Home Blog Page 9245

New powerful supercomputer MBC-1000M launched in Moscow

Author: JT Smith

Kirill Tikhonov writes: “Russian news site Compulenta has a story about new powerful supercomputer MBC-1000M launched in Moscow’s Joint Supercomputer Center. According to the Russian Minister of Industry, Science and Technologies, Russia now holds the third place among the world’s manufacturers of high performance supercomputers. Which means that all European countries and China were left behind. The peak performance of the system is 1 Tflops, the value that makes up the estimated performance speed of the human brain.”

Category:

  • Unix

Net activists launch campaign to jam ‘Echelon’

Author: JT Smith

CNN: ” Internet privacy activists and
“hacktivists” have announced a day-long
cyber-protest intended to jam a computer
surveillance network whose existence isn’t
acknowledged by the governments said to run it.

The activists set October 21 as “Jam Echelon Day,”
calling on individuals to attempt to clog the
purported monitoring system by using so-called
“trigger” words in e-mail messages. The Echelon
system is said to monitor the use of certain words such
as “bomb,” or “terrorism,” that could suggest
dangerous activity.”

Category:

  • Programming

New issue of Debian Weekly News

Author: JT Smith

Tollef Fog Heen writes: “A new issue of Debian Weekly News is out.”

Category:

  • Linux

PostNuke unleashes the ‘mutant’ release, v0.6

Author: JT Smith

Harry Zink writes: “The chained beast that has been rattling its cage, yearning to be let out and unleashed upon the Earth, is freed… Indeed, the release of PostNuke v0.61, codenamed ‘Mutant’ is upon us. You can log on to www.PostNuke.com to find the release announcement, an invitation to mutate.
Here’s what’s new, as well as some background, and new features of the Mutant.

First of all, this release contains a large number of bug fixes. While we certainly can’t say that we have ‘fixed all bugs that has been reported’ (since a considerable number still mock us from the bug-list on SourceForge), a judicious effort has been undertaken to exterminate as many bugs as we could until release. So, obviously some will be left in there, as well as a couple of new ones – such is the nature of code, don’t let it bug ‘ya!

The two big features of the Mutant release represent two major changes to the former infrastructure – the addition of Crocket’s Multi-Lingual (ML) functions, and Patrick Kellum’s Advanced Blocks.

PostNuke/Multi-Lingual (ML) is in an evolution towards a full-fledged multi-lingual system, allowing a weblog to publish articles, surveys, messages, etc… in different languages, to be selectively viewable by visitors in their chosen language. In other words, if you select your language to be English, you will only see menus, messages, articles, etc… in English. If you select it in, say, Français, you will only see the French version of all of the content. To clarify a popular misconception, though – this does not mean that PostNuke/ML automatically translates everything on the fly (à la Babelfish). Of course not – you still need contributors fluent in the various languages to provide the content, but the ML features allow you to organize and present the information in a linguistically organized manner.

Advanced Blocks, while still wet behind the ears, can provide an admin with far more flexibility in creating and organizing blocks than was previously possible. Tightly integrated with the ML features, you can create identical, custom blocks for various languages to provide, for example, a fully multi-lingual Main Menu. Advanced Blocks also supports an API (still being fine-tuned) that allows you to create custom block types, which might hopefully lead to more creative third parties providing new and innovative blocks, to help admins customize and enhance their websites.

Future changes and enhancements planned:

Topik Paks: PostNuke 0.61 ships with a dramatically reduced number of topic icons (just four (4) of them), in order to cut down on the bulk of the package, and to aid users who do not require the bulk of the existing icons (for example, if you don’t run a GNU/GPL Computer based site, 90% of those icons are of no use to you). In context with this change, we also propose the creation of Topic Paks, which we encourage third parties to create and provide. In addition to just to topic icons, a Topic Pak should also include a small installation script that will place the icons in the right locations, as well as populate your SQL db with the right captions. We’ve created an appropriate ‘Topic Pak’ download section for those who want to start providing them as soon as the Topic Pak API is ready (might be a few days).

Avatar Paks: Same concept as above, except applied to the user avatars. This is currently under consideration.

PostNuke compatible Modules:
While 95% of all standard PHP-Nuke modules will continue to work, some modules start to appear that take advantage or are written to be compatible with PostNuke’s css, or other features, such as:

My_eGallery 2.57: (MeG) is the work of MarsisHere (with help from Patrick Kellum), and he’s created one of the premier image galleries for *Nuke weblogs. In terms of features, he’s packing them on. MeG actually supports additional media beyond just images, so you can also present (and allow your users to upload) Flash, Sound, and movie files. Check it out at http://www.babylone6tem.com in the downloads section.

