Summary: Microsoft makes changes to the way it reports earnings after its profit fell by about a third for two consecutive quarters
AS we highlighted before, Microsoft had hidden its Mobile and Business Applications units by shuffling things around [1, 2]. The intent was to conceal Microsoft’s weaknesses and give shareholders the illusion that business across the entire spectrum was profitable. Well, Microsoft seems to be doing it again and Mary Jo Foley’s report, which is similar to previous ones, get responses such as this:
Let’s fudge the numbers some more
This is comical to me. Anything that Microsoft can do to jumble numbers around to try and justify that it isn’t failing in some of its recent ventures. Finally, Microsoft is coming back down to earth, whether it likes it or not. I believe this is being caused by several factors. But the most interesting is the adoption of the market to other products from Apple and also to Linux.
It’s obviously switcheroo time. Microsoft did this a few years ago in order to hide big losses in particular divisions. Here is another separate take on the news:
Netbooks are not going away soon. ARM is taking off. “7″ will burden netbooks with higher prices. Nowhere to hide.
[...]
The huge momentum of netbooks is coming from telcos who supply cheap client machines to customers. They will want the cheapest machines, ARM running GNU/Linux. This is commodity computing, folks.
Everyone has seen a fake virus infection Web page from time to time. They pop up on your screen looking like a perfectly normal Windows page except they tell you that your PC is infected by a virus and you need to click here to either fix the problem or download a program that will clean out the bug for you. The only problem is it’s a lie. It’s actually an attack designed to get you to download malware.
Usually these fake Windows pages-they’re actually Web pages-pop up when you’re visiting a dodgy Web site. But, even the New York Times isn’t immune to attacks like this. Over this last weekend, September 12-13, I was startled to see an apparent Windows page show up that read, “Warning!!! Your system requires immediate anti-viruses scan. Personal Antivirus can perform fast and free virus malicious software scan of your computer.”
[...]
That’s good advice. When you’re on a Windows PC, you shouldn’t click on any part of the fake message. No, not even cancel. Any click might start a malware download.
A federal judge has cleared the way for the trial of two men accused of waging a cyber attack on a webhosting company so they could demonstrate the effectiveness of their botnet to potential customers.
Previous estimates suggested that a compromised machine remains infected for approximately six weeks. Based on an analysis of around 100 million compromised IPs, Trend Micro concludes that many infected IPs are infected (or repeatedly infected) for more than two years, with a median infection length of 300 days. Four in five compromised machines are infected for more than a month.
Summary: Moon Lie (Moonlight) and Silver Lie (Silverlight) are not accepted for real-world use, despite the fact that Microsoft pays a lot of money for it to be spread
SEVERAL MONTHS ago, Silver Lie lost major customers who had cost Microsoft a lot of money. Yes, Microsoft pays rather than charges for adoption. The strategy is not quite working, not even with those incentives. Customers ditch Silver Lie pretty fast. Examples include The New York Times and American baseball. The latest large “poster child” to have abandoned Sliver Lie is ITV. The Register reports:
In a blow to Microsoft, ITV has switched the technology powering its web streaming service from Silverlight to Adobe’s more widely installed Flash.
Our mission, for those who choose to accept it, is to understand that de-programming these proprietary refugees is Job One. It is not a job for the impatient or faint of heart because there are so many layers to penetrate, especially for Windows users who think PCs are Windows computers, that malware, instability, DRM, insane EULAs, and overpriced under-featured crud are facts of life. That we have no right to control our own property or data, and it is perfectly OK to commit all manner of invasions into our personal lives. Somehow we must communicate that some actual study and learning are required for all platforms and devices, and that whining and wailing in despair don’t accomplish much.
Mythbuntu, an Ubuntu-based MythTV distro, made an April Fools’ Day Joke this year about Microsoft opening up CableCard development and that CableCards would soon be supported under Linux. Sadly, the next day was a heartfelt tragedy after the truth was realized.
Maybe someday I’ll be able to watch digital cable from my desktop.
Virtualization may offer a significant advantage to Linux in the decade-old debate over Linux vs. Windows total cost of ownership (TCO). A new Gabriel Consulting Group survey (PDF) of mostly mixed-environment (that is, Windows and Linux) enterprises reveals significantly higher adoption of virtualization technology, with all the cost savings that go with it: less money spent on hardware and licensing fees.
It’s also worth noting that if you don’t think of IBM as a company focused on Linux, think again. Sutor specifically mentions mainframes in his quote, which IBM has never given up on in the age of the PC, and the company’s Linux and virtualization strategies are very tied to that high-margin portion of its business. IBM is also one of the biggest contributors to the Linux kernel, as seen in the chart in this post.
