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Python 2.1.2 released

Author: JT Smith

Posted at LWN.net: I’ve released the final version of Python 2.1.2 – a bugfix release for
Python 2.1. I recommend everyone who is using Python 2.1 or
2.1.1 to upgrade to 2.1.2 — this release fixes a few crashes.
Read about it and download it here: http://www.python.org/2.1.2/.”

Security update to at

Author: JT Smith

Posted at LWN.net: “The ‘at’ command reads commands from standard input for execution at a
later time specified on the command line. If such an execution time is
given in a carefully drafted (but wrong) format, the at command may
crash as a result of a surplus call to free(). The cause of the crash
is a heap corruption that is exploitable under certain circumstances
since the /usr/bin/at command is installed setuid root.

A temporary workaround against the bug is to disable the at command for
non-root users by removing the setuid-bit from the /usr/bin/at command.”

Category:

  • Linux

Linux 2.4 kernel a disaster for enterprises?

Author: JT Smith

LinuxWorld.com has the column: “For desktops, the 2.4 version of the kernel is just fine. If you have
heavy-duty processing needs, 2.4 has been a series of disappointments.
Sysadmins of big iron have two choices — go back in time or play upgrade
hopscotch. Both have problems.”

Category:

  • Linux

Tux Racer site now taking pre-orders

Author: JT Smith

MrRat writes, “The Tux Racer site has been updated for the commercial release. It’s now taking pre-orders!”

Borland backs down from Kylix/JBuilder EULA

Author: JT Smith

Slashdotters discuss the news that “Borland has backed down from its horrible
Kylix/JBuilder license after all the bad press they received on
Slashdot and Freshmeat. You may now all resume using Kylix
and/or JBuilder. Seriously though, it’s good to see a company respond to the voices
of the online community, and admit it made a mistake.”

Linux 2.5.2-dj1

Author: JT Smith

Dave Jones: “Resyncing up with Linus & fix build errors,
I’ll resync with Marcelo next time, along with the other
pending items people have sent me. I’ll also start pushing
bits to Linus again real soon.”

Patch against 2.5.2 vanilla is available from:
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/davej/patches/2.5/

 -- Davej.

2.5.2-dj1
o   Merge 2.5.2 final.
o   Merge 2.5.3pre1
o   Numerous compile fixes.                             (Various)
o   Fix crc32 JFFS2 problem.                            (Russell
King)
o   Remove left over ARM bits from 2.5.1-dj15.          (Me)
o   Mips Magnum fb compile fix.                         (Me)
o   Update to sched-I3                                  (Ingo Molnar)
o   Add missing cp1250 file.                            (Me)

Category:

  • Linux

And in this corner, it’s ‘everyone’s Linux’…

Author: JT Smith

– by Robin “Roblimo” Miller
ELX (everyone’s Linux) is almost ready for user-level desktops. The basic package installed easily on the two computers I used to test it. My first install was done at a meeting of the Suncoast LUG in Brandon, Florida. Other members also tried ELX and gave it high marks. We tested Pre-I, a far-from-finished release, and now we’re eagerly awaiting ELX Pre-I release candidate-II, which probably won’t have most of the bugs we saw in Pre I.

ELX is a simplified, KDE-based distribution that is very similar to Redmond Linux. Both of them have put a lot of effort into making their setup routines and default desktops as Windows-user-friendly as possible, while still including more sophisticated GUI and command line admin tools. And both are succeeding. If anything, ELX is even closer to Windows, as far as GUI- level administration, than Redmond Linux.

Here’s a quote from the ELX Web site:

“Users migrating from Windows will find Elx an absolute delight as Elx retains both style and functionality of all goodies they left behind in Windows like My computer, Network Neighbourhood, Control Panel, Set up wizards etc. besides which it also provides tremendous amount of control, liberty, reliability, power and maturity which are inherently associated with LINUX.”

Both ELX and Redmond Linux have cut installation choices to the bone; you start with basic functionality and little else. I give ELX points over Redmond Linux for including OpenOffice, along with AbiWord and KOffice, in its default install. But this is a temporary advantage. Joe Cheeks, of Redmond Linux, has told me Redmond is going to include OpenOffice either as part of the default install or as an option very soon.