Babe-a-Day: For all deprived computer computer geeks, uhm, I mean, true appreciators of the female form, this module has somehow found it’s way into our CVS tree.

Cyboards Forum: Many of you have been using them, many more should 🙂 Our current forum software is Cyboards, by Virgil of Gold-Sonata.com. They have been ported to PostNuke by Mark Summerlin of www.Fish-tails.net. The latest version offers several new features, better sorting, better display options, and subscriptions to the forum similar to a mailing list. As soon as that module is cleaned up, it will be available.

Phorum: There are several versions of the Phorum module floating around, and once we pick which one works best, we plan to offer that in the modules download section as well.

There’s more, but we have to save some to impress you all for the next release…

Evolve!

PostNuke.com”

Red Hat, 3G Lab to create first Open Source wireless OS

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes: “The first open-source operating system for next-generation wirelesss phones and other devices is under development by software developers Red Hat and 3G Lab, the companies have announced. Red Hat, a primary marketing outlet for the Linux open source operating system for personal computers, and multimedia software developer 3G Lab said the operating system for 2.5G GPRS (general packet radio service) and 3G UMTS (universal mobile telecommunications system) wireless devices is based on Red Hat’s open source, embedded, real-time eCos (embedded configurable operating system) and is not a Linux-based platform.”

East meets West with FreeOS.com’s Apurva Shah

Author: JT Smith

By Julie Bresnick
Open Source people

His name is Apu, like the convenient store owner on the Simpsons,
not
Abu, like the kid in Aladdin. It’s Apu, short for Apurva, and Apurva Shah is not
a cartoon character or a prince, he’s chief technical officer of FreeOS.com, a Bombay, India-based news and resource site serving the free operating
system community.It’s based in Bombay, because that is where Shah has lived
for about half of his 30 years, although he’s able to legitimately call
Boston and New York city home just as often as Bombay and Bangalore. Shah, who grew up
in Newton, Mass., wanting to be a fireman until relocating to Bombay at
age 12, is at least half all-American boy. He sowed his professional oats at one
of America’s big corporations, loves the outdoors, lived for a stint in
Manhattan and eventually went into business with his father. All the
signs of a healthy blue-blood.

He even spent a lot of his pre-teen time watching cowboys, though
that was a bit odd. His first job ever was to look up every night at a
neon billboard and make sure all the lights were on. The billboard was
owned by a friend of his father who paid the then 12-year-old Shah 50 rupees
a month, about $5, to monitor the health of said billboard, which boasted
the image of a cowboy prepping to lasso the billboard viewer into the western
hemisphere. Roughly 10 years later, Shah was hired by AT&T New Media Services to
compile, debug, fix and release build of their now defunct software product,
AT&T Interchange. Owning a billboard in Bombay must have
been no common matter, so the former job was no doubt a responsibility comparable
to that of the latter. Let’s just say Shah has been working in the
electronics industry since he was a boy.

It was hardware that fascinated Shah for years, and hardware that he
studied at RVCE in Bangalore, where
he earned an undergraduate degree in Electronics Engineering. In those
days he hated software and writing code, but a job in circuit design was not
forthcoming ,and he didn’t want to go into sales or support.

“I wanted to create, design and architect things. There was very
little scope doing what I wanted to do and very high levels of competition.
So I started teaching things like DOS, Lotus 123, Office suites and
progressed to the C programming language. I learned C while teaching it. Teaching
it forced me to gain deep understanding of the language.

“Once given a taste of C, there was no looking back. I fell in love
with coding.”

Through his last year at RVCE, he taught at a computer training
institute. He would prepare and learn just enough C to last a couple of days of
class. Once he was completely hooked, he set off to Boston University, where he
earned a masters in computer science. During his second year he started the
“build czar” job at AT&T. After AT&T, he moved to Manhattan where he
worked for a couple of smaller corporations.

In Manhattan he moved into an apartment full of techies and a T1
line, so it was only a matter of time before he met Linux. It was the mid-1990s,
and they were all hosting Web sites from their home-based servers. Shah
was already a Unix guy (Solaris, HP/UX), and he’d heard of Linux, but hadn’t
gotten around to trying it. The day he brought home a new hard drive, Linux
simply filled in the available space, absorbing yet another young
coding fanatic.

