Home Blog Page 9646

Of o-rings, Cinnabons and the freshmeat crowd

Author: JT Smith

From a commentary on LinuxPlanet: “When Nat Friedman of Ximian popped up in LinuxToday’s talkbacks recently, in fact, to briefly lay to rest the
sense that his recent retirement from the CEO business (he’s becoming the VP of Product Management at the
company) was some sort of coup, he addressed that very issue by saying Ximian won’t be catering to ‘the freshmeat
crowd.’

I don’t think that means ‘people who visit freshmeat.’ I think it means ravening software fanatics who expected Ximian
would have everything nicely packaged up for them the day after GNOME 1.4’s release.” (Freshmeat, the site, not the crowd, is a member of OSDN, as is NewsForge.)

Category:

  • Linux

Loki offers discounts to LUGs

Author: JT Smith

Slashdotters discuss an announcement from Loki, which ports popular games to Linux, that it is offering 50 percent discounts to Linux User Groups that order 10 or more copies of a game.

Linux for Windows users: Number crunching, word processing, etc.

Author: JT Smith

A reader points us to this story from mozillaquest.com. “The Microsoft Windows operating system (OS) comes with some pre-installed, basic, productivity tools for word processing and other office or school productivity chores. So do many Linux distributions come with pre-installed, basic, productivity tools.

These pre-installed tools generally are simple, stripped-down, lightweight, applets. Nevertheless, they are handy and can be useful for simple tasks.

In like manner, the Linux-based K desktop (KDE) comes with some pre-installed productivity-tool accessories too. Our primary interest in learning to use these lightweight Linux productivity tools today is to get familiar with starting, running, and using Linux programs — and to get comfortable using the Linux desktop.”

Category:

  • Linux

Mandrake 8 review and installation guide

Author: JT Smith

Jay writes, “I have completed a Mandrake 8 review and installation guide at PCTalk.org. I have listed the step by step procedure of installing Mandrake, as well as some of my first impressions of the OS.”

Category:

  • Linux

Apple updates OS X, but still no CD-RW

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk: “Apple has released an updated to its Mac OS X operating system just
three weeks after the product’s initial launch, but the latest code is still
without some important features.”

Belgium Microsoft site hacking mystery

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk: “The site of Microsoft Belgium has been hacked. On Thursday evening
the hacker Black-Fuuuuuuuu took over the site www.microsoft.be.
The hack was discovered by the website Attrition.org.”

Correction to InfoWorld’s report on Linux/Alpha GS

Author: JT Smith

greybeard writes: “InfoWorld is reporting release of the Linux ADK from Compaq. The Compaq site link is http://www.support.compaq.com/alpha-tools/. The InfoWorld article mentions that software support isn’t available for the AlphaServer line. This isn’t correct. Compaq offers both hardware and software support for Linux on Alpha and Intel Compaq servers up to the ES40 (up to 8 833mhz cpus) AlphaServer. It’s only the GS-Series AlphaServers (32cpu) that haven’t been qualified, yet.

Details on support for Linux is available here :

http://www.compaq.com/services/software/ss_linux.html

Category:

  • Linux

Red Hat to ship Linux 7.1 <--ZDNET headline

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk: “Open source platform developer Red Hat expects to ship its Linux 7.1
operating system imminently, with improvements for better
multiprocessor performance and virus protection. However, some
analysts argued that few European firms will invest in operating
systems upgrades during a period when IT budgets are tight.” Hello???

Category:

  • Linux

New Samba moves onto Microsoft turf

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk: “It’s here – the latest update to the open source software that
lets Linux machines mimic Windows file and print servers. Is
Microsoft feeling the pressure?”

Category:

  • Linux

Floating messages: new kind of wireless spam

Author: JT Smith

Wired: “Call it digital graffiti: a fledgling wireless application that allows users to leave floating messages wherever they go. Sounds spacey — and prone to abuse, observers say.”