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Getting started with FreeBSD

Author: JT Smith

“So now that you have installed FreeBSD, what do you do next? Well there are lots of things you can configure. Here, we
bring you an article that focuses on various aspects like environment, shells, etc, which need configuration. This should
set the ball rolling.” More at FreeOS.

Category:

  • Unix

Tester ID leak leaves WinXP beta site wide open

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “Windows XP beta code has been leaking gently for practically the whole process,
but on Friday Microsoft fell victim to the Big One. A beta tester’s login leaked, was
broadcast across IRC and via instant message, and the Great Escape ensued.”

Nokia launches Open Source home entertainment project

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

Mobile communications giant Nokia is jumping head first into Open Source development by launching a Web site to host home entertainment software projects based on open standards.This week Nokia, working with Open Source project-hosting company CollabNet, will launch the OSTdev.net Web site where developers can come together to create a wide range of home entertainment software for Nokia’s Open Standards Terminal software platform, based on Linux, Xfree and Mozilla. The Nokia Open Source License is based on the Mozilla license.

The development at OSTdev.net will be open to Nokia and its competitors alike. Nokia and CollabNet officials say their goal of a worldwide open standard for home entertainment architecture will benefit the industry as a whole.

Romulo Pinheiro, product marketing manager with Nokia Home Communications, says an open standard will allow companies to concentrate on making good home-entertainment products instead of building proprietary software.

“The proprietary business model is not advantageous to anyone,” Pinheiro says. “By using Open Source tools, we have an opportunity to have worldwide contributions from many developers. They will help set the standards.”

An Open Source development model for new home entertainment devices will jump start a stagnant industry, he adds. “We believe this is the only way to create standards, and at the end of the day, everyone is better off,” he says. “The end user has access to more diversity of applications and services, applications developers have a common platform with which they can work, and hardware manufacturers reduce costs because the technology is cheaper.”

Nokia will benefit from the OSTdev.net development through hardware sales. This summer, the Finnish company plans to start selling its Nokia Media Terminal, an Internet/digital TV/video recorder/gaming device that runs on Linux, in Europe. The terminal will have USB connections to plug in other devices such as cameras.

Pinheiro says the OST platform is another way for developers to show the versatility of Linux. The project, says Linda Stone, senior marketing manager for strategic accounts at CollabNet, also gives developers the opportunity to work on a project that has nearly unlimited potential.

“This is a huge win for the developer community,” Stone says. “It provides a complete environment with the tools, the code, applications, and the support for collaborative software development for any hardware-independent home entertainment device. It provides the opportunity for developers to showcase their work in every home of the future.”

The OSTdev site will be launched at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles May 16 to 19. There, developers will be able to sign up and get the tools necessary to start developing.

Stone declined to say how many developers the project needs for it to be judged successul by Nokia and CollabNet, which has previously launched projects for Hewlett-Packard, Oracle and Sun Microsystems. “It’s really about collaboration and about the development of applications and extending this platform,” she adds. “The more collaboration, the more projects, the more applications, the interest in utilizing this platform is to the benefit of Nokia.”

Pinheiro, asked about the failed attempt by Indrema to create a Linux-based gaming/Internet console, says Nokia is in this project for the long haul.

“This is an emerging industry, and when you are the first one, you have to make sure you have enough resources … until you see results,” he says. “We are not expecting results in the short, short run. You have to be patient because people have to see the power of this tool. We are committed, and we have the resources.”

Texan charged with cracking into NASA computers

Author: JT Smith

Computer News Daily: “A rural Texas man has been charged with hacking into
computers at a NASA research facility and stealing passwords from the space
agency.

Ruben Candelario, 18, who lives near the town of New Braunfels, was
arraigned in U.S. District Court here last Thursday and later released on
$25,000 bond.”

Category:

  • Linux

Encrypted tunnels using SSH and MindTerm

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity: “Businesses, schools, and home users need more secure network services now more than ever. As online business increases, more people continue to access
critical company information over insecure networks. Companies are using the Internet as a primary means to communicate with travelling employees in their
country and abroad, sending documents to various field offices around the world, and sending unencrypted email; this communication can contain a wealth of
information that any malicious person can potentially intercept and sell or give to a rival company. Good security policies for both users and network
administrators can help to minimize the problems associated with a malicious person intercepting or stealing critical information within their organization. This
paper will discuss using Secure Shell (SSH) and MindTerm to secure organizational communication across the Internet.”

Category:

  • Linux

Are you naked on the Net?

Author: JT Smith

ABCNews: “Celebrities and Hollywood stars have had to cope for several years with the problem of faked nude pictures circulating online. But now ordinary individuals are falling prey to the problem. Could you be one of them?”

Protective order motion filed in 2600/Ford case

Author: JT Smith

2600: “Our legal team has filed a Protective Order Motion in the Ford lawsuit, which is designed to protect us from any
funny business that Ford or their friends in Michigan may be planning.”

Category:

  • Linux

How to record MP3s from records, tapes

Author: JT Smith

PCWorld: “Any standard PC with a sound card can record and archive almost anything that you can play through a
stereo system. That includes old 33, 45, and 78 RPM records; reel-to-reel and cassette audio tapes; FM
radio broadcasts; and soundtracks or live concerts recorded from a telecast onto VHS videocassettes. With
one of a number of free or shareware software packages, you can organize your favorite songs on your hard
disk and then put them into easily accessible music libraries or onto custom discs.”

`Copyproof’ CD aims at online music-sharing

Author: JT Smith

Computer News Daily: “Remember Charley Pride? He’s the country crooner who broke
through racial barriers in the 1960s to become country music’s only black
superstar.

Now the Country Music Hall of Famer is poised to become a pioneer of a
different type. His new compact disc being released Tuesday (May 15), “A
Tribute to Jim Reeves,” is the first in the United States to carry a digital code
designed to keeps the music from being copied or uploaded to the Internet.”

Linux Security Week – May 14th 2001

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity: “This week, the most interesting articles include “Tutorial: How to Set Up a Linux-Based Firewall for a SOHO,” “The Practical
Intrusion Detection Handbook,” and “Setting Up a VPN: a Tutorial.” Also, an interesting privacy related article brings up the
ongoing Carnivore issue, “Groups urge Ashcroft to act on Carnivore.”

Category:

  • Linux