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Atipa takes top honors at LinuxWorld

Author: JT Smith

Atipa Corporation, a leading
provider of end-to-end Linux and open source solutions, led all exhibitors at
last week’s LinuxWorld Conference and Expo by winning three of the ten
“Show Favorite” awards presented for outstanding products. Atipa products
were chosen as Show Favorites in three categories: Servers,
Hardware/Hardware Peripherals, and Software Utilities. The press release is at LinuxPR.

Survey: Dotcom job losses rise 55 percent in August

Author: JT Smith

From a Reuters story: Job cuts at Internet companies in August jumped 55 percent from July, led by cuts in the Web retail sector, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. Job cuts in the dotcom sector from December 1999 through Aug. 23 totaled 11,785, up from 7,592 posted through July 23, with retailers accounting for the biggest portion of the layoffs.

Judge limits MP3.com’s exposure to damages

Author: JT Smith

Online music site MP3.com ducked one blow in its court fight over copyright with the recording industry when a federal judge issued an opinion limiting its damages for infringement, according to published reports, reported IDG.

Intel: The Future Is Peer

Author: JT Smith

The peer-to-peer networking revolution championed by Napster will change computing, Intel Corp. believes. And the rest of the industry better jump on board, said Pat Gelsinger, Intel’s chief technology officer, in his Intel Developer Forum keynote speech Thursday morning, according to a story on ZDNet.

Column: Is Sun really Public Enemy No. 1?

Author: JT Smith

From a ZDNet column: “Dell detests them. Many Linux players distrust them. IBM takes almost as many potshots at them as it does at Oracle. Microsoft? Not this time. In fact, Microsoft is watching them like a hawk. Instead, the new Public Enemy No. 1 these days seems to be Sun Microsystems. And Sun executives seem to be reveling in their outlaw status.”

Category:

  • Linux

K-Meleon browser part Mozilla, part IE

Author: JT Smith

What looks like Microsoft Internet Explorer on the outside, but employs Mozilla’s Gecko rendering engine on the inside? It’s a new open-source browser called K-Meleon. From a story on ZDNet.

Looking again at GNOME vs. KDE

Author: JT Smith

From a column at ZDNet: “The LinuxWorld event that seems to have stuck in most people’s minds (or craws, depending on which faction one is aligned with) is the announcement of the GNOME Foundation. Wireless vitriol aside, I think that all this buzz about GNOME vs. KDE is completely ignoring the real issue. I mean, really, who cares whether the underpinnings are CORBA-compliant? Before any developers out there begin squawking that they care quite a lot, thankyouverymuch, it bears pointing out that GNOME and KDE aren’t really for them. They’re for those hypothetical Linux Desktop Users Of The Future.”

Category:

  • Linux

Essay: Open Source vs. corporations

Author: JT Smith

From an essay at the New York Times: “There’s a war going on. It isn’t between ethnic groups, provinces, religions or nations. It is between nimble people who want to think for themselves and big dinosaurs of corporations that want to keep the upstarts penned up and docile.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Innominate AG gets cash infusion

Author: JT Smith

From a press release at PRnewswire: Linux service provider innominate AG announced on Thursday that it has recently received DM 16.2 million new capital from a number of new investors. The money is to be used for the expansion of the European branch network and the development of new Linux products. Furthermore, promotion of the brand name “innominate” which represents professional Linux services and products, is planned, stated innominate’s CEO Raphael Leiteritz. As a medium-term goal, the company is striving towards European market leadership in Linux service providing.

Broadbeam’s deal with Palm boosts mobile security

Author: JT Smith

TechWeb reports, wireless platform vendor Broadbeam Corp. has reached an agreement with Palm Inc. to provide tools to develop secure bridges for accessing enterprise applications via the Palm VII device.