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eZ publish 2.0 beta 1 released

Author: JT Smith

pkej writes “eZ publish is a web based application suite. It delivers functionality ranging from publishing of news, web logs and diaries, through web shop functionality like shopping carts and wishlists and forums to intranet functions like contact handling and bug reporting.

The software uses caching and other optimization techniques to speed up page serving. It handles users, user preferences and user tracking through a user database and both cookie-based and non-cookie sessions.

It supports statistics for page views, links followed and banner ads, both images and HTML with presentation logic.

The package lends itself easily to customization, from changing the look and feel by changing templates, localizing the languages and other internationalization issues to adding new functionality.

The target audience for eZ publish are e-commerce, ASP (Application Service Providers), BSP (Business Service Providers), news publishing, intranets, bug reporting, content management, discussion boards, FAQ and knowledge handling, file and image management, group ware, calendaring, polls, todo lists, appointments as well as personal web sites.

Release info
Feature description
Old documentation, new will be uploaded during the day.
Screenshots will be uploaded during the day.

How, why Microsoft went down

Author: JT Smith

Wired.com: “A series of problems centering around its collection of routers in Canyon Park, Wash. — near the company’s headquarters —
is what the company blames for knocking out dozens of Microsoft (MSFT) properties including hotmail.com and msn.com,
frustrating millions of users and providing acute embarrassment for a company that is offering the promise of unprecedented
reliability in marketing its Internet products. ”

Starters for Linux, part 1

Author: JT Smith

FreeOS.com: “This series of articles aims at helping novices get a firm grip on the basics of
Linux. It?s for those of you keen to get up and running with Linux, but don?t know
where to start. In this first part of the series, we shall look at using Linux via its
Command Line Interface or CLI.”

Category:

  • Linux

An indepth look at LILO

Author: JT Smith

From FreeOS.com: “In a previous article, we saw how versatile the boot loader ‘LILO’ was. This session
we get more technical and look at the internals of LILO, its primary boot time
operation, functionality and a few nifty little arguments that can help us tune up our
LILO installation. One of the plus points of LILO is that it is filesystem independent. It
is able to boot operating systems from Microsoft, OS/2, SCO Unix, Unixware,
PC-DOS to Linux.”

Category:

  • Linux

MS bug of the day: Host of errors with Office 2000

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC tell us that a host of errors may be generated by selecting Open, Save, or
Save As on the File menu in Microsoft Office, Excel, Word, and
PowerPoint 2000 programs. Additionally, if the current folder
includes subfolders, all of the subfolders except for the last one
may appear as squares or question marks.

ASPSeek 1.0.1 released

Author: JT Smith

Kirill Kolyshkin writes “SWsoft has just released a new stable version of ASPSeek – advanced Web search engine software, distributed under GNU GPL. ASPSeek is really the new word in free search engine software, capable of searching fast and efficient through millions of URLs and thousands of sites. ASPSeek’s greatest features are PageRanks and WebSpaces. Find out more, and download the source from
homepage.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Linux ‘Supercomputer on a CD’

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross
Imagine your garage filled with dozens of computers all linked together in a super-powerful Linux cluster. You still have to supply your own hardware, but the geek equivalent of a Mustang GT will become easier to set up and maintain, thanks to new software to be demonstrated at LinuxWorld next week.

The Open Source Cluster Applications Resources (OSCAR) software, being developed by the Open Cluster Group, will allow a non-expert Linux user to set up a cluster in a matter of hours, instead of the days of work it now can take an experienced network administrator to piece one together. Developers of OSCAR are saying it’ll be as easy as installing most software. Call it a “supercomputer on a CD.”

“We’ve actually taken it to the point where a typical high school kid who has a little bit of experience with Linux and can get their hands on a couple of extra boxes could set up a cluster at home,” says Stephen L. Scott, project leader at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, one of several organizations working on OSCAR. “You can have a little supercomputer in your garage.”

And why, exactly, would you want one? Why do middle-aged bald guys test drive Porsches? Because they’re curious, and for the bragging rights, of course.

Actually, universities and businesses use Linux clusters as an alternative to expensive supercomputers for high-level computing needs, such as physics or chemistry research. Karen Green, a spokeswoman with the National Center for Supercomputing Applications [NSCA] at the University of Illinois, another partner in the project, says small universities and businesses with heavy-duty computing needs such as data mining could benefit from the OSCAR project.

The scientific world has been on the Linux cluster “bandwagon” for years, Green says, and now people in the private sector are becoming interested.

Scott adds: “One of the reasons why we decided we needed to do something like this is, we were fielding a number of calls from universities or businesses saying, ‘We want to build a cluster, what do we have to do?’ Everyone could plug the hardware together — that wasn’t the difficult part — a typical eighth- or ninth-grader could plug one together.

“The difficulty was that you had to then go out, download the operating system, shove it across all these machines, download all the tools, download the security, download the application component, your schedulers, then you had to build each of these individually… It took a great deal of time and a great deal of knowledge.”

OSCAR, also the name of a ham radio satellite, eliminates a lot of redundant steps that were ripe for human error, Scott says. “The ultimate goal is to have a single-click installation, but that’s a little beyond the technology at this point.”

Open Cluster Group, which includes IBM, Intel, Dell, SGI, MSC.Software, and Veridian, has been working on the project for more than a year. A developer’s release of OSCAR will be demonstrated at Intel’s booth at LinuxWorld, and IBM representatives will give a presentation during the expo. Each of those partners has contributed pieces of OSCAR.

Included in the package are the Portable Batch System, which queues computing jobs for running on a cluster; a Parallel Virtual Machine, which allows parallel applications to run on clusters; MPICH, a tool that allows Message Passing Interface codes to run on many
high-end computing systems; and Cluster Command and Control, a suite of tools to simplify the use and administration of clusters.

The demo version of OSCAR is a developer’s release because the teams are still debugging some of the code, Scott says. “The idea is to get it out there, get some people using it, get a little bit of the Open Source community effort behind it, and have people help us find things we may have missed.”

Green expects a downloadable version of OSCAR 1.0 to be available in about a month, and Scott says the group is already thinking about OSCAR II and planning a conference on clusters for the future.

“OSCAR was the first volley,” he says. “So now we’re looking at where can we go to make clusters easier, where can we go to make them more scalable, what other tools can we offer?

“OSCAR and the Open Cluster Group is not something we plan to do this year and then throw it away and the Web links go stale.”

The developer’s version of OSCAR supports Linux clusters using Intel IA-32
processors. The full release of OSCAR will also support Intel’s new Itanium processor after summer 2001.

While NCSA’s Green thinks individual interest in OSCAR may be limited at the moment, she points to her organization’s development in 1993 of Mosaic, an early Web browser that introduced the Internet to a general audience. OSCAR could do the same for supercomputing.

“We’re very future-oriented,” she says. “We’re looking at five years down the road. A lot of the things we’re researching now, we want them to get out into general use.”

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

Category:

  • Linux

Are Yahoo and Hotmail part of the spam problem?

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet asks if Hotmail and Yahoo, among others, are part of the problem rather than the solution with regards to spam. Are they blocking all spam when they offer to block spam, or just spam from their competitors?

Category:

  • Programming

Microsoft halts IE 5.5 downloads

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Microsoft has halted downloads of its Internet Explorer 5.5 browser pending a service pack, which neither includes bugfixes nor any new features.

Steve Jobs tells Apple employees: “We can’t relax”

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports that Apple CEO Steve Jobs has warned his employees that they must keep fighting to hold on to their market share.

Category:

  • Open Source