At the heart of many Cisco enterprise routers is the IOS operating system that it developer. When it comes to small business, however, Cisco isn’t pushing IOS — instead, it’s new small business router is powered by Linux.
Cisco today announced a new set of small business networking products including the SA 500-series security appliances, designed to provide unified threat management (UTM) capabilities. The SA 500-series routers provide the usual UTM combination of features including firewall, VPN, antispam, URL filtering and antivirus capabilities.
The highlights of LinuxCon 2009, a conference organised by the Linux Foundation, will be available as a live video stream using the open CODECs Ogg / Theora, viewed via a Web browser Java applet. Alternatively, they may be viewed via an embedded player such as RealPlayer, MPlayer or the Windows Media Player. The keynote presentations will be provided free of charge, while a fee of €84 will be charged for the rest of the conference program and the use of the video archive. The service is an initiative of Linux New Media AG.
LinuxCon is only a week away, and the brand new conference looks like it will be one of the best open source events of the year. The conference kicks off Monday, September 21st in Portland, Oregon, and there is a roster of excellent speakers, ranging from Linus Torvalds to Canonical’s Mark Shuttleworth to Bob Sutor from IBM. Not everybody can make it to Portland, though, which is why it’s great news that there will be opportunities to view all events via live and archived video streams. Some sessions are free, while others aren’t. Here are the details.
From time to time, Nick Carr of Red Hat, and I have a conversation about the state of things. During this discussion, he mentioned a very interesting Linux Foundation paper titled Linux Kernel Development How Fast it is Going, Who is Doing It, What They are Doing, and Who is Sponsoring It: An August 2009 Update.
In two previous articles (here and here) we explored the metadata performance of a number of Linux file systems using a single micro-benchmark: fdtree.
fdtree as a micro-benchmark is very attractive because it is a simple bash script that uses recursion, forcing all cores to be used (extremely important with modern processors). It tests the ability of the file system to simply create directories and files in a tree-structure. The file systems tested typically used their default options (except for ext3 and ext4) so tuning the file systems for this specific benchmark was not tested.
When I began collecting links for the Linux Sound & Music Applications pages I frequented a variety of announcement and news services. Some of those services are no longer with us, some have been superceded by more comprehensive and modern channels, and a few have remained as primary sources for new and updated Linux audio software. SourceForge is one of those long-lived services that have remained relevant to my searches for new and interesting sound and music applications, so I decided to surf the Forge to find recent and maybe some not-so-recent developments in the world of Linux audio.
After showing you how to install and configure conky, and then gave you the idea that you can display Twitter statuses on it, it’s time for me to share to you some of the most highly-customized, unique, and awe-inspiring conky configurations. Take note that you can easily download and install the included conky scripts, but be sure to follow the setup instructions.
While I’m usually happy blasting away demons in a FPS or pushing a necromancer with skeleton escorts to conquer yet another level-grinding dungeon, sometimes I just want to get back to the basics.
The GNOME Foundation, which coordinates development of the GNOME platform, has announced the release of its first quarterly reportPDF. The Q2 2009 Quarterly report spans June, July and August and covers several topics, including the projects migration to the Git version control systems (VCS).
The code is GPL3, so feel free to use and abuse. The dataset code is self containing and soon will have no dependency on Qt, so it may be-reused in other projects.
The KOffice team is happy to announce the second Beta of the upcoming 2.1 release that implement the KOffice 2 vision. The KOffice community has now switched from adding new features to fixing the remaining bugs. As can be seen in the full changelog the bugfixing is very active in all parts of the suite.
If you are thinking about getting Linux on your computer, here’s some advice: Look for a distro that has a strong online community and either a long history or a company backing it. The following are some good distros to check out:
Ubuntu
Debian
Fedora
Mandriva
openSUSE
It’s no secret that I’m a fan of Ubuntu (it comes in five flavors!). If you really are new to Linux, I don’t think you will find an easier distro to learn or a better community to support it, though someone will likely disagree with me on this point in favor of their favorite distro. That’s fine. Just try out the live CD of whichever distro you are considering and reach your own conclusions.
If you feel stuck by that, there is an elegant way to change operating systems that should work on your old computer. Go to www.ubuntu.com and take a look at Ubuntu. Unlike Windows, it’s free and isn’t as demanding of resources. So it can add new life to an old computer.
Gloobus is an extension designed for Gnome (the desktop system for Ubuntu) and allows you to preview a wide array of files as you browse through them by simply hitting the SPACE bar on your keyboard. The previews are designed to generate quickly, and do so without launching the program you would typically use to view them. This can be a great time-saver if you’re searching through a list of documents trying to find the right one, especially if your computer takes some time to launch programs.
