EditorsAbout the SiteComes vs. MicrosoftUsing This Web SiteSite ArchivesCredibility IndexOOXMLOpenDocumentPatentsNovellNews DigestSite NewsRSS

02.11.09

Microsoft: Intel Ain’t Done Until Windows Can Run?

Posted in Dell, GNU/Linux, Hardware, HP, Microsoft, Novell, Servers, UNIX, Windows at 4:46 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Ken and Dennis (UNIX)

THIS is almost the last part in a series which has thus far included the posts:

  1. Bill Gates: “Where Are We on This Jihad?” (Against Linux at Intel)
  2. Microsoft on Intel’s Anti-Linux: “Please Keep Confidential. This is a Nightmare”
  3. Bill Gates on Linux@Intel: “This Huge Driver Group Scares Me.”
  4. Steve Ballmer: “We cannot let intel do chip design on Linux ever”
  5. Bill Gates et al Lean on Other Companies to Derail GNU/Linux as “Main Stream Operating System”

This time we look at Exhibit px06797 (2000) [PDF]. Therein, Bill Gates writes to top executives and other characters with copies to people like Steve Ballmer, Joachim Kempin, Paul Maritz, and Eric Rudder. Bill Neukom and Carl Stork, whom we saw in earlier parts of this series, are digitally present as well.

Gates writes regarding “Intel call — Paul Ottelini” and he consistently misspells the man’s surname (should be written “Otellini” in other exhibits too). The original message is marked “Privileged”, but a few responses shed light on it.

Microsoft’s Carl Stork replies to this entire group — Gates included — when he says:

> I don’t have the feeling that Intel is spending 80% of their Itanium energy on Windows. Neither on the technical/development side nor on the marketing side. They seem to be investing in the Monterey Unix project (this is the SCO/HP Unix), in Linux, in Novell. I don’t know what they are doing with ISVs directly, but in marketing I think they are being neutral/even. We can get more data if you want.

In addition, Dell seems to be blaming Microsoft software — not just Intel — for a considerable launch delay, but the main issue is perceptually low demand for Itanium.

Gates responds by expressing frustration with Intel, but more interestingly, he seems to be trying to alter a hardware release just in order for Windows to support Intel’s product at the same time as UNIX. In other words, Microsoft may be holding back a release that benefits GNU/Linux and UNIX just so that Microsoft is given enough time to catch up or match up.

Michael [Dell] said that Intel was pushing him to have a workstation out in October because Microsoft wants to have a vehicle for Windows which we aren’t getting from the other OEMs and since we don’t want HP-UX or others to ship first Michael should put his product out with us in October.

[...]

I am very frustrated about our mapping our what Intel is doing against us and coming up with a way to get intel to be more balanced. They are hurting themselves.

The full exhibit lies below, as plain text.


Appendix: Comes vs. Microsoft – exhibit px06797, as text


Read the rest of this entry »

Large-Scale Novell Layoffs Imminent

Posted in Finance, Microsoft, Novell, Ron Hovsepian at 11:48 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

RON HOVSEPIAN never had the chance to know Microsoft for as long as Ray Noodra knew them. It’s not entirely clear though what Jack Messman would have done, either [1, 2]. But in any event, Hovsepian’s strategy appears to be failing because we hear that massive layoffs are coming to Novell very shortly (probably next week or maybe the week after). This was said to us privately by a source that can be relied upon. None of this is particularly surprising given recent posts like:

According to our source, who heard it ‘first hand’, the figure to be announced may be close to the figure in that last link, i.e. around 25% of the workforce. Gartner made a prediction of 100 employees (~2.5%), which is quite unrealistic amidst the economical crises. Besides, the Gartner Group is highly corruptible [1, 2, 3, 4] and therefore very wrong. They probably said “100 employees” simply because the word had leaked and whilst the real figure could not be divulged (maybe still a subject of discussion), the big announcement was deferred. According to Novell’s latest financial report, layoffs of the scale an order of magnitude higher would be needed to stop the company’s quarterly losses, taking into account some rough calculations.

“This may be high time that people pressure Novell’s management and protest against the patent deal which they must get out of.”We happen to know that Novell staff thinks that Novell should have never signed the deal with Microsoft. Quietly, some staff was fully against it, but opposition came in different forms.

That “this week is going to be big at Novell” is we’ve heard as “announcements will be made regarding layoffs. Most of the employers are not aware of it, [as the] only thing they do is sit behind their desk [...] They are like zombies working to get the standard dollars in their pockets.”

This may be high time that people pressure Novell’s management and protest against the patent deal which they must get out of. Novell is in a very bad position, based on expert polls.

Microsoft is not interested in rescuing Novell. It’s interested in exploiting Novell and obviously it’s easier to exploit that who is feeble, confused, scared, vulnerable and desperate.

Ron Hovsepian begs Ballmer

Is Windows to Blame for Cracking of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)?

Posted in Microsoft, Security, Vista, Vista 7, Windows at 11:17 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Emergency person

SEVERAL MONTHS AGO we wrote about the disasters which the FAA had been experiencing, probably due to its reckless choice of Microsoft Windows. Now we’re witnessing planes that are being grounded due to similar problems (Microsoft denies this). But it may all be just be ‘small potatoes’ compared to a crack of this scale, which the Associated Press wrongly characterises as “hacking”.

Hackers broke into the Federal Aviation Administration’s computer system last week, accessing the names and Social Security numbers of 45,000 employees and retirees.

