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Calling all girls: IT needs you

Author: JT Smith

From Australian IT: “For a well-publicised and growing area of study, information technology remains remarkably stuck in the gender imbalance that characterises much older fields such as engineering.”

Category:

  • Linux

AMD warns on revenue, attacks Intel

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes “Warning on Wednesday that third-quarter sales will be 15 percent lower than the previous period, microprocessing challenger Advanced Micro Devices lashed out at rival chipmaker Intel for “devaluing” megahertz and accused the chip leader of misleading consumers. The Sunnyvale, California-based AMD — caught up in a price war with Santa Clara, California-based Intel amid a sagging PC market — said revenue in the current quarter will be even less than expected, mostly because of poor sales in flash memory chips.”

Category:

  • Unix

Users won’t pay for Web music

Author: JT Smith

From MSNBC: “Consumers have not accepted purchasing and downloading music via the Web and are not likely to change with the new services being developed by the recording industry, according to a survey by research firm GartnerG2 on Wednesday.”

Another Linux show, another $100,000

Author: JT Smith

– By Robin “Roblimo” Miller
My feet are tired, but not as tired as they would be if this week’s LinuxWorld in San Francisco had been as big as previous ones. There was a good collection of big, slick corporate booths, the kind that cost $100,000 or more to build (plus fees to be there at all), and a number of smaller commercial exhibitors. There were even a few semi-exciting products on display, but not nearly as many as at past LinuxWorld Expos.
I am tired of covering trade shows. I have been to enough of them that none of them seem to offer anything new. Yes, this company has a server that is a little faster and smaller than the ones they were selling last year, and so-and-so has replaced version 5.3.4 of their software with version 5.3.4.00001 and is making major hoopla over it, but so what? Been there, done that, got the sore feet and dozens of logo-emblazoned T-shirts to prove it. The swag level this week is down from previous Linux shows, a phenomenon that is not Linux-specific; every computer industry show I’ve been to in 2001 has less swag, fewer exhibitors, and fewer attendees than last year.

Most of the truly innovative stuff shown off at this Linux World won’t surprise any dedicated NewsForge, Slashdot, Linux Weekly News or Linux Today reader, because it’s all been covered fairly well by one site or another. Kylix and some of the other things Borland is working on, like the upcoming Delphi 6 for Linux, are good news because they will make it easier for developers used to working in Windows to develop Linux applications easily and rapidly. Kylix, at least, deserves a full review, not just a brief mention, and that’s not something you can do at a show. (NewsForge will have a complete Kylix review within a few weeks.)

Codeweavers’ CrossOver is kind of nice. It is essentially a Wine version optimized to run Windows browser plugins, so using Linux no longer means you are a second-class Netizen, forbidden to watch QuickTime movies or play Shockwave online games. This is not free software; it’s like $20 downloaded, $30 on CD. You’ll have to decide for yourself if it’s worth the money, and free software purists won’t want anything to do with it. If you’re installing CrossOver on Mandrake 8.0, you had better read the README file on the CD first (assuming you’re installing from a CD). There is a Mandrake-specific installation issue to deal with, one that is no big deal if you know about it, but is guaranteed to drive you up the wall if you don’t.

I strongly suggest reading the CrossOver license agreement instead of just clicking “I agree.” I don’t say this because the terms are onerous, but because this license is actually interesting to read! Other than that, there is nothing to say about CrossOver. It worked as advertised for me. NewsForge’s Dan Berkes already reviewed this piece of software, and he liked it. CrossOver was also mentioned on Slashdot, mostly favorably, on August 28th.

Thinking of CodeWeavers and Wine, they figure heavily in another interesting commercial project, TransGaming, which has already been the subject of several Slashdot discussions. Gavriel State, TransGaming CEO, is a very cool guy. He wears a floppy cloth hat much like one I got several years ago at a Renaissance Faire, sort of a medieval savant thing. He didn’t tell me anything, really, that I couldn’t have learned from his Web site, but the main reason we go to shows is to put faces to the names and email addresses, right?

The last item at LinuxWorld that really jazzed any of the people I was hanging with there was the OmniCluster SlotServer. This is serious mojo hardware that deserves a serious review by someone who really knows what they’re doing in a production server environment. Brian Aker, Slashcode and Apache developer, is going to do that review. We hope the SlotServer works as well in Brian’s tests as it did in the demos at the show; we’ve got to admit, we like the OmniCluster people a lot. They are not slick on marketing, but they know their stuff. They’re good, old-line engineers, from CEO Chris Fleck on down, very helpful, and proud of their work in a way no big company team could ever be. (It may not be impartial journalism to root for a small company run by cool folks, but that’s the way it goes.)

On the swag front, the most interesting items around were some giant-sized Velcro wire ties that James McHugh, webmaster for San Francisco ACM SIGGRAPH pointed out would make perfect bondage gear. “You open them like this,” he said as he demonstrated one of the little cloth devices. “The arms go here, and this part goes around the bedpost.”

We are politely not mentioning the name of the company that was giving away these items.

Tomorrow: a cruise through the .org pavilion.

Category:

  • Linux

Fear and loathing in the information services department

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes “Microsoft has made a fortune by keeping software comfortable for the end-user. This familiarity and ease-of-use, among other factors, has left competitors in the dust time and time again. But Microsoft’s hand-holding has always frustrated the hobbyist who is curious about how more complex systems fit together. With Linux, that is no longer the case. Ask the average MCSE to debug some networking problems or configure a Cisco router and you’ll find out what fear and loathing in the Information Services Department is all about.”

Category:

  • Migration

Encryption smuggling plot foiled

Author: JT Smith

From MSNBC: “Two men have been arrested and accused of smuggling military encryption to China, the Customs Service said Wednesday.”

Category:

  • Linux

Evolution bug-hunt!

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot discusses the impending release of Evolution, and the pre-release bug-hunt which carries awards for bug-squashes.

Category:

  • Open Source

KDE is the “Best Open Source Project”

Author: JT Smith

KDE dot reports that its namesake has been given the honor of the “Best Open Source Project” at Linux World Expo in San Francisco.

Category:

  • Open Source

LinuxSecurity.com: New look, new features

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity Contributors writes “After an extensive period of planning and
development, LinuxSecurity.com contributors have over the last several months
added easier navigation ability, integration with our local high-speed Packetstorm
Security mirror, and much more.

LinuxSecurity, sponsored by Guardian Digital and first released nearly two years ago, is an
intuitive and easy to use web site with a focus on open source security. The site’s goal is to
deliver relevant content and information on security issues as they relate to various
distributions of Linux and BSD operating systems, as well as any products for which security
issues arise.

http://www.linuxsecurity.com/feature_stories/feature_story-92.html

Torvalds on .NET’s Hailstorm

Author: JT Smith

From an anonymous contributor: Linus has given his opinion on the potential for Microsoft to place a “tax” on the internet for use of .NETs Hailstorm/Passport profile management system. He doesn’t think it’s likely. “There’s no way in hell Microsoft is going to tax the rest of the world, so don’t even worry about it.” But is he right?