How Apple Grabbed KHTML, Overrode It, Then Trademarked the Work
“Why join the navy if you can be a pirate?”
–Steve Jobs
Summary: Apple’s hoarding of control continues now that WebKit™ (originally KDE codebase) becomes a project it can control even by name
EVERYONE’S MOST POPULAR sect technology company is all about sharing love and distributing code — so much so that the code it took from KDE some years ago (leading to a controversy because it had not committed to giving back) is not only maintained in state where it’s centralised under Apple (with Google increasingly participating too) but it’s also becoming a real ownership of Apple in the naming sense. Need companies start asking Apple for permission in order to use the word WebKit™, which roughly translates to “KHTML the Apple way”?
Apple files for WebKit browser trademark
WebKit, the open-source project behind Apple’s Safari browser, is a pretty obscure name to ordinary folks. And perhaps Apple wants to keep it that way, judging by Apple’s May 18 WebKit trademark application.
Now that Apple is under fire for GPL violations (as stated by the FSF, which wishes to prevent Apple from illegally using GNU code against GNU itself), one ought to (re)think about Apple’s role in Free/Open Source software — code which worked pretty well for Apple, as long it ‘consumed’ and gave little or nothing in return. █
“Theres always a group of people that wants to undo the forces of industry that have given us so much in terms of wealth, and theres always people who want things to be free. The open-source movement starts with those sort of people. But it still has such good points that have nothing to do with whether its free or not. The idea of developing something and then making your solution known. Spread the information so the world can grow from it.”
Microsoft Brings George Orwell’s 1984 to Great Britain in 2010
Summary: Inhumane practices are being implemented in the United Kingdom (UK) for Microsoft to become richer and the British population tracked through finger-based surveillance
MICROSOFT Corporation, the company which US congress accused of “enabling tyranny”, is now bringing its tyrannical practices to the UK. Having already helped implement an ID card scheme in India (the UK is canning its own plan for ID cards and thank goodness for that), Microsoft will now participate in the fingerprinting of toddlers, who shall be catalogued like books and numbered based on their small gentle fingers (which the “bad guys” would love to have). From The Telegraph:
Children, 4, ‘to be fingerprinted to borrow school books from library’
Students in Manchester are having their thumbprints digitally transformed into electronic codes, which can then be recognised by a computer program.
[...]
But critics said they were “appalled” at the system, developed by Microsoft which is also being trialled in other parts of the country.
Thank you again Microsoft for protecting those children from paedophiles, terrorists, and those evil evil evil people who borrow a textbook from the library without permission (we all know what a menace to human kind they can be, having gained knowledge!!). Sadly, you failed to protect the children’s fingers, which will now become a hotter commodity.
“Sadly, you failed to protect the children’s fingers, which will now become a hotter commodity.”Having already hijacked the irreplaceable British Library, Microsoft keeps looking for new national assets and institutions with which to make entire states totally dependent on Microsoft, even for curation and long-term access to historical records that are invaluable items.
With just a bunch of developers, Microsoft seems to be doing more damage than many years with Labour have wrought upon human rights (and I am not against Labour at all, just their policies that neglect people’s liberties and freedoms, which were long fought for). █
How to Kill a Software Company (Picture)
“Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”
–George Santayana
Novell’s Results Not Enough to Prevent Takeover
Summary: Companies arguably see what’s coming and they stop buying Novell, leaving the company at Microsoft’s mercy and the hands of vulturous hedge funds
THE BIDDING is not public yet, but it is likely to become publicised next week, just like in the previous quarter. Yes, it is highly probable that Novell will be bought soon and Novell customers feel “nervous”, as reported the other day. Don’t take it from anecdotal evidence; here is Novell’s CFO talking about the issues more statistically:
Novell Inc. (NOVL US): Chief Financial Officer Dana Russell said customers are delaying some contract signings until they better understand the long-term prospects for the maker of Linux operating-system software. Novell has said it’s reviewing whether to sell itself.
Here is a transcript of Novell’s Earnings Call (sliced into three pages), here is an event announcement, and Novell’s press release about its results. UNIX/Linux expert Timothy from The Register has it covered and he goes beyond press releases and fluff sourced from Novell.
Whatever drama is going on at Novell in the boardroom — where the company is apparently soliciting takeover offers from up to 20 different prospective buyers — it has spilled over into the company’s financial results.
[...]
In a call with Wall Street analysts, Dana Russell, Novell’s chief financial officer, said that fiscal Q2 revenues were in line with expectations and profits came in at the high end of the range. Linux bookings were down 3 per cent and Linux invoicing was down 1 per cent in the quarter, with a tough compare because so many Microsoft shops cashed in their SUSE Linux certificates in the year ago quarter.