He was so taken with it, in fact, that he offered to join Prakash Advani and procure the
funds necessary to enhance Advani’s burgeoning site, FreeOS.com. In the fall
of 1998, Advani had written Getting Started
with Linux
for the Linux
Gazette
. Its popularity inspired the creation of FreeOS.com, a site dedicated
to propagating related knowledge and know-how.

In February of 2000, Shah got his father, Dr. Arvind Shah, on
board. Landing his father, author of one of the first books on Basic programming and a Ph.D. in operations research from Case Western, as “angel investor” wasn’t a matter of convenience for Shah, it was a business decision.

“I love working with Dad since there is just tremendous amounts to
learn and absorb from him. With all the knowledge and experience he has, I
feel lucky to be associated with him in business. He is my hero. His role
is pure mentorship and guidance.”

OK, so maybe the lack of family neurosis is not so New England.
What’s unusual, too, is that Shah returned to India to work at all. Though many
of his countrymen may remain loyal to their homeland, it is common for
Indian doctors and engineers to move west to study and practice, returning to
India only to visit and provide for extended family.

“It is quite tough to find good engineers here, since all the good
ones tend to leave for the States. Even if we do find good ones, it is becoming increasingly tough to retain them since they get offers to go abroad all the time. (Germany, Australia and England are other popular destinations.)”

If the simple existence of programmers is an issue, what kind of
obstacles must Open Source face in India?

“India is a poor country. People need money here so people tend to
work extra to rake in the dough. There is little or no time for many of us
to volunteer and do some Open Source coding. Also the business mindset is,
‘How can you charge for something that’s free?’ or, ‘How can you make money
using free software?'”

None of this, however, jars Shah’s resolve. When asked, “Why
Open Source?” he whips off a concise list of reasons that include
efficiency, the propagation of knowledge and therefore quality, stability, integration
and frugality. All of which contradicts the standing reputation of
traditional Indian bureaucracy which, like any system governed by a loose
collection of whim and reason, can be convoluted and often times mysterious.

But that, besides the few Hindi words that I speak, is why all
things Indian fascinate me. It is an endlessly intriguing country marked by
paradox and contradiction — colorful cottons set against the ashen
landscape of poverty, remains of the medieval amidst the bustle of modernity,
catcalls and a raffle in the middle of a Harrison Ford film. No doubt, if a
business model-less product can make it in any capitalist market, it can make it
in India’s. And if it doesn’t, well then Shah would be perfectly happy
running a reggae lounge and designing this year’s fall fashion collection. But
until then, he’ll continue to live and breath Linux and its liberated
brethren.

More about Apurva Shah

Mail reader: Sylpheed

Text editor: emacs

Linux distribution: Red Hat

Favorite snack food: Chakris, an Indian snack that looks like a spiral.

Favorite band/album/song: Bob Marley/Survival/Zimbabwe, Crazy Baldheads,
Exodus, War, Murder She Wrote (Chaka Demus &
Pliers
)

Book: Hitchhiker’s Guide to The Universe (all parts)

Movie: Star Wars (all of them)

Video game: Doesn’t play video games

Television show: Whose Line is it Anyway?

Vacation: For fun and sun, Zanzibar;
for mountains and rivers, the Himalayas.

Favorite person: my
dad

Category:

  • Open Source

Justice mysteriously delayed for Melissa author

Author: JT Smith

The Register looks back at the Melissa worm and at the person charged with having written it, who is still out on bail awaiting a sentencing date.

Category:

  • Linux

eBay sues upstart auction site

Author: JT Smith

Salon reports that eBay is launching a lawsuit against a copycat site for bearing deceitful similarity to the popular auction site.

Category:

  • Open Source

Macromedia Director 8.5 Shockwave Studio Review

Author: JT Smith

Beta Bites writes “Lights, Camera, Action!! Macromedia gives any wanna-be filmmaker a chance to test their skill with its newest version of Director 8.5. If you browse the web often, chances are you have seen animated movies, advertisements, or games created with Director.

Check out the Beta Bites Macromedia Director 8.5 Shockwave Studio Review.

http://www.betabites.com/features/director85/direc tor85.html

Fighting layoffs the old-fashioned way

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes “How do you make money and avoid layoffs in a market like this? Do it the old-fashioned way: work hard and earn it. That’s the message I’d like to send to all those self-proclaimed consultants who in recent years thought six-figure salaries and stock option packages worth millions were standard compensation for recent college graduates with no practical experience, much less an understanding of how businesses and stock options actually work. Massive layoffs are due to the mindset of so many high-tech workers, investors and company executives who over the past few years fell for the “perception is reality” line of thinking.”

Category:

  • Open Source