Author: JT Smith
Wall Street’s lowered forecasts,” a net loss of 28 cents per share, compared to expectations on Wall Street of 26 cents. (VA Linux owns NewsForge.)
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- Linux
Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
Perens, does this mean war?
Go to Google and type in “Eric Raymond.” An AdWords ad for none other than another Open Source advocate, Bruce Perens, pops up. “It’s a joke,” says Perens, adding that it was in response to the short-lived Ximian ad campaign. “I really should take that down.” He says no one else has even noticed the ads, as far as he knows.
The KDE-Ximian saga continues … maybe
In case you missed the brouhaha, earlier this month, KDE developers Kurt Granroth and Andreas Pour got their tighty-whiteys in a knot because Ximian GNOME placed an ad linking to its Web site that came up whenever any of several KDE-related keywords were searched at Google. The KDE guys posted this open letter; but the general consensus was, “get a life.”
Later the same day, Ximian said it would pull the ads and would not create any more campaigns based on the KDE-keyword searches. Granroth and Pour added a statement to that effect to the open letter, and that appeared to be the end of it.
Ximian has a white knight, but do they need one?
Until now. A post on the GNOME developers mailing list from a guy by the name of August Zajonc pointed it out:
Has anyone searched for KDE recently at google? Very funny :) Donate today at: https://secure.paypal.com/xclick/business=junk-adwords@aontic.com&undefined_ quantity=1&item_name=Route+around+KDE+Damage+Fund&item_number=Freedom-1&amou nt=10&return=http%3A//www.gnome.org August
Turns out that “junk-adwords@aontic.com” is none other than Zajonc himself. A 22-year-old college student in Massachusetts, and operator, he says, of a Web site he’d like to keep nameless that serves “six million dynamic pages a day or so using all open source software (PHP/MySQL/Linux) on a six machine server farm,” Zajonc thinks too many developers “cave in” rather than fight when it comes to skirmishes like the recent KDE vs. Ximian flap.
So Zajonc is making a personal sacrifice in the name of what he terms democratic expression. He claims that he’s created ads on Ximian’s behalf and funded an account at Google to the tune of $500. “I may go to $1,000, but if everyone clicks through to see what is going on, I probably can’t sustain it alone,” he says. “The success will revolve around people giving rather than me going it alone, more democratic. I don’t think I could fund ad purchases for an entire year.”
That’s why he set up the fund at PayPal, encouraging interested parties to donate $10 to a fund that will go “back to Google to pay for ad purchases.” The ad account has run dry a couple of times already, and Zajonc says he was surprised at how fast the allotted page views were used up. “I
had no way to judge the rate of ad purchases,” he says. “Looks like KDE gets more hits then I thought.”
A spokesman for Google was unable to confirm Zajonc’s purchase, but said that the adWord program has been very successful and typically garners a much higher click-through rate than the typical banner ad campaign.
If Ximian is grateful for Zadonc’s spontaneous generosity, they’re not saying. Miguel de Icaza, CTO and co-founder of Ximian, didn’t know Zajonc was buying ads, but “I find it funny,” he says.
Zajonc’s not sure how long this effort will continue. “[I] will gauge the response, if people like the idea it’ll continue potentially
forever, if not I expect it’ll die down after a while. I’m willing to fund
it myself for a bit out of principle, so unless the KDE search term gets
slashdotted or something I think it’ll be there for a while.”
As of press time, the ads were not appearing at Google. Zajonc says that he funded the account at a rate that should have lasted 50 days, based on Google’s estimates, but in reality only lasted for one. “In the one partial day I ran the keyword there were nearly 100,000 impressions on my ad alone which is an incredible number.”
Even with all that exposure, Zajonc has not received any donations. Maybe the folks at KDE subscribe to the GNOME developers list, too.
NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.
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Author: JT Smith
Supporting 23 languages, PHP-Nuke has already been downloaded by more than 140,000 users in 6 months and is used by hundreds of
Web sites worldwide. By joining the MandrakeSoft team, the “PHP-Nuke” project will not only benefit from the financial support needed for
its continuing improvement going forward, but will also receive full technical support including Web hosting and download mirrors, and
benefit from MandrakeSoft’s communications network to further raise its profile with users worldwide.
According to Gael Duval, co-founder of MandrakeSoft: “PHP-Nuke is a Slashdot-like killer application that basically allows anybody to
establish community orientated news services on the Web with ease. It is also one of the fastest growing Open Source projects on the
Internet, and is being adopted massively by Web masters. It is a great pleasure to have Francisco Burzi as part of our team and to give him a
chance of working full-time on his projects.”
“I’m very excited to join the MandrakeSoft team”, said Francisco Burzi. “When I first started developing the software for my own use, I never
dreamed that the project would turn out to be so successful and I always like to hear from people out there who’ve made a success of
launching virtual communities using PHP-Nuke. I am a strong supporter of free software and of the Open-Source movement and hope that
PHP-Nuke will help free software developers around the world with their projects. With MandrakeSoft’s support and commitment to the
Open Source philosophy, I hope that PHP-Nuke will become THE reference of choice for community portals.”
Since it was created, MandrakeSoft has systematically been involved in Open Source community movements and organizations such as the
Free Software Foundation (FSF), Linux Standard Base, KDE League, and the GNOME Foundation. The company also actively supports
independent Open Source project leaders and contributors.
For more information on MandrakeSoft’s involvement in the community:
http://www.mandrakesoft.com/community/actions
For further information on the other projects supported by MandrakeSoft
http://www.mandrakesoft.com/community/projects
For more information on PHP-Nuke:
http://www.phpnuke.org
About MandrakeSoft
Mandrakesoft provides a trusted interface between users of information technology and open technologists. The company offers customers
in the small office, home office (SoHo), small and medium size enterprise, government and educational sectors a set of GNU Linux and Open
Source software and related services, user-friendly and highly competitiveinformation technologies at a very attractive total cost of
ownership. In addition, Mandrakesoft offers technologists committed to open software and courseware a trusted channel to offer their
services.
The company has technologists in over 20 countries, and has received funding from major banks and venture capital institutions, including
Azeo Ventures (Lazard Group), ABN AMRO, Viventures, AXA Placement Innovation and OFIVM. The Linux-Mandrake distribution, which
became the leader in US retail sales last year (PC Data), received the awards for “Best Product of the Year ” and ” Best
Linux-Distribution/Server ” at LinuxWorld Expo 99, as well as the PC Answers Platinum Award in April 2000, the Linux Magazine Editor’s
Choice Award in September 2000 and the Chip Magazine ” Best Technique and Winner of the Test ” in December 2000.
“Born on the Internet” in late 1998, MandrakeSoft established headquarters in Pasadena, Berkeley (U.S.), Montreal (Quebec), England,
Germany and Paris (Europe). Please visit the Web site, http://www.mandrakesoft.com for more information.
Author: JT Smith
The “PHP-Nuke” project was initiated by Francisco Burzi in the Summer of 2000, a talented young computer technologist currently living in Venezuela. The latest version, “PHP-Nuke 4.4″, provides a highly flexible and customizable set of tools to help build on-line communities, enabling users to share news, submit comments and discuss articles and ideas via a Web based portal-like solution. Some of its main features include Web based administration and survey building functionality, customizable user boxes, an in-built moderation mechanism etc.”
Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
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Author: JT Smith
This is a vexing problem, since one of the great hope of Linux’s portability was that it would level
the playing field for the many non-x86 processors out there. Instead, the playing field has stayed
roughly the same, but new playing fields in the embedded space have been created where
Linux-NOT-on-x86 has flourished.”
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Author: JT Smith
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