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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

Microsoft’s ruling — no victor yet

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes: “After reading about the Microsoft appellate court ruling last week, I was surprised to hear so many individuals believed the ruling was a Microsoft victory. Shortly after the ruling was announced, I received scads of e-mails coupled with the occasional phone call. Most of these communications were about how much of an injustice it was that Microsoft got off scot-free. People were wondering how much further the technology industry must be degraded before anyone in charge acknowledges how inappropriate Microsoft’s behavior had been over the past 15 years.”

The 20th anniversary of the personal computer

Author: JT Smith

PCWorld: “If you were in the market for a personal computer back in 1980, you had plenty of choices. Many
popular models of the day ran an operating system from Digital Research called CP/M. Commodore’s
PET and Tandy/Radio Shack’s TRS-80 were also established players. And two guys named Steve had
a big business selling the Apple II.”

Category:

  • Linux

Free download of ARM clone source code offered

Author: JT Smith

eeTimes.com: “A Chinese graduate student is offering freely downloadable source code for
the description of a synthesizable processor core claimed to be compatible with the
ARM7 32-bit RISC processor developed by ARM Holdings plc (Cambridge, England).
The core is available through the OpenCores Web site.

Although the core is a student project and unlikely to hurt ARM’s position as a leading
supplier of RISC microprocessors, its availability could be seen to undermine ARM’s
control of its architecture.”

Category:

  • Open Source

‘Hackers’ may profit from spam

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “Got an e-mail from your
grandmom advertising the services of an adult Web site?
Don’t get mad – her computer’s been infected by the
spamming trojan virus.”

Category:

  • Linux

Napster site offline to tweak new filters

Author: JT Smith

Dallas News: “Napster has taken the unprecedented step of suspending its online music-swapping service because it is unable to stop the unauthorized exchange of songs. Napster discovered its users continue to trade bootlegged songs, despite technological safeguards put in place to comply with a court order mandating it halt the practice.”

Newly released Linux Standard Base, duplicate

Author: JT Smith

CNET: “The Free Standards Group released version 1.0 of the Linux Standard Base specification Friday,
a move aimed at reducing the difficulties of getting software such as Oracle’s database to run on
versions of Linux from Red Hat, Debian, SuSE and others.”

KWord 1.1beta3 review

Author: JT Smith

The Dot: “Kent Nguyen has written a very nice and entertaining review of KWord as part of a more extensive KOffice examination. With the help of an alter-ego or two, as well
as some editorial guidance from Tina of Newsforge, Kent covers everything from KWord
frames to component embedding and groupware features, with more than a few illustrative screenshots.
Over the next few weeks, look forward to Kent’s reviews of KSpread, KIllu, KPresenter, Kivio, and Krayon.”

Category:

  • Open Source