also controversial this week was Trolltech’s decision to release the 2.2 version of its Qt/Unix under the GNU General Public License, as a way to deflect criticism about the KDE user interface that uses Qt. However, Free Software Foundation founder Richard Stallman still disputed KDE claims that it was now in compliance with the GPL, and KDE.org fired back. It’s unlikely that we’ve heard the last of this.
In business news, a couple of software companies keep making news, although it’s not always good news. Linux distributor Caldera System’s recent acquisition of the Santa Cruz Operation has gotten mixed reviews, and the company announced this week that SCO will lay off 190 people and take a $5 million to $6 million charge this quarter as part of its sale of Unix operating system software and services to Caldera. The Gartner Group offered Caldera some free advice later in the week, saying the company must articulate a coherent road map for OpenLinux and SCO OpenServer.
Speaking of layoffs, software company Corel plans to lay of 139 people at its engineering operation in Dublin, Ireland, in a $40 million cost-saving move.
Who’s afraid of a little FUD?
You might file this under “no surprise.” ZDNet reported on a Microsoft team charged with keeping an eye on Linux and Unix, but critics charged the Redmond crew with also generating a little FUD.
New in NewsForge
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category: