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What good is technology against terror?

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes: “Only in the wake of a tragedy of such enormous proportions can we truly understand how vulnerable we really are, and how little we can do to prevent a disaster. We have become so dependent on technology that we expect it to somehow miraculously help us when terror strikes. Unfortunately, in time of desperate need, most of the things that we rely upon on a daily basis proved to be virtually worthless. Ironically, the Internet, which was by now supposed to have become the most reliable source of instantaneous news updates, was the first to fail. Both CNN.com and ABCNews.com went down only minutes after the event and were not fully functional for at least an hour.”

Category:

  • Linux

Linux token ring support bringing down corporate nets?

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot: “I’ve been running Debian GNU/Linux on my company supplied laptop for 3 months now. I got permission from my
manager to run it on the network, but I did not go through the somewhat rigorous process of getting the software certified. I
have legitimate business reasons for using it on the corporate network (which is why my manager approved it). I even
managed to get Lotus Notes to run under wine so I never had to boot into Winders at all (unless someone sent me a PPT
doc). I was pretty happy…until I brought the entire network down.” Anyone else running Linux on a Token Ring network who
would care to talk about their own experiences?”

Category:

  • Linux

Tech could prevent suicide hijackings

Author: JT Smith

CNET: “The next time a terrorist aims a jet at building, maybe the plane should say no.

From computers that could steer airliners away from skyscrapers to face-recognition devices already used to spot card
counters in casinos, technology could provide ways to make the skies safer, but at a cost, experts said.”

Category:

  • Linux

Belkin 4-Port USB switch

Author: JT Smith

From MozillaQuest Magazine: “if you are suffering from desktop clutter . . . too many mice and keyboards getting in the way . . .have only one printer, scanner, or other such peripheral device that you would like to share among several computers . . . Belkin has a nifty solution for Linux, Mac, and Windows users. . . . The new Belkin 4-Port USB Switch . . . lets you connect several computers to a single peripheral computer device. Or, you can use the Belkin 4-Port USB Switch together with a USB hub to connect a set of single peripherals to several computers.”

Category:

  • Unix

Weekly news wrap-up: Community and government responses to terrorist attacks

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

Open Source news took a back seat this week to world events, and even tech news sites focused on the terrorist attacks on the United States, for at least part of the week. Latest estimates of the missing in New York now top 5,000, with hundreds more dead in the hijacked airplanes and at the Pentagon.

The airplane hijackings even prompted a debate in the Open Source community, or at least readers of this site.

Open Source advocate Eric S. Raymond, stepping away from his more traditional types of advocacy, commented on how the United States could avoid further attacks. From ESR’s commentary: “Perhaps it is too much to hope that we will respond to this shattering tragedy as well as the Israelis, who have a long history of preventing similar atrocities by encouraging their civilians to carry concealed weapons and to shoot back at criminals and terrorists. But it is in that policy of a distributed response to a distributed threat, with every single citizen taking personal responsibility for the defense of life and freedom, that our best hope for preventing recurrences of today’s mass murders almost certainly lies.”

That commentary provoked hundreds of responses, including one from veteran technology journalist Bruce Tober, who called Raymond’s proposal absurd. Wrote Tober: “Decentralizing government, or more specifically the justice system, would result in sheer chaos as each state and county and local municipal government enacts its own, often contradictory, laws. At which point no one knows what laws pertain and which don’t and confusion reigns supreme. Raymond seems to even go beyond this, suggesting we all administer our own personal justice.” Tober’s commentary prompted several dozen responses itself.

Less political, but perhaps more moving, was NewsForge business columnist Jack Bryar’s early tribute to the victims of the attacks. Among the victims was Daniel C. Lewin, co-founder, chief technology officer and board member of Akamai Technologies. Here’s a list of ways to help the relief efforts.

Government response: Spying on U.S. residents, illegal encryption?

Some of the fallout from the attacks are likely to affect the technology community. The U.S. Senate approved a measure that would allow police to spy on Internet users and issue wiretaps without search warrants. One senator is calling for a global ban on “uncrackable” encryption products.

