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Sun Fire heats up supercomputers

Author: JT Smith

From ZDNET: “Cray also has moved a step in the direction of the Beowulf method of making cheap
supercomputers by wiring together dozens or even hundreds of Linux computers.

Since a January deal with API NetWorks, Cray now offers supercomputers made of lots of
smaller API machines running Linux.”

Category:

  • Unix

Linux messaging in the enterprise

Author: JT Smith

“We know from OS/2 that without applications, superior operating systems drown on the desktop. To capture market share, Linux needs
applications such as a low-cost accounting packages like QuickBooks, applications to run education software found on Macintosh and
Windows computers, a contact management suite similar to Act 2000, and a calendaring and messaging suite similar to Outlook and
Notes.” More at OSOpinion.com.

Category:

  • Linux

Best new embedded Linux product

Author: JT Smith

“The latest ‘it better be drool-proof’ embedded Linux device is Galleo’s wireless ‘mobile multimedia communicator’, which features a 320 x 240 color screen with touch
interface, a deluxe web browser with SSL and Java, a cell phone, digital camera, MP3 player and PDA functionality in one cool-looking five-inch (134mm x 93mm x
17.5mm to be exact) blue case. It’s scheduled to be introduced in about three months.” More info at LinuxJournal.

Category:

  • Linux

Watch a ‘hacker’ work the system

Author: JT Smith

“Claims of six figure ‘salaries’ earned without ever
leaving the bedroom. A hearty supply of ‘free’ computer
hardware and a never-ending e-mail inbox full of victims.
Credit card accounts ‘phished’ from fake porn sites, or clever
e-mails promising ‘You’ve got Pictures’ that ask for AOL user
names and passwords. What do computer criminals do all day?
Work the system – and reap the rewards.” More at MSNBC.com.

Category:

  • Linux

Bob Young, tete-a-tete with the monopoly

Author: JT Smith

LinuxWorld: “Joe Barr has outdone himself. Scoring an interview with the Bob Young is good. But actually pinning down one of the
monopoly’s minions for a verbal slugfest with Young is a triumph. If Joe has accomplished this much by the first of April, by
year’s end the LinuxWorld.com editors will almost certainly cave in to his demand for an espresso machine in his limousine.”

Sun evangelist preaches software as services model

Author: JT Smith

InfoWorld: “Open standards, such as Java and XML, are the
driving force of an evolution in computing that focuses on software as services, a
Sun Microsystems official said Wednesday during a keynote speech at the O’Reilly
Conference on Enterprise Java 2001.”

Category:

  • Linux

Reviews: VMware Express 2.0 and Win4Lin 2.0

Author: JT Smith

LinuxJournal has a detailed comparison of these two products designed to allow Linux users to run Windows programs.

New Linux Weekly News is out

Author: JT Smith

LWN’s latest edition is up and ready for consumption.

Category:

  • Linux

Meet the women of KDE

Author: JT Smith

By Dan Berkes

Head on over the KDE home page, and scroll down a bit until you see the “Family” heading in the left-side menubar. At first glance, it doesn’t appear to be anything out of the ordinary: games.kde.org, bugs.kde.org, lists.kde.org. Then there’s the eye-catcher: women.kde.org.Women may be in the minority when it comes to the fields of programming and software development, but they’re not such a small portion of that group as to be invisible. With one or two notable exceptions such as linuxchix.org and now KDE-Women, they’re severely under-represented online.

Start with three friends, add a little beer, a dash of nice music, and a healthy portion of animated conversation, and you have the starter recipe for KDE-Women. Ralf Nolden, Torsten Rahn and Eva Brucherseifer met up for a night of relaxation after a hectic day at the Systems 2000 conference in Munich, and the next thing they knew, the latest addition to the KDE project had been concieved.

To quote the project’s Web site: “And then everything happened very fast.”

The first incarnation of KDE-Women was that cornerstore of Open Source projects, the mailing list. After a while, participants decided that the best supplement to the mailing list was a real-time discussion forum, which fostered creation of a hangout spot on KDE’s Internet Relay Chat server. All things eventually lead to the Web, and on March 19, the group announced its new site to the world.

Brucherseifer, who serves as the project’s webmaster, says the goal is to get more women involved in the creation of KDE. “Up to now there was only a low percentage of women in the KDE team and no female core developer. And not only the ‘usual female’ jobs like designers, documentation writers, journalists, but into every part of KDE.”

KDE-Women is much more than just an online forum. The group has already hosted two European meetings, and three more meetings are already scheduled — two in Germany and one in the United Kingdom — to coincide with Linux trade shows taking place this summer.

The Web site is a work in progress, she stressed. Current offerings are sparse, but KDE-Women hope to have a variety of tutorials and information available as the site and the organization it supports grows. “Some possible topics are graphics, themes, user howtos.”

The intent of KDE-Women is to promote cooperation, not competition. Brucherseifer is quick to point out that, although KDE-Women is run by women, and offers Open Source advice from that perspective, everyone is welcome to join.

“Personally, I have the opinion that men and women tend to do things in different ways,” says Brucherseifer. “That is why there easily can arise conflicts and women often think they are not able to do things, because they would do them different and don’t understand the ‘male way.’

“KDE wants to be a desktop for everyone and I think it can only gain from female input.”

NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.

Category:

  • Open Source

Statusline secutiy problem in ‘vim’

Author: JT Smith

Securtity Focus warns of a security bug in the popular editor ‘vim’, which allows a malicious user to run arbitrary commands from statuslines in text files opened by other users.

Category:

  • Linux