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Grown-up installed to salvage Linux Standards Base

Author: JT Smith

Linux Gram got the scoop on this one: “The Free Standards Group, the entity responsible for the Linux Standard Base (LSB), is about to get adult supervision. LSB, the vaunted
attempt to standardize Linux and ward off that old bugaboo, fragmentation, has spent most of its time twisted up in its own laundry. Now it’s
about to get some industry backing from the likes of the old-line Unix guard compliments of the Free Standards Group’s new unannounced
executive director, VA Linux loaner Scott McNeil, who will translate commercial necessities into terms the free-thinking open source
developers can understand and mediate between the open source community and commercial interests.”

Category:

  • Linux

Startup has web solution Microsoft desperately needed

Author: JT Smith

Linux Gram reports that, this Wednesday at Linux World, a little-known but well-heeled company by the name of Nominum will burst on the scene with the first of a series of
offerings that could have prevented the massive outages Microsoft’s web complex experienced this week, the ones that were caused by a
technician misconfiguring its DNS servers.

A meditation on copyright issues

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill at OSOpinion writes “Sooner or later, if copyright issues aren’t brought under control, copyright protection could extend for a length greater than the projected existence of the universe, or at least for “forever minus a day.” “Forever minus a day” sounds like a precise definition of how long the protection lasts, until one asks silly questions like, “Is ‘forever’ to be understood as ‘infinity?'” And “How do we know when to subtract one from infinity?” Not to forget, “Are we using integers, or can we use real numbers — and how about complex numbers?””

Category:

  • Open Source

VB.Net migration fears

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk reports: “Visual Basic.Net, one of the primary pieces in Microsoft’s dot-Net
plan, is causing software developers concern, due to problems in
migrating software from existing Visual Basic editions.”

DSL rhymes with hell

Author: JT Smith

Wired.com: “The biggest U.S. DSL providers are in a quandary. Customers are clamoring to get the high-speed service in their neighborhood. But once it’s available, they say it’s too hard to set up.”

Handheld programmers hard to come by

Author: JT Smith

“Market demand for
handhelds has
mushroomed,” reports CNET, “and will
continue to do so as
cellular networks
upgrade to
third-generation, or 3G,
networks, which will
allow handheld
computers to have
always-on online
access. At the same time,
the market is so new that
few people have direct
experience writing code
for this market in
particular.”

Beware the sophisticated Web attack

Author: JT Smith

From ZDNET.co.uk: “The attack that took many of Microsoft’s sites off the Web Thursday
afternoon may have been a new, and more dangerous, variant of the
distributed denial-of-service attacks that have hit many high-profile
sites over the last year.”

Category:

  • Linux

Napster to begin charging users this summer

Author: JT Smith

Nando Times says that Napster, the controversial but popular music file-sharing Web site, will start
charging users a membership fee later this year, the head of Bertelsmann, Napster’s parent company, said Monday.
“We have an idea of the price range but it is too early to publicize it,” Bertelsmann chief executive Thomas Middelhoff told journalists on
the fringes of the World Economic Forum held in this Swiss resort town.

BIND holes mean big trouble

Author: JT Smith

Security Focus reports: “Serious new security holes have been found in the ubiquitous BIND name server program, the worst of which jeopardize hundreds of thousands
of computers and make key elements of the Internet’s infrastructure vulnerable to hack attacks, according to a Monday morning advisory from
the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT).”

Category:

  • Linux

Gnutella puts up fight for Web elite

Author: JT Smith

CNET reports: “J.C. Nicholas of GnutellaWorld said his coterie of computer whiz kids have solved the
application’s slow-to-a-crawl network speed and the steeplechase it takes to use the
application.”