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Free Software Magazine, Issue 2 is available

Author: JT Smith

Andy Tai writes, “The second issue of the Free Software Magazine is out. It is available at http://www.rons.net.cn/english/FSM/issue02 with a mirror in North America at
http://www.free-soft.org/FSM/english/issue02/

This issue include articles on the history of PostgreSQL, introduction to Jabber, Treecc, and E2K, the Qt/Embedded GUI toolkit, database presentations using XML/XSLT and context, and more.”

K12LTSP, LUG, and school join forces to save money with Linux

Author: JT Smith

DaGoodBoy writes “I am pleased to announce the recent successful K12 Linux Terminal Server Project deployment at the St. Mary’s Catholic School in Rockledge, Florida assisted by volunteers from the Melbourne Linux Users Group, Inc. (Melbourne, Florida USA). The school estimates it has saved thousands of dollars in license fees and has been able to field lower powered, donated computer equipment than would have been possible otherwise. I am very proud of the work done by the K12LTSP developers, the St. Mary’s school and the volunteers from the MLUG and I.D.E.A.L. Technology Corporation. There are pictures and more details available here, here and here.”

Category:

  • Migration

Debconf 2 in Toronto: July 5-7th, 2002

Author: JT Smith

Debian Planet reports that Debian Conference (debconf) 2 will take place at York University in Toronto on July 5th through July 7th.

Category:

  • Linux

Peanut Linux 9.2 review, and more

Author: JT Smith

Laurence Hunter writes “What do I think of the latest version of Peanut Linux? What software does it include? How does it compare to the other lightweight distributions, Vector Linux and CRUX? And more…”

Category:

  • Linux

Network Security with /proc/sys/net/ipv4

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity Contributors writes “David Lechnyr submitted a paper he wrote on how to use /proc to tune network security settings.
“In additional to firewall rulesets, the /proc filesystem offers some significant enhancements to
your network security settings. Unfortunately, most of us are unaware of anything beyond the
vague rumors and advice we’ve heard about this beast. In this article, we’ll review some of the
basic essentials of the /proc/sys/net/ipv4 filesystem necessary to add to the overall network
security of your Linux server. ”
http://www.linuxsecurity.com/articles/network_security_article-4528.html

Category:

  • Linux

MozillaQuest.com: Mozilla milestone 0.9.9 branched

Author: JT Smith

Mozilla 9.9 is on its way. MozillaQuest Magazine (MozillaQuest.com) reports: “The Mozilla developers cut the 0.9.9 milestone branch yesterday — a week behind schedule. Mozilla 0.9.9 is the last planned milestone before the scheduled April 2002 Mozilla 1.0 release…. The good news of course is … there will be a Mozilla 1.0 soon. However, some in the Mozilla community question whether … Mozilla 1.0 should be released in April 2002. Two major concerns are that there are too many open bugs and that Mozilla lacks some essential features.” … “Not including enhancement-request bugs, the Mozilla bug-targeting schema anticipates leaving some 8,600 unfixed, targeted, problem-bugs in Mozilla 1.0 when it is released… Many … Mozilla bugs are in that underlying application programming framework — the Mozilla APIs if you like. That means that any third party developers that build
programs on top of the Mozilla … framework will be building on top of a buggy foundation — not a pretty picture.”
on top of the Mozilla … framework will be building on top of a buggy foundation — not a pretty picture.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Larry Sanger quits Wikipedia

Author: JT Smith

Mikael Pawlo writes, “It looks like Larry Sanger gives up Wikipedia and Nupedia (the free encyclopedia projects): ‘I hereby resign as editor-in-chief of Nupedia and I also hereby give up any position of authority I had with Wikipedia; assuming particularly that
funding will not be able to be found for the position of Nupedia editor-in-chief (see below), I don’t intend to work on either project any
significant amount within the next few months, and very possibly ever.'”

Fluxbox 0.1.7 is out

Author: JT Smith

aleczapka writes, “Fluxbox is a lightweight and highly configurable window manager with pwm-like tabs.
What’s new in this release: code cleanups, bug fixes, GNOME support, new languages and new keybindings. Check it out here.”

Mac’s iPhoto vs. Linux’s gPhoto

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes, “iMacLinux has an article comparing iPhoto to standard PC software as well as gPhoto on Linux. And in a practical test with an unexperienced user, Apple’s iPhoto falls a good deal short from being the ultimate digital photo application.”

