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Trustix XSentry Firewall 1.5

Author: JT Smith

Patrick Mullen writes “The Duke of URL has just posted its review of Trustix XSentry
Firewall 1.5
. XSentry is a high-end firewall for both Linux and Windows produced by
Trustix, the makers of Trustix Secure Linux. The review covers the
technology behind the firewall, installation, configuration and more.”

Category:

  • Linux

Freebie plants OS X in older Macs

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “Users of older Power Macs last week gained new access
to Mac OS X, courtesy of a free utility.

Ryan Rempel’s Unsupported UtilityX, available for free
download from Other World Computing Inc.’s Web site,
enables processor-upgraded Macs or other Power Mac
systems outside Apple Computer Inc.’s designated
specification to run Mac OS X.”

Category:

  • Unix

Slashdot in the balance?

Author: JT Smith

“For the militant advocates of “open source”
programming – the movement that holds that software should
be shared and collectively improved and that Microsoft must be
destroyed – it was as if the world stopped for a while.” More at MSNBC.com.

Category:

  • Open Source

Red Hat guns for MS database space

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “The reasons for buying a Red Hat Database are very compelling. Our unique selling
point is based around the open source principles and the considerable cost benefits
that can be experienced by making such a choice. Add into that the global support
that we provide and Red Hat Database is a very strong solution.”

Category:

  • Linux

KDE 2.2beta1 showing up on FTP mirrors

Author: JT Smith

by Tina Gasperson
Though not officially scheduled to be announced until this afternoon (July 3), KDE 2.2beta1 was spotted on several FTP mirrors around the world early this morning.The primary goals of the release, according to KDE officials, are to “provide a preview of KDE 2.2 and to involve users and developers who wish to request/implement missing features or identify problems. Code development is currently focused on stabilizing KDE 2.2, scheduled for final release later this quarter.”

The changes from 2.1.2 to this pre-release of KDE 2.2 are listed in a changelog at http://www.kde.org/announcements/changelog2_1to2_2.html. A list of FTP mirrors is at http://www.kde.org/mirrors.html.

A notable caveat from the KDE project: They don’t recommend the use of gcc 3.0 in compiling the sources. According to KDE, “several known miscompilations
of production C++ code” occur with the popular GNU compiler. KDE officials say they are working with the gcc team to get the problems resolved.

Category:

  • Open Source

PHP developer program released

Author: JT Smith

Peter Revill writes: “HTML/php Ide written by me has just been released, includes SQL statement testing, Single keystroke development, ftp facilities and a bit more, check out the download at: http://scorpius.spaceports.com/~nolimits/nolimits1.zip.
Homepage (with very outdated screenshots of the developer): Aqua Nuke.

Real threat is cyberwar, not cracking

Author: JT Smith

Wired: “Denial-of-service attacks and garden-variety site defacements obscure the much larger issue of international cyberwar, members of an Israeli-Palestinian Internet panel say.”

Category:

  • Linux

IBM Global Services lays off 1,000

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “IBM’s Global Services group is laying off 1,000 people who don’t have the
necessary skills to develop its business.

Despite the involuntary redundancies, IBM will continue to hire people and a
spokesman for the firm told the Wall Street Journal that the layoffs are no indication
of the current health of its business.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Dumped tech workers find revenge

Author: JT Smith

Wired: “You’ve been laid off without warning. Your ex-CEO has a lovely golden parachute. You want revenge. What to do? Well, if the company’s been using pirated software, you bust ’em.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Intel ships 1.6-GHz, 1.8-GHz pentium 4

Author: JT Smith

PCWorld: “Intel raised the speed bar to 1.8GHz for its family of Pentium 4 chips, up from 1.7GHz. The company also introduced a 1.6GHz P4
model; now Intel offers P4s at 100MHz increments from 1.3GHz to 1.8GHz.

The new chips are meant to provide customers with additional price/performance points, according to George Alfs, Intel
spokesperson.”

Category:

  • Unix