I’ve argued for a while now that one of Canonical’s primary contributions to the Linux distribution world is in the polish, the look and feel of the desktop. Karmic continues this tradition, with an attractive, aesthetically pleasing UI. While some of the decisions – the introduction of the Growl-like notification system, for example – have been controversial in some quarters, I find them to be welcome additions to a rapidly improving user experience.
Have you ever have an aged laptop, with pentium III inside and 256 MB of Memory, and you feel that it more worth to be a paper weight than a laptop, don’t worry , Turn your sluggish windows based laptop into , Ubuntu based laptop with so much fun and not much lagging ( of course it is lagging, it is pentium III!!!) but not that annoying compared to windows !!!
Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala now includes an installer slideshow. I’ve always liked the idea of rotating slides of information about the OS while it’s installing to give the users something to do. No matter what you put on the slides this is going to be more entertaining for users than staring at the progress bar. While installing Ubuntu 9.10 Alpha 5 you may have noticed a similar feature has been added to Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala. After entering information into the installer and clicking the Install button, users will see a slideshow of highlights, tips, and featured applications one after another. The one thing that sets that Ubuntu installer slideshow apart from others I’ve seen is it only plays through once. I found this to be a nice touch and I also anticipate many more slides by the final release.
Chris Jones, creator of Terminator has been working on a small little tool that you might like. It’s called Lifesaver. It’s a small screensaver that searches for “ubuntu” on twitter and identi.ca and then presents it on your screen all slick-like.
If you want to buy one, they’ll be available tomorrow, September 16th, from Amazon and the Archos Web site. There is one major caveat: this second-generation Archos 5 has the same name as its predecessor and, just to look at it, you could mistake it for its immediate ancestor. If you want to buy one, make darn sure you’re getting the new model. Prices range from $249.99 for the 8GB device to $439.99 for the 500GB top-end model.
Archos is shipping the Android version of its media-oriented Archos 5 Internet Tablet. The Archos 5 runs on a Texas Instruments OMAP3x SoC and comes in flash (8GB to 32GB) or hard drive versions (160GB to 500GB), with a 4.8-inch, 800×480 touchscreen, 720p video, GPS, WiFi, and Bluetooth, says Archos.
DSF 5.1 is available for 30 operating systems and more than 70 CPUs, and is “platform independent, endian-neutral, and can be used without an OS or RTOS,” says Mocana. Platforms are said to include Linux, MontaVista Linux, VxWorks, OSE, Nucleus, Solaris, ThreadX, Windows, MacOS X, (ARC) MQX, pSOS, and Cygwin. All versions are said to be available as government-certified FIPS 140-2 level 1 validated binaries, or in source. A developer API is also said to be available.
Wind River launched a partner validation program to offer pre-validated middleware stacks integrated with Wind River Linux and VxWorks for the industrial and medical markets . The initial partners for the Wind River Partner Validation Program are Acontis Technologies, Esterel Technologies, KW-Software, and Softing AG, says the company.
Builders of the JRuby version of the Ruby programming language are working to enable development of Ruby-based business applications for the Android handheld platform, a leader of the JRuby project said on Monday afternoon.
MySpace on Tuesday will release as open source a technology called Qizmt that it developed in-house to mine and crunch massive amounts of data and generate friend recommendations in its social-networking site.
As you experiment with the new Chrome, you can provide Google feedback on it here. Chrome is now officially one year old, and it’s good to see it advancing and getting speedier. The benchmark charts below, from Google, show version 3.0′s speed improvements in Javascript tests, which look substantial (bigger is better in the first chart and smaller is better in the second one).
Google’s Chrome team releases a stable build of the Web browser that incorporates the speed bumps and features introduced in August’s Chrome 3.0.195.4 beta release. Chrome has been through 51 developer, 21 beta and 15 stable updates and 3,505 bug fixes in the past year. Greater expectations await Chrome now that Sony is bundling the browser alongside Internet Explorer on Vaio laptops.
What a movement achieves depends greatly on the motivations behind it; when one is pushed to do something, then much less is achieved than if the movement arises spontaneously.
The “winner” was the GPL, as debated by Matt Asay – ironic considering Mr. Asay seems to disparage the GPL quite frequently of late. His strongest points seemed to be two-fold: one, the popularity of the GPL is evidence of its strength; two, it fosters “trust” where other licenses can not.
Tuesday, September 15th, 2009 — On Saturday, September 19th, Boston’s casual free software users and the technologically curious will gather together for a Software Freedom Day event hosted by the Free Software Foundation (FSF).
As Indian consumers and enterprises evaluate the option of upgrading to Microsoft’s much-touted operating system (OS) Windows 7, to be officially launched on October 22, the free and open source software (FOSS) community has fired yet another salvo at proprietary software.