Commentary: What Linux needs most (it’s not more features)

Author: JT Smith

By Elwin Green

I’ve had an epiphany. Let me tell you how it happened. My wife brings home an issue of Newsweek (the January 28 issue, to be exact), and I’m browsing through it, and it flips open to a big ad, a two-page spread with a nice, clean look that attracts the eye. In this case, my eyes are drawn to a banner headline, which reads: “A special message to Windows users: Welcome.” And I see a series of paragraphs with boldface headings that say, “Myth 1,” and “Fact,” then “Myth 2” and “Fact,” and so on. My heart skips a beat because my very first, hopeful thought is, “An ad for Linux?!?”

Nah. It’s an ad for the Mac. Or rather, the iMac. And as it turns out, it’s not just two pages; it’s 12 full pages of seductively well-designed text and graphics. And when I realize that it’s not an ad for Linux, I feel somewhat sad, because in that same moment I realize that it couldn’t be an ad for Linux; that I will probably never see such a thing, because Linux does not have a marketing department.

Which led to the epiphany: Linux needs a marketing department.

Since buying my first distro nearly two years ago, I have consistently been both amused and amazed by talk about Linux achieving “world domination,” or “winning the desktop.” I don’t know what world those who say such things inhabit, but in the world I see, it’ll never happen; in part because Linux does not have a marketing department.

This is where some might reply, “So what? Word of mouth is the best advertising anyway.”

Perhaps. But I’m not talking about advertising. I’m also not talking about sales. I’m talking about marketing, which is different from advertising and is more than sales. It is the entire educative process by which a seller engages prospects in hopes of making a sale.

The key word there is “educative.” The lack of a marketing department means there’s no group of people whose job, whose paid profession, is to educate the world about Linux.

And this is the “so what” — that single Newsweek ad will probably educate more people about the iMac than five years of word-of-mouth would. Why? Because word-of-mouth typically expresses enthusiasm or exasperation, but it rarely educates.

That is the realm of marketing. And in the absence of marketing, the growth of Linux is stifled by ignorance and fear.

By ignorance, I don’t mean cluelessness about using the command line. I mean ignorance of the very existence of Linux. True story: I’m at a party, and a friend of mine starts telling me about a stock he’s holding that has lost value. He expects it to regain ground, so he thinks I might do well to buy it at its beaten-down price. The company is called Red Hat Linux. When he says that, I start talking enthusiastically about the OS – but I don’t get far before my friend’s face goes blank, and I realize he doesn’t even know what Linux is. He just owns some Red Hat stock.

Many people still do not know what Linux is. People who don’t know what it is certainly won’t go to the trouble of displacing Windows to make room for it on their PCs.

And then, for those who have heard of Linux, there’s the fear. Or perhaps I should say, the fears. What if it doesn’t work? Where do I go for help? Isn’t Linux hard to use? Etc.

People who have never heard of Linux, or who fear Linux, will never try Linux.

So maybe, just maybe, what Linux needs most, right now, is a group of people whose job it is to tell the world about Linux, and to tell the world why they needn’t be afraid of it.

In other words, a marketing department.

Have you noticed that I keep referring to “the world?” I’m not talking about individual Linux users “advocating” with their co-workers, bosses or spouses. I’m talking about a group of people with expertise and a budget, educating (and, I may as well say it, seducing) everyone in the world who picks up a copy of Newsweek, with a well-designed ad extolling the virtues of Linux, even as it debunks the myths.

And doing the same thing with everyone in the world who picks up a copy of Time Magazine. Or who watches an episode of “Frasier” or “Friends.”

Yes, I’ve seen IBM’s ads — a couple of them, anyway. There’s the basketball spot, in which a team with players like “Server” and “Mainframe” is improved by a new player named “Linux,” whom the owners acquired for next to nothing because “he just loves to play the game.” Then there’s “The Heist,” the mini-drama in which the mysterious disappearance of an entire floor of computers turns out to be the work, not of a criminal, but of an in-house geek who has replaced them all with a single Linux-based server.

The IBM ads are cute. But the basketball one is an inside joke; to get it, you have to know more about Linux than the average person does. It doesn’t educate — and one of the questions a marketing department would deal with is, “How well can a 60-second commercial educate people about Linux?” (My guess would be, “not very.”) And “The Heist” is an ad for IBM’s server, not for Linux itself. There are no ads for Linux, because there’s no marketing department to produce them. It’s not IBM’s job to market Linux.

It’s not anybody’s job. And that’s the problem. Solutions, anyone?

“Commentary” articles are contributed by Linux.com and NewsForge.com readers. The opinions they contain are strictly those held by their authors, and may not be the same as those held by OSDN management. We welcome “Commentary” contributions from anyone who deals with Linux and Open Source at any level, whether as a corporate officer; as a programmer or sysadmin; or as a home/office desktop user. If you would like to write one, please email editors@newsforge.com with “Commentary” in the subject line.

Category:

  • Linux