Wonderful.

TechDirt has meanwhile gotten around to commenting on related news.

Unpatched, Virus-Infected Windows To Blame For Grounded French Fighter Pilots And Halt To Traffic Arrests In Houston

Reader Calvin sends in two separate stories of government institutions who apparently failed to patch their Windows machines to protect against the Conficker virus — despite the patch being available for many months. First, Houston police have stopped arresting people with outstanding traffic warrants and shut down the municipal court system for a few days to try to deal with their computer systems being overrun by the virus.

Whether a person is troubled by use of Windows or not, the side effects appear not only in billing (damage is compensated for collectively) but also in people’s E-mail. This is made possible owing to massive Windows-based botnets.

Virus authors are attempting to hoodwink unwary and lovestruck internet users with malware that poses as Valentine’s Day-related games and email greetings.

The hacker tactic is a familiar companion to annual holidays, such as Christmas, New Year’s Day and Valentine’s Day. McAfee reports that the Valentine’s Day spam links to URLs pushing the Waledac Trojan, a strain of malware that has copied many of its techniques and features from the infamous Storm Trojan.

Another side effect of these turbulent experiences is being combated by a victim of the very same botnets which it fights, namely DNS. IDG published this report:

OpenDNS has added a feature to its Domain Name System (DNS) services to fight a widespread worm, with help from Russian security company Kaspersky Lab.

OpenDNS has its own network of DNS servers that translate domain names into IP (Internet Protocol) addresses so, for example, Web sites can be displayed in a browser. The company says its system is faster than using the DNS servers run by ISPs (Internet service providers) and provides better protection against phishing as well as other features such as Web content filtering.

As far as Microsoft is concerned, there is no solution to this (not even Vista 7) and some people are meanwhile dying. This is totally preventable because secure platforms like GNU/Linux exist and are readily available.

“[W]e’re not going to have products that are much more successful than Vista has been.”

Steve Ballmer

“David Smith commented that Gartner will not bash MS if MS chooses to slip Vista.”

Jamin Spilzer, Microsoft

Microsoft Silver Lie Locks GNU/Linux Users Out of Italian Public TV, South African Government

Posted in America, Europe, Microsoft, Mono, Novell, Videos at 10:17 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Bad Silverlight

A reader from Italy alerted us last night that the “Italian television just got everything running on Silverlight.” This is a no-go area to GNU/Linux, which Italy purports to be embracing, so who is responsible for this tasteless choice of streaming technology that hardly gains traction or acceptance anyway? Is this merely incompetence or is it shenanigans?

Another story that was apparently pulled from Tectonic (South Africa-based publication) claimed inability to access a crucial public site, stating that: “Microsoft’s own Silverlight site prompts Linux users to download and install the open source alternative, Moonlight, on their computer as an alternative to Silverlight. Moonlight, however, is only compatible with Silverlight 1.0 and the SpeedServices website requires Silverlight 2.0.”

How typical. And because of Novell, Microsoft refuses to support GNU/Linux with a port of Silverlight. It explicitly said so to the press last year. Novell helps Microsoft make GNU/Linux a dysfunctional follower [1, 2].

Related posts:

Microsoft as Political Movement in the US, Maybe India Too

Posted in America, Asia, Google, Microsoft at 9:34 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Hypocrisy defined

“Linux is a cult that captures the best-and-brightest kids.”

Jim Gray (Microsoft Research)

Entire separation between technology and politics is a convenient simplification, but it rarely serves the prudent observer who is interested in answers. As Richard Stallman once put it, “geeks like to think that they can ignore politics, you can leave politics alone, but politics won’t leave you alone.” Google may have had to learn this the hard way because it witnesses not only existing Microsoft employees but former ones aligning against it too. At the same time, Microsoft is inciting Washington DC against Google [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] in what only can be described as a contemptuous display of power. Microsoft uses cronies to achieve this and by all means, that’s just putting it as bluntly as it comes, simply because it’s true and well substantiated.

Although we mentioned this a couple of weeks ago, PR Watch has just gotten around to explaining how Microsoft uses AstroTurf campaigns against Google.

For PR support in that campaign, Microsoft turned to LMG, a secretive Washington DC public affairs firm that specializes in astroturf campaigns. Thompson and Vogelstein expect the anti-Google campaign to intensify in 2009, with a focus on painting the company as a threat to personal privacy.

Particularly, as the essay points out, LawMedia Group played a role here and PR Watch describes it as follows.

LawMedia Group — also referred to as LMG — is a secretive Washington DC public affairs firm. The firm’s website says it “unites the worlds of law, communications, strategic counseling and crisis management into seamless campaigns for Fortune 100 companies, trade associations, start-ups and non-profits.” [1] Ads for LMG describe its services as including “government relations” (lobbying), “grassroots lobbying,” “issue / initiative / petition management,” “media production” and “opposition research.” [2]

LawMedia is one of those agencies which in a decent society would be dismantled. When AstroTurfing/legalised bribery (commonly known as "lobbying") becomes a ‘norm’, justice cannot prevail, let alone be ever reached. We’ve mentioned LawMedia Group on many occasions [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] since its involvement was initially exposed [1, 2] for its dealings with Microsoft. It serves to illustrate that Microsoft’s letters-from-the-dead tactics are far from outdated.