In the year 2010, if FOSS is adopted at 50 per cent levels across the economy, India can save around $2 billion (around Rs 9,800 crore), suggests a study conducted by the Indian Institute of Management-Bangalore. Even a very conservative estimate, notes the study, pegs the cost savings for use of FOSS on servers as an operating system or as an application at Rs 138 crore in 2010.
I suspect that such truly independent numbers would show that there are truths to weigh behind both Red Hat’s and Microsoft’s positions. Support and training are cost centers in big software deployments, but companies like Red Hat specialize in minimizing the costs for them. As is always true with statistics, it can get very hard to discern whether the ones we see are lies, damned lies, or truths.
Sen. Charles Schumer asked the Justice Department’s antitrust division on Monday to investigate the recent sale of Diebold’s voting machines division to a competitor, saying the deal raises anti-competitiveness concerns and has “adverse implications on how our country votes.”
As reported previously, the court was weighing the appropriateness of a $33 million fine the SEC levied against BofA for failing to notify shareholders about a massive bonus package paid to Merrill Lynch executives when BofA acquired Merrill in September of 2008.
It is easy to think of efforts to influence lawmakers as the exclusive domain of K Street lobbyists. Much has been said and written about the millions of dollars the special interests are spending on lobbying activities and the hundreds of lobbyists who are at work as we speak trying to shape health care reform legislation. Very little by comparison has been written about the millions of dollars that special interests are spending on PR activities to accomplish the same goal and that are vital to successful lobbying efforts.
After some conservative bloggers wrote that they believe allies’ guesstimates over official reports, CJR asked whether “the point of the whole exercise on Saturday was not, apparently, to gather a crowd in the numeric sense” but “to gather a crowd in the symbolic sense.”
Blogger Lindsay Beyerstein reports that BusBank, “one of the featured corporate sponsors of the Tea Party Express had to pay millions of dollars to settle lawsuits for its role in a bus fire that killed 23 elderly nursing home residents fleeing Hurricane Rita in 2005.”
Some of the most influential aides in the closed-door Senate Finance Committee negotiations over health care reform have ties to interests that would be directly affected by the legislation.
‘Contrary to the misinformation being disseminated by the health insurance industry and its allies, the public insurance option would not have a competitive advantage over private plans,” Potter told the committee. “It would have to meet the same benefit requirements and comply with the same insurance market reforms as private plans. ”
In the United States, rightsholders claimed that without DRM, digital TV would herald an age of uncontrolled piracy and they would have no choice but to boycott a flag-less terrestrial digital TV transition. At the time, one of EFF’s counter-arguments pointed to the movie companies’ continuing involvement in an earlier, successful, and DRM-free digital TV model – in Britain, which began to switch digital TV in 2007. We called the rightsholders’ bluff. Despite their bluster, they continue to participate, and profit, in both British and American digital TV markets.
It turns out that the sky does not fall if Hollywood doesn’t control your home devices. The British and American experiences prove that. Ofcom and the BBC should stand firm to their commitment to the historical success and the future public interest of British terrestrial TV, and refuse to create this license to kill innovation.
Is the broadcast flag rearing its ugly head yet again over a show about a California motorcycle gang trying to keep the lid on cops, druggies, and “corporate developers”? One Ars reader had his analog hole unwillingly plugged when he tried to record Sons of Anarchy last week.
Three years ago, we wrote about the “roller coaster” of indecency complaints to the FCC. Basically, there are very, very few indecency complaints, until one particular organization alerts its members to all complain at once. What’s silly is that the FCC is often influenced by this, even though most of the people complaining never actually saw the TV content in question. What’s even sillier is that the FCC apparently (very quietly) changed its process to make it easier for this group to stuff the ballots.
Well, well. Last week, we noted that a large number of well known musicians had come out against the idea of kicking accused file sharers off the internet, noting that it would only escalate the problem rather than solve it. But, of course, the industry organizations who claim to represent musicians’ best interests can’t have that, so this week they’re on the attack. The head of a royalty collection society apparently called the statement from musicians “grossly naive and desperately damaging.” Yes, but damaging to whom? Perhaps to collections societies, but not to artists. Smart artists know that going to war with fans is never a smart move.
The story behind the event is that Popkomm, one of the bigger recording industry events, held in Germany each year, was canceled this year, with the guy behind it blaming “piracy” rather than, say, the economy and structural changes in the industry. A bunch of folks in Germany who knew better decided to show Popkomm’s organizers how to organize a better event these days, and scrambled, pulling together a fun-looking event to be held at the exact same time as Popkomm had originally been scheduled.
A new survey of intellectual property protections puts the US in 19th place, and that has already led for business groups to demand that the government ratchet up IP protection (again).