Both have recent, fully-usable Mozilla versions, including popular plugins. Both use the KDE Control Center and Konqueror as the basis of all system controls, instead of having (visually) separate tools a la Mandrake or SuSE.

Hands-on with ELX
My friend Bill Preece had his girlfriend, Diana, do their first install of ELX, because she has less Linux experience than he does. He said Diana had no trouble at all. “The only question she asked,” Bill said, “was whether she should make a boot floppy. I told her no.” But then they tried to shut down the laptop on which they’d installed ELX, and it couldn’t find a floppy drive and … hung. With ReiserFS, this was an inconvenience, not a disaster. They overcame the problem by reinstalling as “default” rather than as “laptop.” But they also had trouble opening OpenOffice (which I did not).

Jim, one of the Suncoast LUG members who was at the meeting where we first installed ELX, went home and tried it himself later. In an email to the group’s list he wrote, “I really like it. It’s smoooooooth.” He also said, “The ‘Network Neighborhood’ works really well, and the pop-up windows are cool.”

I personally encountered what we might call “inconsistencies” with the install. I tried it over and over (five times) and got slightly different glitches with each try. It always worked pretty well, but not perfectly. For example, during my five test installs, my much-loved Linksys wireless card was detected and installed correctly only twice.

In general, ELX was achingly close to full usability, but not quite “there” yet. But don’t forget, this was a very early pre-release version, and no one at ELX claimed it was ready for the big-time. Abhi Datt and his ELX crew assured Bill and me that the bugs we and others spotted (I did not include a full list here) were known and that they were working to correct them.

ELX + Redmond Linux?
Every now and then I have an urge to yell at two separate groups of developers, “Would you guys please get together and cooperate instead of competing with each other?!?!”

I feel this urge very strongly with ELX and Redmond Linux. Each has areas where it is ahead of the other. Each has strengths, each has weaknesses. ELX is based in Hyderabad, India; Redmond Linux in Redmond, Washington, so they have different, probably complementary cultural perspectives. Both groups are run by very smart, very helpful people. And they are making Linux distributions that are, at least from a user’s viewpoint, very similar to one another. It would be nice if they could collaborate. Perhaps some of the development resources that are now going into duplicate work could go into user-level application writing or porting, an area where Linux in general — not just one distribution — could certainly use help if it’s going to attract more Windows users.

More to come…
This is not a full review of ELX, just a “first peek.” We’ll be looking at ELX again in another release or two, when it’s a little more of a finished product. The next version may be ready to download by the time you read this; we hear that it’s almost ready. If not, bookmark ELX and wait. It’s sure to be along shortly. But keep a close eye on Redmond Linux, too. And don’t forget OEone. All three are working hard to make Linux more usable for “the masses,” and all three are doing a darned good job.

It’s also going to be interesting to see how Red Hat, SuSE, Mandrake, and other distribution publishers react to these newcomers. Will they come out with super-stripped default menu options for brand-new users? Work on making their install routines easier? Move toward closer integration with KDE, Gnome, Mozilla or another desktop? Or will they move toward more enterprise-level offerings, and cede the basic home and small office desktop to the “next wave” of players in the user-level Linux marketplace?

Category:

  • Linux

Judge: Microsoft must give states Windows code

Author: JT Smith

Reuters (on CNN.com) reports that a federal judge has ruled that Microsoft Corp. will have to supply the computer code for its Windows program to a group of states seeking stiffer antitrust sanctions against the software giant.

Compiling MPlayer from sources

Author: JT Smith

aLEczapKA writes” “MPlayer is a best (in my opinion) movie player for Linux, it supports many movie formats (including asf, asx or mov) it’s fast and can work on many *NIXes including non-x86 platform. Because distributing precompiled packages with MPlayer is illegal, I’ve prepared some HOWTO which will help you build MPLayer from sources, plus set of build.scripts to help you go through the whole procedure really easy. It was written for Slackware users in mind, however the tips found there could be applied on any distro.”

.Net problems plague Microsoft

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “After a five-day outage, Microsoft fixed a technician’s error Tuesday, allowing Windows
users to once again access critical operating system updates on the company’s Web site.

But the problem–the latest in a series–had .Net analysts questioning whether the software giant
can deliver the reliability necessary for its widely touted 24-7 Web services initiative.”