In other news, something is happening which involves a former ELCOT officer. ELCOT’s success story with GNU/Linux (Ballnux unfortunately) was noted in a video that can be found here and we believe there may have an important update that relates to previous coverage of what Microsoft does in India, namely:

We received some additional information which may suggest that other officers whose choices favour Free software are being moved or removed, but at whose behest? According to a report from the Deccan Chronicle (newspaper in Hyderabad, India), “IAS officer faces wrath, shifted again.” Here is the ‘meat’ of the story:

Jan. 25: Senior IAS officer C. Uma Shankar has set a record of sorts. His transfer last Friday to the Small Savings department from the post of Managing Director of Arasu Cable TV Corporation was the fourth in just six months.

Said to be an efficient, tech-savvy officer and known for his role in developing and promoting e-governance, he has been credited with the introduction of open source software during his brief stint in ELCOT (Electronics Corporation of Tamil Nadu Limited).

His transfer order came a day after the officer told the media in Vellore that it would be better for the State to take over the Sumangali Cable Vision (SCV). The officer was also critical of the damage caused allegedly by the SCV to the Arasu Cable TV infrastructure in some parts of the state.

Earlier, Mr Uma Shankar was said to have been transferred from ELCOT after he found fault with an errant IT firm that was run by a person with connections.

In response to this, said one person, “It’s very sad how a honest govt officer is being harassed for doing his job.”

Uma Shankar wrote back: “I saw the postings on my latest transfer today only. I am accustomed to lightning transfers. Transfers cannot affect my morale.”

“Why is that whenever someone is encouraging Free software adoption in India, something sudden and abrupt creeps in?”Another person remarks: “It is not good for the government if it punishes the sincere officers who devote their time for the welfare of the state. It will definitely encourage corruption, fraud and maladministration.”

Uma Shankar also wrote to a public group about his experience with Ubuntu and SUSE: “I have been using Ubuntu and Suse linux. Of all the distributions, Ubuntu is the best as it comes with full free online upgrade support at no cost. It has a 32 bit and 64 bit version. All of them are free. It is extremely user friendly. I have fallen in love with it.”

Why is that whenever someone is encouraging Free software adoption in India, something sudden and abrupt creeps in? The theory remains that Microsoft might be pulling strings as it did in Massachusetts, but evidence is lacking. Can anyone help?

Bill Gates et al Lean on Other Companies to Derail GNU/Linux as “Main Stream Operating System”

Posted in Antitrust, Bill Gates, GNU/Linux, Hardware, HP, IBM, Microsoft, Steve Ballmer at 7:41 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Novell newspaper

THIS IS PART of an ongoing series of posts which explore Microsoft’s pressure on Intel. For background, c/f:

Today we dive into Exhibit px06825 (2000) [PDF], which appeared on a public site very briefly in 2007. This details the correspondence going under the subject line “Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture” and this comes from deep inside Microsoft.

Here is Microsoft’s Carl Stork pondering the application of pressure to partners who might support GNU/Linux.

—–Original Message—–
From: Carl Stork [mailto:carls@exchange.microsoft.com]
Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 9:43 AM
To: Flannigan, Steve
Subject: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture

Has Intel briefed you on the Open Source development venture they are planning? Does Compaq have any plans to participate in this?

At some stage in the near future we will expose the relationship between Microsoft and Compaq (now part of Hewlett-Packard). It is not an ordinary affair by any stretch of imagination. Anyway, in reply to the above, says Steve Flannigan from Compaq:

From: Flannigan, Steve [mailto:Steve.Flannigan@Compaq.com]
Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 11:45 PM
To: Carl Stork
Subject: FW: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture

Per Michael and Gary Campbell, we know what this is and have declined to participate. This is a push to make Linux a “mainstream” operating system, looks like IBM and HP are in the boat with Intel. Pool will be $500M according to rumor.

Half a billion dollars, eh? What does Microsoft’s board have to say about this? Bill Gates writes to Steve Ballmer:

From: Bill Gates
Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2000 9:59 PM
To: Steve Ballmer
Subject: FW: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture ATTY-CLIENT PRIV

We need to decide how to deal with this on Monday.

Given the previous posts on the subject (see links at the top), we pretty much know how Microsoft handled this type of problem. “Is it legal, Microsoft leaning on other ‘independent’ companies to not use open source,” asked one reader last night. “[It] makes you wonder why the DOJ agreed on a do-not-bundle-IExplorer settlement,” he concludes.


Appendix: Comes vs. Microsoft – exhibit px06825, as text


**********
From: Bill Gates
Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2000 9:59 PM
To: Steve Ballmer
Subject: FW: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture ATTY-CLIENT PRIV

We need to decide how to deal with this on Monday.

—–Original Message—–
From: Carl Stork
Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2000 7:33 AM
To: Brian Valentine; Bob Gomulkiewicz (LCA); David Heiner (LCA); Mike Porter; David W. Williams; Brian Schuster; Bill Veghte; Neil Calvin (LCA); Jim Ewel; Doug Miller; David Thompson (NT); Bill Gates; Steve Ballmer; Paul Maritz; Jim Allchin
Subject: FW: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture ATTY-CLIENT PRIV

Privileged

—–Original Message—–
From: Flannigan, Steve [mailto:Steve.Flannigan@Compaq.com]
Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 11:45 PM
To: Carl Stork
Subject: FW: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture

Per Michael and Gary Campbell, we know what this is and have declined to participate. This is a push to make Linux a “mainstream” operating system, looks like IBM and HP are in the boat with Intel. Pool will be $500M according to rumor.