Lazy Man and Money is just one of many sites (including this one) that have been critical of MonaVie, a company that has cleverly combined the miraculous, life-extending properties of the acai berry with the equally stupendous, wallet-emptying promises of a multi-level marketing company. Lazy (as the blog’s author likes to call himself) has, however, achieved one thing that other MonaVie critics apparently haven’t: He’s gotten the company’s attention, and they’re accusing him of trademark infringement.
Hirst, apparently got so upset by a 16-year-old kid using the image in his own artwork, that he threatened to sue the kid, and forced the kid to hand over the artwork and to pay £200 to Hirst. A bunch of other artists started creating more artwork using Hirst’s skull in protest. But the whole thing got more bizarre lately, after the teen stopped by a Hirst exhibit and took a box of pencils that were in one of the “sculptures” and left a “ransom note” demanding his own artwork back. Except, the police have valued that box of pencils at £500,000 and arrested the kid. Yikes.
The Recording Industry Association of Japan—the Japanese version of the RIAA—is pushing for heavier piracy controls on mobile phones. The organization is entering into talks with Japanese mobile carriers to implement a system that will check whether each and every song a user wants to play is legit.
Few people are as qualified to write a book about the copyright wars as William Patry: former copyright counsel to the US House of Reps, advisor the Register of Copyrights, Senior Copyright Counsel for Google, and author of the seven-volume Patry on Copyright, widely held to be the single most authoritative work on US copyright ever written.
A few years ago I hosted a mini-series for CBC Radio called The Contrarians, a show about “unpopular ideas that just might be right”. Each week I’d take a controversial opinion and try it on for size. Sometimes the show was serious, sometimes it was silly- I rarely agreed with the positions I took, but operated on the principle that no idea is so radical or offensive that we should be forbidden to contemplate it (if only to learn why we should discard it). The CBC brass was incredibly supportive of the project and I was given license to explore a lot of unorthodox subject matter.
But they’re back at it again. And it’s really no wonder. Already the cost of a blank CD in Canada has an astounding 90% of the price go to this levy. But what happens to all that money? Well, the CPCC claims that it needs this levy to sustain the livelihood of artists. That’s also its reasoning for extending it to iPods. But, Howard Knopf dug into the numbers a bit and notes how laughable that claim is. First, CPCC claims that its brought in over $150 million from the blank CD levy, and handed it out to 97,000 rights holders “most of whom would not be able to continue their careers without this revenue.”
Editorial: It’s a shame that two songs can wreck an entire project, but at the same time it’s good to see Shout! sticking to their guns. Releasing a hacked up set would only anger fans of the show and blame would be focused at Shout! Factory. Now the blame will be upon the companies/bands that own the impossible-to-license songs for their inability to work things out. It’s just sad that fans won’t be able to enjoy the show on DVD, and Shout! Factory is likely out time and money they spent working on this release.
I think this is a fantastic list — and the results of other experiments we’ve seen seem to support many of the points on this list as well. The rest of the paper is also worth reading, and I look forward to the final thesis. Of course, two small quibbles: the paper cites me a couple times, including claiming that I coined the term “competing with free.” I can’t take credit for that, though I have no idea who coined it. I was under the impression the phrase was in widespread and common usage prior to me ever mentioning it.
Is the “Smarter Planet” concept something limited to IBM?
No, it’s open. We are developing a system based on an open-source standard, not a dedicated system. It is very important to be using Linux, or open communication standards or protocols, for example. If each manufacturer uses its own dedicated components, it will be impossible to interconnect them. That’s why we all have to cooperate with open systems.
The first part in our comprehensive Linux App Roundup covers Internet Apps. In this segment, we’ll be looking at Web browsers, RSS readers, podcatchers, FTP clients, download managers, BitTorrent clients, and a slew of other file sharing solutions. There’s also a spotlight on Miro Internet TV, a piece of software that defies category. This does not include apps used to communicate with other specific people, but simply to retrieve content from the Web. The next segment will feature Communications Apps, and will include those titles.
Highlights from FISL10 in Porto Alegre, Brazil including interviews with Chris DiBona and Michael Tiemann, using Open Source to make things out of computer junk, and President Lula da Silva speaks out on free software.
Lastly, I find that Linux/Unix is more appropriate for servers than Windows, and once you know how to manage Linux, it is hard to go back to the Windows way of doing things. However, most people do not like change, even though we say we do, so our arguments will always be tainted by our own experience.
Oracle redoubled its efforts in the $2 billion embeddable database market on Monday updating two members of its open -source Berkeley DB family to include support for Windows programming environments. It’s a move Oracle believes could benefit both developers and IT shops.
[...]