Whatever your view on what measures should be taken to combat terrorism, these measures are worth more debate than the quick passage they seem to be getting. Some people might actually be uncomfortable about a national police force that can spy on its own citizens without even a judge’s permission.

RTLinux vs. the GPL?

Back to news of a more Open Source/Free Software nature. The Free Software Foundation is accusing RTLinux of violating the GPL. No word yet from the company.

Bad business news

Two companies with Open Source ties announced bad news recently: Lineo announced it was cutting 60 positions and EBIZ Enterprises filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

New in NewsForge

Stories that appeared first in NewsForge this week:

  • We report that Lutris Technologies has backed away from its active support of the Open Source Enterprise Enhydra project because of licensing problems with Sun Microsystems’ J2EE.

  • Mike Newlands reports that Turbolinux has discontinued on-the-self sales of its Linux operating system in the United States.

  • Tina Gasperson reviews the Linux section of Tucows.com and finds it a good site to find your favorite Linux programs.

  • Alan Cox: Linux 2.4.9-ac11

    Author: JT Smith

    ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/linux-2.4/.
    Intermediate diffs are available from http://www.bzimage.org.

    Cox writes:

    ** ::EXPERIMENTAL::
    ** This is just a resync as various people work to get most
    ** of -ac into Linus 2.4.10. Please don't resend patches - I have a
    ** lot nicely queued. This is just a snapshot to keep pakrat happy and
    ** so folks can see where it is at and double check. It might even
    ** boot - who knows
    **

    2.4.9-ac11
    o Fix sign check error in death signal (Martin Macok,
    Kamil Toman)>br>
    o Merge up to Linus 2.4.10pre9

    2.4.9-ac10
    o Multiple swapoff fixes (Hugh Dickins)>br>;
    o Clean up the mips parts of the mem.c ifdefs (Ralf Baechle)>br>
    o Update NCR53c700 driver, make it generic (James Bottomley,
    Richard Hirst, Rasmus Andersen, Keith Owens)>br>
    o Recognize Radeon VE in radeonfb (Nick Kurshev)>br>
    o MCE address reporting fix (Dave Jones)>br>
    o APIC check fixes (Randy Dunlap)>br>
    o Wrong SIGBUS data in siginfo fix (Daniel Kobras)>br>
    o acpi Makefile fix (Keith Owens)>br>
    o NTFS update (Anton Altaparmakov)>br>
    o Parse mainboard resources inline to pnp not
    as pci_device objects (Gerd Knorr)>br>
    o Propogate register_netdev errors out from
    init_netdev (Dave Miller)>br>
    o Take sound lock static (David Hansen)>br>
    o ns83820 updates/fixes (Ben LaHaise)>br>
    o Small arch_init_modules fix for ia64 (Maciej Rozycki)>br>
    o pci bridge setup fixes, 64bit sign propogation
    etc (Todd Inglett)>br>
    o Add another batch of MODULE_LICENSE tags (me)>br>

    2.4.9-ac9
    o ICP vortex documentation update (Boji Kannanthanam)>br>
    o Fix farsync ioctl checks (Bob Dunlop)>br>
    o Kiovec optimisations (Rohit Seth)>br>
    o Fix irda-usb match flags (Adam J Richter)>br>
    o USB serial MODULE_LICENSE tags (Greg Kroah-Hartmann)>br>
    o Tidy up Changes notes to recommend gcc2.95+ (“Colonel”)>br>
    o Kill dup in usb unusual_devs table (Harald Schreiber)>br>
    o Ethtool ioctl handling fix (Dave Miller)>br>
    o Add S/PDIF, 4 and 6 channel audio to ICH driver (Bob Paauwe)>br>
    o Fix compare types in ncpfs (Petr Vandrovec)>br>
    o Add limit to bluetooth ioctl (me)>br>
    o Fix missing channel range check in dpt_i2o (me)>br>
    o Fix lvm checks (me)>br>
    o Add missing wireless ioctl length check (me)>br>
    o Fix checks in sbpcd (me)>br>
    o Fix checks in generic ppp (me)>br>
    o Fix check in zr36067 (me)>br>
    o Fix checks in moxa (me)>br>
    o Fix checks in zr36120 (me)>br>
    o Fix Matrox DRM to mention G450 (Pavel Roskin)>br>
    o DGRS multi-nic mode fix (Rick Richardson)>br>
    o Reformat aztcd (no other changes)>br> (me)>br>
    o Clean up the mcd driver (me)>br>
    o Remove gendisk export. Gendisk is now private (Christoph Hellwig)>br>
    to the sane API and has proper locking
    o Highmem overflow fix (Ben LaHaise)>br>
    o Megaraid oops fix (Arjan van de Ven)>br>
    o Update kernel-doc-nano-HOWTO (Ken Moffat)>br>
    o Fix sis900 kerneldoc (Ken Moffat)>br>
    o Fix via audio kernel doc (Ken Moffat)>br>

    VA lays off Mesa developer

    Author: JT Smith

    From Slashdot: “Brian Paul, the author of Mesa, was laid off by VA Linux. Here’s his mail to the mesa3d-dev list.” Other places are reporting that Keith Whitwell of the DRI project was also laid off. Presumably just two of many major contributors to open source, but honestly I don’t really know who got the axe.” VA Linux Systems is the parent company to NewsForge.

    Category:

    • Open Source

    Adding anti-aliased font support to gtk+-1.2

    Author: JT Smith

    From Gnotices: “Gdkxft transparently adds anti-aliased font support to gtk+-1.2. Once you have installed it, you can run any (well, nearly any) existing gtk+ binary and see anti-aliased fonts in the gtk widgets. You don’t need to recompile gtk+ or your applications. The current version of gdkxft is 1.2. Improvements include: installation tuning, debian packaging, more gdk font API hooks, bugfixes and more.”

    Category:

    • Open Source

    Please make stable NON-US homes for strong crypto projects

    Author: JT Smith

    An email has been circulating about helping to ensure that the recent US government changes won’t destroy US-based crypto projects. “It’s clear that the US administration is putting out feelers to
    again ban publication of strong encryption. See: http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46816,00.html
    The evil gnomes who keep advancing unconstitutional US anti-crypto
    policies know that the current hysteria in Congress and the
    Administration will not last forever. “

    Linux Kernel 2.4.9-ac11 released

    Author: JT Smith

    Linux Kernel 2.4.9-ac11 has been released at ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/linux-2.4/.
    Intermediate diffs are available from http://www.bzimage.org.

    **	::EXPERIMENTAL::
    **	This is just a resync as various people work to get most
    **	of -ac into Linus 2.4.10. Please don't resend patches - I have a
    **	lot nicely queued. This is just a snapshot to keep pakrat happy and
    **	so folks can see where it is at and double check. It might even 
    **	boot - who knows
    **
    
    2.4.9-ac11
    o	Fix sign check error in death signal		(Martin Macok,
    							 Kamil Toman)
    o	Merge up to Linus 2.4.10pre9
    	
    2.4.9-ac10
    o	Multiple swapoff fixes				(Hugh Dickins);
    o	Clean up the mips parts of the mem.c ifdefs	(Ralf Baechle)
    o	Update NCR53c700 driver, make it generic	(James Bottomley,
    				Richard Hirst, Rasmus Andersen, Keith Owens)
    o	Recognize Radeon VE in radeonfb			(Nick Kurshev)
    o	MCE address reporting fix			(Dave Jones)
    o	APIC check fixes				(Randy Dunlap)
    o	Wrong SIGBUS data in siginfo fix		(Daniel Kobras)
    o	acpi Makefile fix				(Keith Owens)
    o	NTFS update					(Anton Altaparmakov)
    o	Parse mainboard resources inline to pnp not	(Gerd Knorr)
    	as pci_device objects
    o	Propogate register_netdev errors out from 	(Dave Miller)
    	init_netdev
    o	Take sound lock static				(David Hansen)
    o	ns83820 updates/fixes				(Ben LaHaise)
    o	Small arch_init_modules fix for ia64		(Maciej Rozycki)
    o	pci bridge setup fixes, 64bit sign propogation	(Todd Inglett)
    	etc
    o	Add another batch of MODULE_LICENSE tags	(me)
    
    

    Category:

    • Linux