—–Original Message—–
From: Flannigan, Steve
Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 2:04 PM
To: Boak, Jim
Cc: Campbell, Gary; Seif, Naila; Becker, Rick
Subject: FW: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture

anyone know the answer?

—–Original Message—–
From: Carl Stork [mailto:carls@exchange.microsoft.com]
Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 9:43 AM
To: Flannigan, Steve
Subject: Intel’s ODL Linux/Open Source Venture

Has Intel briefed you on the Open Source development venture they are planning? Does Compaq have any plans to participate in this?

Plaintiff’s Exhibit
6825
Comes V. Microsoft

MS-CC-MDL 000000396217
HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL
**********

Thanks to Jose_X for help with this exhibit

Links 11/02/2009: Head Tracking in KDE4, Obama Lobbied for Free Software

Posted in News Roundup at 7:09 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME bluefish

GNU/Linux

  • OpenCV webcam head tracking + KDE4

    Using the integrated webcam and opencv it’s possible to track the position of the viewer’s head and tweak the 3d-rendering of the window manager (KWin) to display what appears to be a “true” 3d environment.

  • IBM Builds Europe’s fastest supercomputer in Germany

    IBM THINKS THE GERMANS are just über and plan to build Europe’s most süper powerful züper computer at the Forschungszentrum Juelich (FZJ), by upgrading an existing machine to petaflops level.

    Funding for the groß BlueGene/P cluster machine will be channeled in from the German Ministry of Research and the Ministry of Research of Northrhine-Westfalia

  • Desktop Linux Virtualization Options

    For Linux users, it would need to be made clear that USB support does take some configuration before it is ready to roll out of the box. Outside of this concern, VirtualBox does provide the kind of environment that leaves many people wondering why anyone even bothers with costly alternatives.

    For my money…or lack there of, VirtualBox remains best suited for SoHo or home users as it is just not stable enough for serious enterprise use, in my honest opinion. It’s close, but seeing new issues cropping up with each new release leaves me thinking that most IT departments would rather see VMware solutions in place over troubleshooting the latest broken function caused by a VirtualBox update.

  • Ubuntu’s Best Hope: Convert the Kids

    My children have been using Kubuntu for the past three years without any complaints, save one. The network administrator forgot to install Flash so that Nickjr.com and PBSKids.org would work properly after a fresh install awhile back. After I got their games working properly, they have used the desktop with great success doing everything they need.

  • Adaptation

    • Linux Versus the Microsoft Trained Brain Syndrome

      Recent articles I have read by people complaining about how things on Linux do not work like they do on Microsoft led me to coin the phrase Microsoft Trained Brain Syndrome (MTBS). The problem is that people who have lived, worked, and played in a homogeneous Microsoft computing paradigm are lost and confused when they encounter a different paradigm. These people have only seen the flawed Microsoft ideology for how computing systems should work and so have a difficult time with more elegant systems based on Unix. They see the Linux system with its’ own paradigm and ideology and try to force it into the only paradigm they know, which is Microsoft’s. This will always cause the user problems.

    • Linux Or Windows? Do Your Homework.

      I get a a lot of terrific comments on this blog. One visitor, colonelcrayon, left a comment regarding the security issues with Windows and Linux. He said, “As I’ve already commented multiple times, security is almost entirely up to the user. A competent user is never in danger.”

  • Lists

    • 10 Most Awesome Linux Applications

      I know, I know. Not another blog post that lists the “top 10 something or other”. But bear with me.

      I’ve been thinking a lot lately about what makes a given application awesome. I use a lot of applications every day, many I couldn’t do my job without… but not all of them are awesome.

      It’s hard to describe just what “awesome” is. It could be the reliability of something. Or the sheer joy it brings when you use it. Or that it does something truly unique and inspiring.

      With that in mind… my list of the top 10 most awesome applications for the Linux desktop (in no particular order).

    • 23 Useful System Applications for Linux

      I earlier wrote about Top 5 BitTorrent Clients for Ubuntu Linux, 7 Awesome 3D Graphic Design Applications for Linux , 23 Free Ubuntu Linux Login Screens and Top 10 Free Video Editors for Linux . It’s always great to have Linux Alternatives to popular applications so I’ve decided to write about some of the most useful System applications for Linux including Cd burners, Aniti Virus, FTP solutions and instant messengers that you can download today.

    • 50 Tutorials To Get You Started With Gimp

      Gimp has been famously known as the “poor man’s Photoshop”, and perhaps rightfully so. That’s a complement Gimp won’t mind taking. While it would be an unfair comparison to make between Gimp and Photoshop, Gimp can easily meet needs of most amateur image editors out there and then some. Since its release in 1995 Gimp has come a long way in to being the most powerful image editing tool freely available out there. With these tutorials we hope to vanish some of the doubts you might have had about Gimp’s ability as a powerful image editor.

  • Audiocasts

    • Linux Outlaws 76 – Easily Operated with One Hand

      This week: Dan is irrate with Dell but not as much as Putin with Michael Dell himself, Mozilla news, Google FAIL, the usual open source news and much more.

    • Episode 52 Fedora 10

      This week I install Fedora 10 from the live cd installer. It’s a single cd installer compared to the traditional 3 cd or 1 dvd installation method.