Other new features in Berkeley DB 4.8 include refurbished APIs designed to simplify application development that reduce time and cost, and better flexibility for addressing applications scalability and on-disk storage requirements. Ease of use improvements include support for foreign keys to help guarantee referential integrity and improved failure handling for multi-threaded applications.
To date, ARM has shipped more than 10 billion ARM processors in mobile devices, many of which run Linux. Ian Drew, EVP Marketing at ARM, said that “joining the Linux Foundation is a natural step towards advancing innovation in the Linux community for a rich, always-connected, computing experience.”
The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization dedicated to accelerating the growth of Linux, today announced that ARM (LSE: ARM; Nasdaq: ARMH) has become a member.
ARM designs the technology that lies at the heart of advanced digital products, from wireless, networking and consumer entertainment solutions to imaging, automotive, security and storage devices.
RPG programmers who are looking to escape the limitations and fees associated with IBM’s flagship RPG editor, Rational Developer for i (RDi), now have another option with RPG Next Gen, a free and open source RPG editor that is based on Eclipse and runs under Linux. Created by Mihael Schmidt of Germany, the RPG Next Gen project is still fairly young, but it shows promise as a lightweight and easy-to-use source code editor.
id’s idTech game engine has a long history of running well on Linux-based machines. Games such as Quake were one of the very few really big PC titles that found themselves installed on all the many flavors of Linux out there.
As you can see Linux is way up there, which is quite a surprise to say the least. For every 232 Linux visitors I get on my website, one of them buys my game. If you compare that to windows users, I need 526 of them to get a sale. For Mac OS X it’s 256. So who would have thought that Linux users are the most eager to buy an indie game? Certainly not me.
After 18 more months, 4.3 is the release that 4.0 should have been, and it’s now stable enough for critical use. KDE is also now stuffed full of eye candy.
The shadow/glow generation code is being enhanced to offer more options and better glow. It introduces a new approach to the division between oxygen and ozone dilemma, that was suggested by another great hacker/designer Thomas Luebking, that ofers a nice option to people that want to color active and inactive windows in different colors, without making it look completely awkward.
This Gentoo-based distribution features, among the other graphical tools, the latest XFCE desktop environment, version 4.6.1. Even if it’s just a stripped-down desktop, with the unnecessary bits removed to keep the distro size low, the amount of included functionality is amazing. You will also find Firefox 3.5.2 and Python 2.6.2, all of them in a 235MB, live Linux system.
Paul Sherman has released version 13.0 of his Slackware-based distribution, pulling it level with Slack in the version stakes and relying on the slimline IceWM as window manager.
Fragmentation within mobile platforms helps handset manufacturers and software developers to properly address customers’ needs, a senior Nokia executive has said.
This past Sunday I was invited to London’s Southbank to take a peek at a number of arty hacks centred around the new Nokia N900 tabletyphonething. The hackers involved were from Tinker.it, a creative consultancy that seems to specialise in making physical things that represent the digital world. A lot of what they do seems to revolve around the Arduino platform (a small microcontroller that can talk to sensors and various external modules) and Nokia gave them the task of taking us back to the 80’s.
It’s taken them a while to catch up, but HTC have finally added the new Hero firmware to their UK download page. The English 2.73.405.5 ROM brings with it a new lease of speed and general perkiness to the Android smartphone, together with adding touch-to-focus to the Hero’s 5-megapixel camera.
In an attempt to broaden the appeal of its Lotus Symphony productivity software, IBM has released a number of widgets that boost the suite’s collaborative capabilities.
Traditionally something of a niche phenomenon, open source PBXs have seen a significant surge over the past few years and it has become much more mainstream and more competitive with traditional communications systems. According to The Eastern Management Group, open source PBXs claimed 18 percent of the North American market in 2008, a 40 percent growth from the previous year.
[...]
Skype for Asterisk, which Digium co-developed with Skype, is the first Skype-sanctioned connector to a full-fledged PBX system. The add-on to an Asterisk PBX lets businesses register as many Skype accounts as they need, allowing users to receive calls from Skype accounts, right on their IP deskphones. With a bit of additional configuration, users can also place outbound calls to Skype accounts through their Asterisk PBX.
Twitter application TwitApps has announced on their blog that the service will be shutting down at the end of next week. TwitApps provided two services: Replies which sent you any replies via email and Follows which sent you an email of your new followers regularly instead of getting each follower individually emailed as Twitter does now. The followers function is something I’ve asked Twitter to provide for a while – a digest of daily activity.
Some people within the FOSS community do feel that way, of course. They are idealists first, developers second. It is thanks to such people that software is now a hollow mountain, the insides visible and little bits of open innovation pushing through the crust here and there.
