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Tuxia partners with Chinese Internet appliance company

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet UK reports that Tuxia, an embedded Linux startup from Germany, has announced a deal to bring the company into
the expanding Chinese market for Internet appliances. “Tuxia is to co-develop Linux-based gadgets
like thin client terminals, set top boxes, PDAs and Web pads with Beijing Orient Electronics Group, a
large manufacturer of electronics components and displays.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Court shoots down Napster appeal

Author: JT Smith

CNET News.com: “A federal appeals court has determined that Napster must continue to block the
swapping of copyrighted music, marking the latest legal setback for the fading online
service.

In a terse, two-page order released Friday, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied two
separate requests from Napster. In one, a three-judge panel said it would not rehear the issues it
ruled on last February. Responding to another petition, a larger group of judges also declined to
review the matter in a so-called en banc appeal.”

Excerpt from Professional Perl Programming

Author: JT Smith

The Web Developer’s Virtual Library features an excerpt from Chapter 7 of Professional Perl Programming from Wrox Press. From the overview: “This book provides comprehensive coverage of the Perl language. It covers the fundamentals of data types and
file handling through advanced features like regular expressions, object- oriented programming, threads,
internationalization, and integrating Perl with the C programming language. The latest version of the language,
Perl 5.6, is used throughout, with commentary for those with earlier versions.”

Red Hat officially announces Postgres-based database offering

Author: JT Smith

Enterprise Linux Today: “Red Hat, Inc. has officially announced Red Hat Database. The Red Hat Database product is based on PostgreSQL 7.1, and
optimized with Red Hat Linux 7.1. The company said the target market for the product is mid-sized organizations and corporate
workgroups and departments.” Yearly subscriptions can be purchased for $199, or a one-time charge of #2,295.

Category:

  • Linux

LinuxUser issue #11 – June 2001

Author: JT Smith

In the latest edition of LinuxUser: Stealth corporate Linux deployments, review of Kylix, a profile of Debian Linux, and coverage of Microsoft’s latest Open Source-is-evil hysteria. Stories are in PDF format.

Category:

  • Linux

Linux-Mandrake Community Newsletter #4

Author: JT Smith

In the latest edition of the Linux-Mandrake Community Newsletter: “New release of MandrakeFreq; Introducing the
Mandrake Cooker Weekly News; PPC Beta Status Report; Request for
MandrakeExpert Volunteers; Business Case of the Week; MandrakeForum
headlines.” Posted at Linux Weekly News.

Category:

  • Linux

Intel takes Alpha from Compaq’s hands

Author: JT Smith

From The Register: “Compaq today confirmed that it will transfer its Alpha microprocessor division to Intel
and consolidate its entire 64-bit server family on Intel’s IA-64 architecture by 2004.

The two firms have issued a statement, confirming a report in The Inquirer this
weekend that “Compaq is transferring significant Alpha microprocessor and compiler
technology, tools and resources to Intel.””

Category:

  • Open Source

Caldera implements per-seat licensing for OpenLinux Workstation

Author: JT Smith

By Dan Berkes
The latest version of Caldera International’s OpenLinux Workstation product comes with a feature that most Linux users probably won’t welcome: per-seat licensing.Caldera’s company line touts OpenLinux Workstation as a product made just for the needs of “Internet-enabled business,” offering stability and security corporate customers want, but without most of the configuration issues that building an in-house Linux system might include. OpenLinux Workstation ships with Caldera’s Linux distribution and additional documentation, the usual array of system, server, and development tools including the GNOME and KDE environments, and additional development applications from Borland and Sun Microsystems.

Version 3.1 of of Open Linux Workstation is slated for release on June 30. Customers can even pre-order the new version to ensure that it arrives bright and early on the official day of release. Anyone thinking of freshening their corporate fleet of computers with the latest version, however, should be aware that Caldera has updated more than the software for its new release.

In the reviewers guide for OpenLinux Workstation (in PDF), Caldera notes that it will require one license for each system the distribution is installed on:

“OpenLinux Workstation licensing has changed from previous versions. OpenLinux Workstation, as a product, is licensed per system and cannot be deployed without limit. Caldera will provide a certificate of license authenticity (COLA) with each unit sold, and Caldera expects each customer to have a COLA for each system that deploys OpenLinux Workstation.

“Although OpenLinux workstation contains the Linux kernel and variety of Open Source software, there are a wide variety of licenses, each with different distribution restrictions. Additionally, Caldera includes some of its own proprietary software as well as other Copyrighted material.”

Company representatives were not immediately available to comment on the new licensing requirements. Stay tuned — we’ll bring you further developments on this story, should they happen.

Category:

  • Linux

Open Source terror stalks Microsoft’s lawyers

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “When Bill Gates last week urged businesses to have their lawyers read the GPL
before using open source software, it turns out he was speaking from a position of
knowledge. Knowledge of having lots of lawyers, anyway, because Microsoft’s
legal team have clearly given themselves the most awful fright by reading the
blessed thing.”

Linux authentication using OpenLDAP, part one

Author: JT Smith

Serge Wroclawski writes “Part one of a tutorial on using LDAP to authenticate users from SecurityFocus.”