Home Blog Page 9904

Where is Emmett Plant?

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxWorld.com: “Conversations with Miller led to a job offer that Plant quickly accepted. In fact, it stunned him. Plant told me, “I mean you can’t actually apply
for a job at Slashdot, you have to be asked to work for them. So they wanted to do a little more in-depth research pieces and things like that,
and I kind of fit the bill for what they wanted … It’s frightening to think that — oh my God — I’m going to be working at Slashdot, which is
pretty much like a focal point for the open source community. And it’s like, wow! Who the hell am I?” “

Category:

  • Linux

Big and flat: LCD monitor prices thin out

Author: JT Smith

From PCWorld.com: “Everybody loves the look: a large, skinny screen that occupies only a sliver of your
desktop or hangs like a picture on the wall. And whether you typically work on page
layouts, juggle multiple windows, play games, or watch DVD movies, you’ll find that a
large screen makes most work easier and most play more fun.”

Category:

  • Unix

Serving up cheap, easy network administration

Author: JT Smith

BusinessWeek: “Servers can be scary. These workhorse computers,
whether running Windows 2000 or Linux or Novell’s
NetWare, present untrained administrators with a
barrage of technical concepts and incomprehensible
choices. But increasingly, it’s difficult to run even a
small business without a server of some sort to manage
the local network and control access to the Internet.”

Category:

  • Unix

MS bug of the day: Triggering errors with Microsoft Excel

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC tells us: “Opening a Microsoft Excel 2000 workbook may trigger this
error: “The instruction at “0x3005ca13” referenced memory at
“0x00000018”. The memory could not be “written””.

Sun developing software platform for p-to-p

Author: JT Smith

Infoworld.com: “Looking to build on its success with Java, Sun Microsystems
said it is developing a software platform for peer-to-peer computing that it hopes
will provide a common base for writing distributed applications.

Speaking at the O’Reilly Peer-to-Peer Conference here, Bill Joy, chief scientist at
Sun, said the platform, called Juxtapose, will be an addition to Sun’s growing family
of Web-based programming languages, which includes Java and Jini.”

The Linux reality vs. the Microsoft dream

Author: JT Smith

“The threats are not comical anymore. I was laughing at Steve Ballmers’ characterization of Linux as
“crummy”. I have to admit that when I read that I thought “If that’s the best he can do, then we’re in the home
stretch.” What was baffling was why he didn’t go all out and say it was “Ugly”, or “Butt-ugly”? I don’t know
— but crummy? Well!” From LinuxToday.

Linux 2.4’s firewalling matures

Author: JT Smith

LinuxSecurity.com: “In yet another set of advancements to the kernel IP packet filtering code, netfilter allows users to set up, maintain, and
inspect the packet filtering rules in the new 2.4 kernel. This document explains those changes and tips on how to get
started.”

Category:

  • Linux

Intelligent devices: A new arena for Linux

Author: JT Smith

Fernando Ribeiro Corrêa writes “LinuxDevices.com is ZDNet’s embedded Linux Portal and it’s
been founded by Rick Lehrbaum, who currently occupies the
Executive Editor chair. LinuxDevices.com is devoted to the use of Linux
in intelligent devices. OLinux interviewd Rick Lehrbaum and he talked about the future of embedded Linux and Linux devices.”

Category:

  • Linux

Web review: The ultimate guide on Linux for beginners

Author: JT Smith

– by Tina Gasperson

The next time you get an email from some desperate student that says something to the effect of, “I’m doing a research project on Linux and it is due tomorrow. Please tell me everything you know about it, and hurry!” instead of hitting the delete key, you can pass the poor kid the URL to this site. You mean you never get emails like that? I think teachers nowadays must assign research projects the day before they’re due, instructing students to simply “get the information from the Internet.” Today’s eighth-graders, knowing only how to use their Hotmail account’s forwarding feature, and having missed the lecture on research techniques because they were in the bathroom putting gold rings in each other’s ears sideways, have adopted this practice en masse. So be expecting the email — because you know you left your address sitting on Slashdot last time you posted. Either that, or your home page shows up at the top of the search results list for the question “how do i find info about linux” (On msn.com, of course.)

Today’s spotlight site is called “The Ultimate Guide On Linux for Beginners.” It doesn’t have a fancy domain name of its own, or a fancy interface, or slick design. It’s rather hard on the eyes, actually, because it’s done with a black background and small type. That makes some of the page elements difficult to read, even when you’ve set your default font size fairly large.

If you can get past that (if that even bothers you — I hear some of you actually favor black backgrounds with white words), and if you really, really like to read, you may find, like I did, that there is quite a bit of good background information here about Linux — what it is, where it came from, how to get it, what to do with it once you acquire it.

Copious masses of verbiage drip from these pages. Surely no middle-school Linux research paper would be complete without swiping a few paragraphs from the “What is Linux?” page, or the “History of Unix,” or “Linux Development.” (With appropriate credit given, of course. In no way am I advocating the blatant ripoff of the fruits of someone else’s labor and creativity.)

The site even tiptoes around the subject of system administration, delving into basic Linux commands, the shell, file system structure, and a short piece on rebuilding the kernel — as well as an overview of administrative tasks like motd and password files. The most informative and interesting part of the site for me was the section on Internet installation of Linux.

“Ultimate Guide” also links to major Linux sites and distributions. More interesting, though, is its affiliation with a Linux webring; a cursory examination of its contents revealed lots of uncharted territory in our favorite subject matter (OK, my favorite subject matter — I don’t like Natalie Portman or Quake.)

There’s also a large guestbook, and open access to very detailed site stats — which revealed that something like 98% of the visitors to this site are running some flavor of Windows and browsing with Internet Explorer or AOL. We can only hope the message gets through.

Go visit “Ultimate Guide” and see what you think.

Do you know of a site worthy of the spotlight at Newsforge? Send me the URL and a brief description. A couple of weeks ago, we featured several “build your own computer” sites, and was promptly deluged with a bunch of emails telling me which ones I’d left out. I’m putting together a “build your own computer, part 2” story, so if you know of a good how-to site, share the wealth.

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

Category:

  • Linux

Battlebot: The future of sports?

Author: JT Smith

CNet asks if Battlebot is the future of geek sporting. Battlebots are bots designed for one purpose and one purpose only – to destroy the opponent’s robot.

Category:

  • Unix