  • Games

    • Awesome Game – Warzone 2100 Resurrection – for Linux

      I must admit that I have not played any kind of computer games that seriously for a while. Atleast since I sold my Sony PS2 a few years back and got back into the real corporate world. But Warzone 2100 has completely changed that for me. This game is something special. It seems I cant get enough of it since I downloaded it last night to my Ubuntu Linux laptop. I was literally glued to the screen for well over 6 hours straight.

    • Linux Entertainment In Bars

      Well it was not really a bar, but it was a local pizza shot. Imagine my surprise when the my daughter plugged in the Megatouch machine and it booted a Linux kernel. You can find these machines in most bars in the US. I know a lot of them used to run DOS, but it’s great to see them using a far superior OS. My hats off to the company! So next time you are out having a good time throw a few quarters in a Megatouch to support Linux!

    • A fun game for movie buffs who happen to use Linux

      With the Oscar fever running high, there is towering expectations all around for all the Oscar nominees. So it was only a matter of time before someone jumped into the fray and created a game featuring all the movies, directors and actors nominated for the Oscar award. The beauty of the game is that it is played exclusively in YouTube – the popular video sharing site of Google.

  • Events

    • PyCon 2009 Takes Python to New Places

      *CHICAGO – February 10, 2009* – PyCon 2009, the seventh annual conference of the worldwide Python programming community, has opened registration and announced its list of accepted talks. The topics show Python appearing in a variety of places outside its traditional realms.

    • FOSDEM 2009

      • FOSDEM: Pride and Success in 2009

        Over the weekend the Free and Open Source Software Developers’ European Meeting (FOSDEM) took place in Brussels. In his keynote, Mozilla’s Mark Surman hoped for Open Source’s success and Debian key contributor Bdale Garbee supported its social contract. As an aside, Debian Lenny’s target release date was reconfirmed.

      • FOSDEM 2009

        The volunteer organisers of the “Free and Open Source Developers’ European Meeting” (FOSDEM 2009) demonstrated the fine art of scalability with a very well organised event. 250 talks for 5000 developers arriving from all over Europe, were held with very few problems. If such an event can have a general technical hot topic, then it was the omnipresent netbook and any number of Android mobiles: open source can slim down, be purged of non-essentials, start faster and look forward to a buoyant open future, running as a stable OS on many new small devices.

  • Kernel Space

    • Intel On Rebuilding The X.Org Linux Desktop

      At FOSDEM 2009 in Keith Packard’s talk on the rebuilt Linux desktop, he shared the progress made in composited 3D, monitor auto-plugging, 2D/3D/media shared objects, kernel mode-setting, and kernel-based 2D drawing. Allowing these problems to be addressed was the Graphics Execution Manager for kernel memory management. The Graphics Execution Manager was used instead of TTM (which we talked about several times before at Phoronix) and it allows for persistent objects, global name, and pageable contents.

    • [ANNOUNCE] xf86-video-ati 6.10.99.0

      This is an xf86-video-ati RC release for 6.11.0

      Major changes between 6.10.0:

      - – major output rework
      - – fix bug in rs780 MC setup that could lead to memory corruption
      - – lots of bug fixes

    • The magic of Linux device drivers.

      The Linux kernel has a fantastic way of dealing with your computer’s hardware. It doesn’t concern itself with the company that sells the hardware or brand names, it is only concerned about the hardware itself. More specifically the actual chipset of the hardware. This means that one single Linux driver automatically supports a particular chipset no matter what company packages and sells products made with that chipset.

  • Desktop Environments

    • GNOME Do 0.8 Review (now with Docky) [Mono Warning]

      This weekend, I decided to check out GNOME Do’s latest 0.8 release with the new Docky task bar. As someone who has managed to avoid all the launcher hype bestowed on programs such as Launch Box, Quicksilver and Ubiquity, I have to admit that in the beginning, I was more than a little bit skeptical about GNOME Do. How useful can this program really be? I mean, all it does is allow you to use keyboard shortcuts for common tasks. I can use the the mouse for that. Right? Wrong. After using GNOME Do for only a few days, it has quickly risen to the top of my must-have applications list.

    • KDE

      • Getting Started With Kate, the Friendly yet Powerful Text Editor

        If you run KDE, you may already have encountered Kate, KDE’s built-in graphical text editor. If not, it’s well worth a look the next time you have text files to edit – whether those are code files, HTML files, config files, or just plain note files. There are stacks of useful features, including multi-document support (so you can have as many files open at the same time as you want, or the same file open in multiple windows), and session support (open sets of files together automatically).

      • Some new Plasmoids for KDE4 in next Mandriva Linux Release (2009 spring)

        If you use KDE4 and want to find some nice Plasmoids packaged for Mandriva Linux open rpmdrake and search for “plasmoid”, you will get the full list.

  • Distributions

    • Linux System Rescue CD 1.1.5 updates for ext4

      There comes a time when for whatever reason a system (Linux or Windows) won’t boot. It was during during one such emergency years ago that I discovered the System Rescue LiveLinux CD. System Rescue is a bootable Linux operating system that will show you what partitions are on a drive and enable you to ‘fix’ them.

      The latest version of System Rescue version 1.1.5 is out today and it includes a few notable improvements over its predecessors. The most important in my view is support for the ext4 Linux filesystem. Version 1.1.5 includes a new Linux kernel with support for ext4 as well as including a version 0.4.2 of the GParted partitioning software that includes support for ext4.

    • Funtoo Linux installed!!!

      Finally, I got Funtoo Linux, a derivative of Gentoo Linux, installed on my desktop. Funtoo is a distribution created by the founder of Gentoo, Daniel Robbins. In his website, Daniel describes Funtoo Linux as a:

      Freshly-built Gentoo Linux variant, optimized for your processor, Funtoo Portage unstable branch, includes OpenRC, dhcpcd and git.

      He does not call Funtoo a fork of Gentoo though. I like that since he really wants to keep the Gentoo community intact.

    • sidux, antiX, and SimplyMEPIS – still winners in 2009!

      I have not changed my view of the top desktop systems for my own personal use as the landscape of distros changed at the end of 2008, nor have I changed my view as we are two months into the 2009 year. I have elevated my view of one system – Fedora. I really like the Alpha release of their Fedora 11. It shows that even at an early testing stage, they are one of the few projects that has managed to package KDE 4.2 well. When you couple that with the fact that they are already among the leaders in security and virtualization centered projects, this makes Fedora one of the leading projects to follow.

    • Debian

      • Debian Project News – February 9th, 2009

        Welcome to this year’s second issue of DPN, the newsletter for the Debian community. Topics covered in this issue include:

        * Release update
        * Debian Summer of Code 08: Where are they now?
        * Dedicating Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 Lenny to Thiemo ths Seufer
        * Open Source study conducted by Heise Open
        * … and much more.

      • Debian’s ‘lenny’ release expected this Saturday

        The successor to ‘etch’, Debian GNU/Linux 5.0, codenamed ‘lenny’, is expected to be made generally available this Saturday.

    • Red Hat

      • Red Hat updates real-time Linux

        Red Hat has announced that it has begun shipping the second rev and the first fully functional version of its Enterprise MRG real-time Linux. The Fedora Project, which is sponsored by Red Hat, has also put the alpha of its Fedora 11 development release in the field on time.

      • State of the Union at Red Hat

        I wanted to take a quick moment to provide a brief “State of the Union” for Red Hat. I’ve been on the job at Red Hat since December 2007, and have had the opportunity to meet hundreds of Red Hat customers, partners, associates and industry leaders. In keeping with the U.S. presidential State of the Union address, I’d like to touch on plans for the upcoming year while also reflecting back to share a few observations from the past 13+ months.

        Red Hat’s accomplishments help us better serve our customers and reflect the tremendous work of our associates. In addition, significant events in the external environment helped shape our business environment and influence our work and lives.

      • Red Hat’s state of the union
      • Fedora as Basis of Russia’s Operating System?

        It’s good news that Red Hat has had the opportunity to talk to senior government officials about open source – in this case, at the ministry of communications – but what’s much more important are the specifics mentioned in the story:

        На встрече обсуждался широкий круг вопросов, касающихся развития рынка свободного программного обеспечения (СПО) и его практического применения в действующих системах. Отдельно отмечена важность создания российского сообщества разработчиков Russian Fedora, которое может послужить одним из шагов навстречу создания отечественной операционной системы. Министр отметил: «Мы считаем, что интеллектуальный потенциал российских специалистов таков, что в России можно вести не только сборку, но и полноценную разработку кода».

    • Ubuntu

      • Ubuntu – Using The Right Tool For The Job

        I’ve had several business people ask me about using Ubuntu instead of Windows and I’ve always steered them away for one reason. Microsoft Office doesn’t run on Ubuntu. Yes, you can get Open Office and use that, or you could use Google Docs. But you will inevitably run into file sharing issues. If you are absolutely sure that you will not need to share files with anyone using Microsoft Office, and you meet all of the other requirements above, you might want to consider Ubutu as well.

        If you want to play with Ubutu on Windows, you CAN install it in a Virtual PC environment to make sure it will do everything you need it to do before you make the official switch.

  • Devices/Embedded

    • Tiny ARM9 SBC shrinks by half

      Calao Systems is shipping its tiniest embedded computers yet. The Linux-ready “TinyCore” single-board computer (SBC) modules are offered with Atmel’s ARM9-based processors, including the 400MHz AT91SAM9G20, 200MHz AT91SAM9263, and 180MHz AT91SAM9260, and measure a scant 1.4 x 1.6 inches, says the French embedded systems vendor.

    • Vendor touts two million Linux IP-STBs

      A vendor of Linux-based IP set-top boxes (STBs) announced that it has sold its two millionth unit. Meanwhile, Amino’s latest “AmiNet130M” model, which offers MPEG-4 and MPEG-2 in HD (1080i) resolution, has recently won two industry awards, says the company.

    • Review: Yoggie Gatekeeper Pro

      Overall I loved the card. It’s really an amazing device and I was highly impressed with it’s feature set. It also installed and ran first time, every time, and did it’s job without hickup, burp, or glitch. In fact, you couldn’t even tell it was in the machine, because it consumed no resources and didn’t interfere with operations. Ok, it consumed a tiny bit of resources with communication and the drivers, but as far as the remaining 99% of what it did, all of that was handled by the card itself.

    • Phones

      • “Mini” smartphone design runs Linux

        Access China and NEC Electronics are developing a “price sensitive” smartphone reference design incorporating the “new” Mini version of the Access Linux Platform (ALP) mobile stack. The touch- and 3G-enabled design will use NEC’s ARM9-based MP201 system-on-chip (SoC), and a future design may use NEC’s new ARM11-based Emma Mobile 1.

      • Mobile software vendor gets executive “Infusion”

        Access announced several management changes, including a new co-CEO, and the promotion of senior executives from networking subsidiary IP Infusion (including Koichi Narasaki, pictured, Access’s new SEO/CSO). Access tapped Kiyoyasu Oishi, formerly COO, to head up Access Systems Americas, responsible for the Access Linux Platform (ALP).

      • Android

        • Android 1.1 released

          The Android developers have released Android 1.1, a bug fix and minor enhancement release of the open source smartphone operating system. For users of Android, which is currently owners of the T-Mobile G1 in the UK and US, the changes include the addition of details and reviews when searching maps, a show/hide dial pad button to make it easier to see the number pad when making a call and support for saving attachments from MMS messages.

        • ARCHOS Adds Android Telephony to Mobile Internet Device

          This announcement out of ARCHOS is right up the alley of what I said a week or two ago. The line between MIDs and smartphones will blur as folks don’t want to carry both a phone and Internet browsing device. That’s precisely where ARCHOS is heading with their newest IMT, or Internet Media Tablet.

        • Linux PMP adds Android telephony

          Archos announced a portable media player (PMP) that incorporates Google’s Android stack for mobile telephony. Due to ship in the third quarter, the Internet Media Tablet (IMT) is built around a Texas Instruments (TI) OMAP3440 system-on-chip (SoC), supports 3.5G HSUPA service, and offers 500GB of storage, says the company.

        • Why I Switched to Android from the iPhone

          The philosophical reasons:

          * Android is open source.
          * Because it’s open source, many of my favorite open source apps work with it and not the iPhone yet, like KeePass, for example. (See KeePassDroid.)
          * Android’s apps are written in Java, and as a Java developer, this delights me.
          * Android doesn’t tie me to iTunes, which is a fine piece of software, but is just a little too bossy and proprietary-like for my taste.

    • Sub-notebooks

      • Dell Releases Ultracheap $250 Ubuntu Netbook

        Dell fires back at the Taiwanese market leaders with the Mini 9n. Starting at just $250, this Ubuntu netbook is easily one of the cheapest on the market from a brand-name manufacturer.

      • Netbook users: Microsoft says three apps is enough

        It makes sense in pure business-school 101 terms, but I think our culture is turning away from such heavy-handed business strategies as this. Social media, participatory communities and the current financial crisis is giving strength to those companies, brands and individuals who make a fair, honest and authentic contract with their users. (Just look at our recent Presidential campaign.) I’m not sure a pop up window saying, “Sorry, You Can’t Launch Excel Right Now. Please Close Firefox or Upgrade Today” really creates that impression. But is that enough? Will Linux really be able to compete against Redmond? I think this policy may make it slightly easier, but honestly it’s a difficult challenge. David, get out your slingshot of computing freedom.

Free Software/Open Source

  • OpenStreetMap: Birmingham digital remapping complete

    Birmingham has become the first English city to be completely remapped by its own citizens. Maps of the city are freely editable and available at OpenStreetMap (OSM). The OpenStreetMap project, run by the OpenStreetMap Foundation, is an open source project that is building free online maps, not based on any copyright or licensed map data. Birmingham is not the first city to be remapped in this way, but it is the first city in the United Kingdom. Birmingham joins the likes of Paris, Berlin, Canberra and Vienna.

  • The 21st ODF Toolkit Scenario

    Back in 2006 I gave a short in talk at a KDE conference in Dublin on the topic of “A Standard ODF Object Model”, essentially laying out my thoughts on why we needed an “ODF Toolkit”. As part of that presentation I listed “20 Prototypical App Dev Scenarios”, my attempt to enumerate all the fundamental patterns of use for ODF. I did a blog post on this list later that year.

  • Interview with Richard M. Stallman, founder, Free Software Foundation.

    RICHARD MATTHEW STALLMAN has visited India several times during the past eight years or so and given lectures in many parts of the country. He started the GNU (a recursive acronym for GNU’s Not Unix) project in September 1983 to create software that gives users the freedom to use, share, modify and redistribute. Though he was alone in this task at the beginning, today there are tens of thousands of programmers worldwide helping to create such software.

  • Government

    • Vietnam to widely use open source software

      Vietnams Ministry of Information and Communications has instructed that 100% of all of Vietnams government agencies servers must run free software by June 30, 2009. They also mandate that IT divisions train their staff to use this software and require 50% of the drones to be able to use the technology “proficiently”.

    • FOSS Execs Send Open Letter to Obama

      Executives representing several open source software companies collaborated on an open letter to President Barack Obama in the hopes of moving open source solutions to the top of the list of ways to implement parts of his national economic stimulus plan. The letter asks Obama to make FOSS a “key component” of all new technology initiatives implemented during his administration.

    • To President Obama: Please Consider Open Source
    • Open letter to Obama: Uncle Sam should go open source
  • Business

    • Funambol Unveils Its Open Source v8 MobileWe Sync Software

      Today, Funambol, a provider of open source push and mobile sync software, officially introduced the next generation of its MobileWe platform. Funambol’s v8 MobileWe software looks a bit different from its predecessors, and with good reason. This release sports a new AJAX web portal and integrates some very visual features.

      The new portal was designed to better facilitate syncing PIM (contact and calendar) data, email and multimedia files between mobile devices, the internet, and desktop computers. Those who are familiar with Funambol’s software likely picked up on the other new feature from that last sentence: The v8 MobileWe software supports image syncing between devices.

  • Sun

    • Is OpenSolaris Ready for Admin Desktops?

      OpenSolaris is essentially GNU-Solaris. When talking about the user experience, one could say that since the GNOME desktop is used, running OpenSolaris is no different from running Linux. For the casual Web, e-mail, and office applications user this may be true. For us network and systems administrators, however, we need to be more careful about jumping ships.

  • Applications

    • Open source video player, aggregator Miro goes 2.0

      The team behind open source internet video player Miro have pushed out version 2.0. The new player features a new interface, improved speed and performance, and the ability for users to add links to online streaming video portals like Hulu and CBS.com to the sidebar.

Leftovers

  • Hollywood Takes Another Crack At Getting Permission To Break Your DVR

    The movie studios and the MPAA have been pushing hard over the last year to get the FCC to let them use “selectable output control” to basically block DVRs from recording certain broadcasts of movies. Their somewhat creative (but totally ridiculous) argument is that this would allow more consumer choice. Now, you might ask how limiting what consumers can do with products they already purchased can possibly allow more consumer choice, but this is where the MPAA tries to play a bit of a jedi mind trick. It claims that if it’s allowed to block recording of movies, then it would add another window to its windowed release program of movies (i.e., theater -> special locations (airplanes/hotels) -> DVD -> cable TV -> network TV). If they can break your DVR, they claim that they’ll also release it to TV before it’s even out on DVD.

  • Congressman Buys Recording Industry Argument That Radio Is Piracy

    For pretty much the entire history of radio, everyone has known that getting your songs played on the radio was promotional. It helps sell albums. It helps sell concert tickets. There is no better way to prove this than to just look at the history of “payola” whereby record labels would pay radio stations to get their music heard. Obviously, the recording industry put tremendous value into being on the radio and was willing to pay for the privilege (even if it was illegal).

  • Eric Schmidt To Advise Britain’s Conservative Party

    Eric Schmidt’s support of Barack Obama made a lot of people rather upset. A new move on Schmidt’s part may placate them, though, as the CEO of Google has agreed to work closely with Britain’s Conservative Party.

  • Stanford Takes Up Case Against AP

    Okay, maybe not Congress just yet. But fresh on the heels of Harvard Law taking it to the RIAA over the recording industry’s litigation scare tactics against the nation’s universities and assumed pirate students. When the best profs at Harvard Law come after you, you know you’re in big, big trouble.

    The AP is facing similar intimidating opposition from the other coast, this time from Stanford Law and San Francisco-based Durie Tangri Lemley Roberts & Kent, who just filed a lawsuit against the Associated Press. The suit seeks a declaration from the court that Shepard Fairey’s artistic transformation of an AP photograph of Barack Obama is fair use. The suit also seeks an injunction against the AP from further action against Fairey or anyone else using or displaying his work—perhaps like the Smithsonian, at the moment.

  • BT Will ‘Definitely’ Go Live With Phorm This Year, Phorm Says

    After BT (NYSE: BT) concluded its much-delayed trial of Phorm‘s controversial ISP-based behavioural ad targeting technology in December, the advertising company is trying to keep those precious few positive moments up in the spotlight.

    [...]

    Despite European Commission concern, the UK government ruled Phorm legal in September, though some privacy advocates keep pointing to Phorm’s previous incarnation, 121media, as a maker of software classed as spyware. BT, if it goes ahead, will launch the product as BT Webwise.

  • Wacky Jacqui Smith says whole country crusading against CCTV

    Home Secretary Wacky Jacqui Smith has conceded that there is zero support for CCTV cameras in UK communities. In a shock letter to the Guardian, she claims massed phalanxes of irate burghers are poised to join a Tory march on Whitehall to overthrow the hated devices.

  • Wikileaks Publishes $1B Worth of Congressional Reports

    Wikileaks.org, the online clearinghouse for leaked documents, has published a complete database of Congressional Research Service reports, which are private research documents written for members of Congress and their staffers.

    The 6,780 reports date back to 1990 and comprise all of the digitized reports accessible by congressional offices, said Wikileaks, which estimated their value at US$1 billion. They do not contain classified material, but they do cover politically sensitive topics such as social policy, defense and foreign affairs.

  • Directors Admit They ‘Steal’ Ideas… But Most People Recognize That As Inspiration

    Jon Lawrence points us to an article in Variety where a bunch of movie directors admit that they often look to other movies for ideas to “steal” in making their own movies. Of course, they don’t really mean “steal.”

Digital Tipping Point: Clip of the Day

Bdale Garbee, Hewlett Packard computer wizard and Debian lead 06 (2004)

Ogg Theora

Digital Tipping Point is a Free software-like project where the raw videos are code. You can assist by participating.

IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: February 10th, 2009 – Part 2

Posted in IRC Logs at 6:28 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME Gedit

Enter the IRC channel now

Read the rest of this entry »

« Previous Page« Previous entries « Previous Page · Next Page » Next entries »Next Page »

RSS 64x64RSS Feed: subscribe to the RSS feed for regular updates

Home iconSite Wiki: You can improve this site by helping the extension of the site's content

Chat iconIRC Channels: Come and chat with us in real time

New to This Site? Here Are Some Introductory Resources

No

Mono

ODF

Samba logo






We support

End software patents

GPLv3

GNU project

BLAG

EFF bloggers

Comcast is Blocktastic? SavetheInternet.com



Recent Posts