Open-source medical software has been around for over 30 years. Unless you are in healthcare IT, however, chances are you’ve never even heard of it. But that’s poised to change.
With the passage of ARRA (the American Recovery And Reinvestment Act of 2009, also called the federal stimulus package), some $19 billion dollars have been earmarked for Medicare and Medicaid technology incentives over the next five years. This program is known as HITECH (PDF), short for Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health.
Ingres Corporation, the leading open source database management company and pioneer of the New Economics of IT, announced today that Peerless Foods, Australia`s largest privately owned producer of edible oils, fats and
margarines, relies on Ingres as the underlying database for its mission-critical business enterprise resource planning (ERP) and business intelligence (BI) platforms. Ingres Database is theleading independent open source database that helps organizations develop and manage business critical applications at an affordable cost.
OpenLogic, Inc., a provider of enterprise open source software solutions encompassing hundreds of open source packages, and Nuxeo, an open source enterprise content management (ECM) software and services provider, today announced they are partnering to provide top to bottom support on a robust ECM stack, which includes Nuxeo’s Enterprise Platform, the JBoss application server and the PostgreSQL database.
Additionally, MonitoringForge provides a unified, professional project and plugin listing for all open source solutions involving monitoring. This web platform is designed to give the project developer control of how their material is presented and managed.
Many of the projects that I have been involved in do not use a cache solely for the reading of frequently accessed data. This is a common scenario when using caching technologies and is prevalent in the Web 2.0 world (Facebook, Twitter etc.). The applications that I work with process large amounts of data (up to a million objects per day), performing massive numbers of ad-hoc reads, write and update operations.
PGDay.eu 2009 is the third big PostgreSQL conference to be held in Europe. It’s a chance for existing users and developers to meet and learn more about each other, both person to person and through the great lineup of talks we’re planning which will offer something for everyone.
The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) has announced its program for ApacheCon US, taking place 2-6 November 2009 at the Oakland Marriott City Center in Oakland, California. Reflecting the tremendous impact Apache technologies have had on computing over the last decade, this year’s conference program features more trainings, tracks, sessions, speakers, and events than any other previous ApacheCon. Early registration incentives end 25 September 2009.
In June of this year Nottingham University hosted the First Open Source GIS UK Conference. The aims of the event included hearing presentations from government, academic, industry and policy makers on open source geospatial technologies, providing a platform to network and develop ideas for future collaborative work in open source GIS, developing an understanding of current developments in open source GIS and enabling a focus for open source GIS research.
The announcement arriving today from New Zealand is a lot like a birth announcement. It’s been nine months in the making, reveals all the vital statistics, and encourages everyone to come and visit. In that spirit, we are pleased to announce the arrival of the conference schedule for the 2010 linux.conf.au.
SilverStripe (news, site), the open source CMS that brought you the Democratic Convention website among others, has hopped the waters of the Pacific Ocean, in a sense doubling their real-world presence.
In any case, it certainly provides a handy way for Funambol to distinguish between the open source community edition of its synchronisation software (available under the AGPL), and the commercial version aimed at carriers who have suddenly discovered a violent desire to jump on the cloud computing bandwagon and offer synchronisation services to their customers.
ClearFoundation announced today that ClearOS 5.1 will be available September 30, 2009 at www.clearfoundation.com, the newly unveiled Web site for ClearFoundation. ClearOS is a next-generation Linux server operating distribution for the small organizations and distributed environments. The
ClearOS Linux distribution has an installed-base of over 120,000 systems that serve approximately 1.2 Million users. It is available in over 20 languages and is utilized in more than 122 countries around the globe.
Any new technology market has its own lifecycle and rhythm. From mainframes, through smartphones, there’s the early years, the rapid growth, some slowing down and inevitably a decline. Some technologies never go away completely (e.g. mainframes), while others never really get a foothold (insert your own example here).
In a highly competitive business environment, the ability to adapt the IT infrastructure quickly is imperative. Many businesses are turning to a Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) to create a flexible infrastructure. SOA enables organisations to build and deploy IT systems that directly serve the goals of the business faster and more easily than traditional approaches.
Q: How effective do you think you’ve been at creating change?
A: I cannot impartially estimate my own capacity, so I cannot answer that question. What is clear is that we have at least gained a foothold for using computers in freedom, but that we are still far from our goal: that all software users should be free. At least the free software movement continues to grow.
Q: What would you consider your most significant accomplishments as an activist?
A: We have developed free operating systems, free graphical environments, free applications, free media players, free games — thousands of them. Some regions have adopted GNU/Linux for their public schools. Now we have to convince the rest of the world to do the same.
In a unique venture in the country, all state government employees in Kerala have been initiated into the world wide web with the state government initiating its ‘Email to All Employees’ project.
