Author: JT Smith
this (perhaps the last stable release of the KDE 2 series) better.”
Category:
- Open Source
Author: JT Smith
2.4.10-pre12 is impressive Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 13:16:46 +0200 From: Helge HaftingTo: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org 2.4.10-pre12 is impressive compared to pre10. 128M, 300MHz and a 3G ide-drive is usually enough for office work and compiling, but there are times I use some swap. Reading the impressive reviews for pre11, I decided to put it through a worst-case test. Well, worst-case for my kind of use anyway. I started staroffice with 40 documents. This is slow and tends to ruin interactive performance for a long time. I used to get lots of swapping, and plenty of swapping in long after finishing staroffice. This time I also started a kernel compile, a updatedb run, and a rgrep in /usr/src while waiting for staroffice to load. I also had netscape up. It came up, with only 10M total in swap. 20-30M just for starting staroffice used to be the case. And interactive performance was fine, even with all that going on. The normal under such circumstances is several seconds just to raise a xterm, with typing oocationally lagging and delays when pressing enter. But only commands needing disk-io got delayed and only slightly. Typing and window moving were just like a normal X session with nothing else going on. The rgrep seemed to proceed at great speed, the compile ran very slowly. I guess it lost the bandwidth competition. Then I went away for lunch, and when I came back there were no more than 20M in swap. Everything had finished except the compile - it was still hampered by netscape doing one of its 100% cpu bugs. Staroffice and netscape _still_ performed fine, all that io didn't destroy their working sets! I quit staroffice, the compile finished, and swap usage dropped do 15M. The machine have recovered perfectly - there seems to be none of that long-term sluggishness that used to happen after updatedb or after swapping 20M. The machine used to recover to a usable state before too, but never this good. Before, I had to reboot or use it a few hours. Good work! There's noticeable improvement for desktop use! Helge Hafting
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Georg's Brave GNU World is a monthly column which is being released simultaneously in seven languages (English, German, French, Japanese, Spanish, Korean and Portugese) on the web and printed in the German "Linux-Magazin" as well as the "Linux Magazine" U.K. and the "Linux Magazine France." This makes it the monthly column with the widest distribution worldwide (afaik). If you would like to receive mail about new issues directly, you can subscribe to the "Brave GNU World" announcement mailinglist. Just send mail towith "subscribe" in the *body*. The mailinglist is only for announcements that are related to the "Brave GNU World" and is of very low volume (between 1 and 2 mails a month). The 31st issue covers the following topics: * Freeciv [ A Free Software Civilization Clone ] * XWeb [ Writing web pages in XML/XSL ] * General Server Pages [ Writing programs for structured output made easy ] * GNU Classpath Extensions [ GNU and Java is no contradiction ] * IDX-PKI [ An entirely Free Software Public Key Infrastructure ] This column intends to provide a forum for all GNU maintainers, friends and associates and I am always open to suggestions. So if you * have questions about the GNU Project that might be of general interest * have a GNU Project and would like to improve its profile * would like to start a GNU Project you are looking for people to start it with * think something doesn't get the publicity it deserves * would like to see something made public send mail to: "Brave GNU World " This column is for everyone with an interest in Free Software, so don´t hesitate to contact me if your project is under a Free Software license and you´d like to see it introduced here. The 31st issue can be found at http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.en.html [ English version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.fr.html [ French version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.de.html [ German version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.ja.html [ Japanese version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.es.html [ Spanish version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.ko.html [ Korean version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/issue-31.pt.html [ Portugese version ] or via the "Brave GNU World" homepage http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.en.html [ English version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.fr.html [ French version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.de.html [ German version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.ja.html [ Japanese version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.es.html [ Spanish version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.ko.html [ Korean version ] http://www.gnu.org/brave-gnu-world/brave-gnu-world.pt.html [ Portugese version ] That´s it for now... Regards, Georg Greve
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Since this report was written, two more free self-help chatterbots have been released by InnerPeace.Org under the GPL, including one on forgiveness, which is particularly relevant at this time. Starting InnerPeace support groups at your church or place of work is very easy to do.”
Category:
Author: JT Smith
The company said its second-quarter adjusted loss totaled $100,000, or nil cents per share, compared with a loss of
$4 million, or 2 cents per share, in the year-earlier period.”
Category:
Author: JT Smith
All your suggestions are welcome, more particularly regarding these subjects :
– Would you like to compete, what is the free software project you are working on,… ?
– Where would you advise us to give information on this contest (web sites, universities, …) ?
Soissons-Technopole (url in french, a translation in english is coming soon)
Author: JT Smith
Members of the Open Source and Free Software communities continue to feel the effects of last Tuesday’s terrorist attacks on the United States, with community responses ranging from anger to concern over civil liberties to desire to discuss the events.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Free Software Foundation’s Richard Stallman have called for vigilance in protecting civil rights, while some in the community have suggested that a clamp-down on civil rights may be the price the United States has to pay to fight terrorism (see the responses to Stallman’s article).
Amid those debates, the DotGNU project has opened a new mailing list, called compassion@dotgnu.org, for members of the community to discuss the events of the last week. Barry Fitzgerald, a member of the DotGNU Steering Committee, says the list will be an open one to discuss the terrorist attacks and related subjects.
But he also urged restraint among list members. “Please be compassionate and treat
others in this list with respect,” Fitzgerald wrote to the DotGNU-developers list. “There is room for disagreement. There is no room for brutal grandstanding. Please join and share your emotions.”
Fitzgerald says part of the reason for the new list is to move such discussions away from the DotGNU-developers list. But he also acknowledged the need for people to work through their emotions.
“Many people harbor many different political opinions all over
the world,” he wrote to the DotGNU developers list. ” I personally feel that these diverse political opinions are
what gives us strength. These diverse opinions provide us with a sense
of refinement in our systems. Without our differences, we could never
adapt in a positive way to the events around us. As such, everybody
has something different to say about these horrible events. This has
affected everybody in a mutually unique way.”
To join the list, go to http://dotgnu.org/mailman/listinfo/compassion.
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Category: