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Firm raps FBI’s Code Red response

Author: JT Smith

From MSNBC: “[Code Red] infected an estimated 975,000 servers in July and August 2001. But representatives of eEye Digital Security, which discovered the flaw in Microsoft’s Internet Information Server (IIS) exploited by the worm, say the FBI should have been more proactive in warning people about a “test” version of the worm to which it was alerted in April.”

Four 1GHz Pentium 3 servers in only 1U of rack space

Author: JT Smith

Fnord Systems is now selling the
Fnord 90, a new rackmount server that shoehorns four independent 1GHz Pentium
3 servers into only 1U of rack space. Fully loaded (P3-1GHz/512MB/100GB) each
node costs $1,344.

BELLINGHAM, Wash., September 6th 2001

Fnord Datacenter Systems (http://www.fnordsystems.com)
proudly announces the Fnord 90, a breakthrough in high density rackmount server
design. For the first time ever, four independent 1GHz Pentium 3 servers can
fit in only 1U of rack space. Each Fnord 90 contains two seperate 1GHz servers
in a single 1U, 15.75 inch deep chassis. Two shallow-depth Fnord 90s can be
mounted back-to-back in standard 36″ depth colocation cabinets, racking
four 1GHz servers in 1U.

Each server has its own 866MHz or 1GHz Pentium 3 processor, 256 or 512MB of
RAM, and 40 to 100GB of 7,200rpm ATA/100 IDE storage. Three Intel Pro/100+ Ethernet
interfaces are standard on every server, facilitating interlinked clustering
without need for a switch.

The unique single-sided connector design places all data and power connections
on the front faceplate of the server, greatly simplifying cable management.
One hundred sixty-eight (168) servers can be mounted in a single 42U cabinet,
making the Fnord 90 perfect for Beowulf clusters, web hosting farms, mathematical
simulation, rendering, and other node-distributed processor intensive tasks.

The most compelling feature of the Fnord 90 is its price, less than half that
of expensive “blade” style high density servers. In a P3-866MHz/256MB/40gb
configuration, it costs $1,070 per server, while fully loaded P3-1GHz/512MB/100GB
servers are only $1,344.

Fnord Systems specializes in servers designed for Open Source software, and
offers every server with the customer’s choice of FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD,
or various distributions of Linux. The Fnord 90 also has
full device driver support in Windows NT 4 and 2000.

One of Washington State’s leading datacenter infrastructure firms, Fnord offers
a full product line ranging from $1,000 1U Firewalls to massively powerful quad-processor
Xeons.

For more information, please contact:

Eric Kuhnke
Lead Engineer / Operations Manager
http://www.fnordsystems.com
Phone: (360) 527-3301

Apple sued over patents

Author: JT Smith

From ZDNet: “Apple Computer was sued Thursday for alleged infringement of two computer patents owned by a small company called Biax. According to papers that Biax filed in the U.S. District Court in Delaware, three Colorado-based inventors of the 1996 patents assigned their rights to Biax.”

HP-Compaq: Breakup could be costly

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that the HP-Compaq merger could cost one of the companies $675 million if it causes the merger deal to fall through, and the value of the deal has fallen more than 20% to under 20 billion dollars as shareholders express their disapproval.

Category:

  • Open Source

Caldera announces losses, layoffs

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports on layoffs at Caldera after the company’s third-quarter financial report. The report detailed a loss of $18.8 million, and the company is doing a reverse stock split to stay listed at Nasdaq.

Category:

  • Open Source

Linux users warned of new Trojan danger

Author: JT Smith

vnunet: “Security companies are warning Linux users
over a new and dangerous Trojan that may
have originated in the UK.
The Trojan contains self-replicating virus-like
capabilities and has similarities to the
Windows-based Back Orifice tool, putting Linux
boxes at risk of remote control.”

Category:

  • Linux

Redfoot celebrates birthday with 1.0 release

Author: JT Smith

James Tauber writes “We are delighted to announce the release of Redfoot 1.0. Today marks the one year anniversary of the initial project submission to SourceForge and so what better way to celebrate Redfoot’s first birthday than by releasing version 1.0? Redfoot is an open source framework for building distributed data-driven web applications with RDF and Python. It can be used to develop personal or workgroup information environments, community web sites or any kind of web application that involves managing the relationships between different information objects in a consistent yet extensible manner. Redfoot is distributed under a BSD-style license and is available at http://redfoot.sourceforge.net/

Security workers: Copyright law stifles

Author: JT Smith

CNET News.com: “Two well-known computer security experts pulled down their works from the Internet this
week for fear of being prosecuted under 1998’s Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

Along with the threatened lawsuit of Princeton computer-science professor Edward Felten, and
the arrest of Russian encryption expert Dmitry Sklyarov, the incidents are the latest to point at
what is quickly becoming a touchy environment for security experts.”

Category:

  • Linux

MontaVista provides embedded Linux for a configurable processor

Author: JT Smith

Posted at PR Newswire: “In a joint announcement, MontaVista
Software Inc., the company powering the embedded revolution and Tensilica, the
leading supplier of configurable processor cores for embedded systems, today
disclosed a wide-reaching technical and marketing agreement. The pact leads
to the porting of MontaVista Software’s Hard Hat(TM) Linux(R), one of the most
widely used embedded Linux products to Tensilica’s Xtensa(R) processor
architecture.”

Category:

  • Linux

Inside Jail

Author: JT Smith

“Jail chroots an
environment and sets certain restrictions on processes which are forked from within. For example, a jailed process cannot affect processes outside of the
jail, utilize certain system calls, or inflict any damage on the main computer. Jail is becoming the new security model. People are running potentially
vulnerable servers such as Apache, BIND, and sendmail within jails, so that if an attacker gains root within the Jail, it is only an annoyance, and not a
devastation. This article focuses on the internals (source code) of Jail and Jail NG. It will also suggest improvements upon the jail code base which are
already being worked on.” Read the article at Daemon News.

Category:

  • Linux