The new initiative was kicked off today by the Chief Minister of Kerala, V.S.Achuthanandan. The Kerala State IT Mission is the agency implementing the project.
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The project has been developed on the Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) platform, configured and tested for hardware and software and finally rolled out by the Centre for the Development of Imaging Technology (C-DIT) led by P Gigy, team leader, Open Source Technology Team.
“We’re talking about an open-source software platform,” Chu said. “You begin to develop a method, just as there is Windows or Linux…There is still incentive for private commercial development, but you set the building industry on a new commercial path.”
In cooperation with the other open source partners TESTA MOTARI (supplier of lighting technology) and Proof Design (composite solar module specialist), the EDAG Group will be integrating all the concepts shown in an EDAG Light Car test vehicle, and presenting this vehicle at the next Geneva Motor Show, in spring 2010.
Scott McNealy, former CEO of Sun Microsystems (JAVA), met me for breakfast at an unassuming little restaurant in a strip mall tucked into the woods a few minutes’ drive from his house. We discussed one of his recent passions: applying technology’s open-source model to education. Sun was an early proponent of open source, giving the concept a huge boost when it opened up its Java software. And McNealy funded and helped promote a project called Curriki to create open-source textbooks that will ultimately be free, via the Internet.
Given the inherent speed in Web-standards deventevelopment, I imagine you’ll be seeing finished browser implementations of WebGL in a matter of months.
“It puts the Linux phenomenon and the Unix phenomenon at the top of the list.”
–Steve Ballmer, 2001
Summary: Video of Ballmer’s latest tactlessness goes missing after receiving too much exposure
WE’VE already mentioned Ballmer's iPhone incident, but there is no known footage of it. There was, however, a footage of Ballmer making a characteristically-bizarre appearance, but as Todd Bishop puts this, it “looks like the person who posted this publicly had second thoughts after it started to be viewed publicly (funny how that happens), and switched it to allow only private viewing on YouTube. We’ll let you know if it resurfaces elsewhere.”
All attempts to find a copy of this video were not successful (videos are not being cached). Any other means for retrieving this missing video which was publicly viewable for a while? Here is how Bishop describes it:
Is Steve Ballmer admirably enthusiastic, or is his cheerleading too much following the company’s unprecedented layoffs and cutbacks?
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This particular video doesn’t show the iPhone incident — we’re still hoping to get our hands on a video clip of that — but it does provide a sense for the tone leading up to that now-infamous encounter.
From one comment we learn that “The fact the video is NOT available RIGHT NOW on YouTube says volumes about the current state of employee anxiety. Such lockstep, fearful behavior among the ranks does not bode well for the future of the company.”
Another comment goes as follows: “As a long time ex-MSer, I have to say this used to be energizing but became embarassing some years ago. It’s particularly inappropriate this year with the company’s bad financial performance and the 5,000 layoffs already and likely more to come.”
Silently, Microsoft is still laying off employees without announcing it to shareholders. Well, Microsoft has had happier days. █
Microsoft’s Xbox game brain drain continues as a senior executive departs
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Executive departures are fairly common at the Microsoft game business. Peter Moore left in 2008 to join Electronic Arts. Former EA executive John Schappert joined Microsoft to take the helm at Xbox Live, but he left this summer to return to the No. 2 post at Electronic Arts. Kim plans to stay through the end of the year.
Given that Xbox has already lost about $7 billion, the unit helps weaken the company which is viciously attacking GNU/Linux (most recently with patent trolls [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]) and thus it is relevant to us. A Microsoft insider very recently shed some light on how bad things are at Xbox.
“Microsoft’s dreams of a profitable advertising platform seem to be fading.”It is equally bad on the Web (if not worse). Microsoft is trying to establish an advertising business in there. Does anyone still remember (let alone uses) this renamed ‘search engine’ (propaganda filter) that Microsoft relaunched? It seems to have sunk into a chasm as soon as the $100 million in advertising budget ran out. Microsoft even paid blogs to make some artificial buzz about it.
The aQuantive exodus from Microsoft continues. Just yesterday, we reported that Karl Siebrecht — the former president of aQuantive’s Atlas unit — planned to leave Microsoft to join Seattle online advertising startup AdReady. Now, we’ve received word that three other former aQuantive execs who held general manager titles at the software giant — Aaron Easterly, Brian Handly and Brent Turner — also gave notice last week. And one of those execs has already landed a new job at a Seattle online advertising company
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Microsoft has lost some other key employees who came over in the aQuantive deal, most notably former aQuantive CEO Brian McAndrews who announced his plans to join Seattle’s Madrona Venture Group on August 13th. (That was exactly two years after the aQuantive deal closed).