Excluding these Microsoft deals, Russell said that the SUSE Linux invoicing in the quarter was up 46 per cent compared to last year. But that seems to indicate how weak SUSE Linux sales were a year ago and how dependent Novell’s Linux biz is on what Microsoft customers do. Part of the problem is that Microsoft bought SUSE Linux licenses at 45 per cent of the then-current list price in 2007, and at current prices for SUSE Linux support, these licenses are renewing at something closer to 15 per cent of that original value. This makes the compares for the Linux biz doubly tough. But, Novell is optimistic as always. “We are pleased with the growth in our core business,” Russell said.
Novell is too Microsoft dependent. Red Hat sells GNU/Linux without this silly reliance on software patents tax and that is why Novell’s future looks neither so promising nor long. There is no reason to buy SLE* anymore.
Some additional references are added below. █
____
[1] A Look Ahead to Novell’s Earnings Announcement; NOVL, SYMC, MFE, ASIA
[2] Novell (NOVL) Expected TO Report Q1 Earnings Of $0.07 Per Share
[3] Macquarie Maintains Bullish Stance on Novell (NOVL) Into Q2 Results
[4] How to Make Money During Market Corrections: M&A Plays
It’s certainly not reasonable to assume that NOVL’s final buyout price will be affected much by the market dropping on a given day. Therefore, on days like this I tend to buy more NOVL.
[5] Ahead Of Novell’s Q2 Report (also here)
[6] Novell, Guess Trade Higher Ahead of Earnings Reports Due After the Bell
[7] Notable Earnings After Thursday’s Close: GES, BCSI, JCG, NOVL, OVTI, SXE
Novell, Inc. (NASDAQ: NOVL) is scheduled to release its fiscal second-quarter earnings after the closing bell on Thursday, May 27, 2010. Analysts, on average, expect the company to report earnings of 7 cents per share on revenue of $204.85 million. In the year ago period, the company reported earnings of 8 cents per share on revenue of $215.60 million.
[8] Macquarie Research Sets $7.50 Price Target on Novell (Nasdaq: NOVL)
[9] Wall Street Set For Higher Start
After the markets close, Adaptec (ADPT), Diamond Foods (DMND), Guess (GES) and J Crew (JCG), Novell (NOVL) are among the major companies that are due to release their results.
[10] Novell (NOVL) Profits Rise, But Just Match Estimates
Novell Inc. (NASDAQ: NOVL) posted on Thursday fiscal second-quarter results mostly in-line with the market expectations, while also failing to impress investors with its guidance for the current quarter.
[11] Novell Inc. (NASDAQ:NOVL) Cautious
[12] Top NASDAQ Stocks to Watch (JCG, NOVL, AIG)
[13] Novell Reports a 28% Gain in Quarterly Profit
[14] Novell reports 28% profit gain
[15] Novell 2Q Profit Up 28% On Lower Expenses; Revenue, Margins Down
[16] Novell Q2 profit beats Street, sees weak Q3 rev
[17] Novell FY Q2 Revs Miss; Q3 View Below Estimates; Shrs Slip
[19] Novell Q2 Profit Rises; Guides Q3 – Quick Facts 2
[20] Novell, Inc. Reports Q2 2010 Earnings, Net Revenue Down from Last Year (NOVL) (also here)
[21] Novell 2Q Profit, 3Q Revenue View In Line With Expectations
[22] Novell Q2 Profit Rises 25%; Sees Q3 Revenue Below Consensus
[23] Novell (NOVL) Posts $19.9 Million 2nd Quarter Income
[24] After-Hours Movers 5/27: OVTI, ESL, LAVA, DITC, JCG Higher; BCSI, GES, NOVL, UPI Lower
[25] Earnings Recap: J Crew (JCG), Novell (NOVL), Blue Coat Systems (BCSI)
[26] After-Hours Earnings Roundup: GES, NOVL, JCG, BCSI, OVTI
[27] Novell posts higher 2Q profit but revenue slides (also here)
Operating costs fell 7 percent to $142.8 million.
Links 28/5/2010: KDE 4.5 Features; OLPC XO-3
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Contents
GNU/Linux
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Desktop
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Five tips for desktop malware first responders
2: Carry a Web-enabled smart phone and carry a big (16GB USB) stick
Pay for that data plan. Get reasonably proficient with a favorite mobile browser. Store bookmarks. Most phones support flash cards where additional remediation software can be stored. Also, consider carrying a hefty USB drive containing favorite anti-malware utilities, if not a fully bootable OS with security tools on it, such as Slax.
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Welcome to the world of free software
Free operating system: Let’s start with the operating system (OS). A Microsoft OS is chosen by a majority of users as no retailer bothers to inform buyers about the free to load open source OSes like Red Hat, OpenSolaris or the most popular one, Ubuntu. A word of caution: If you are a newbie at open source, it might be advisable to get a technical expert to upload the OS.
Cost Saving: An entry-level Microsoft OS would cost you between Rs 4,000 and Rs 14,000.
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Server
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From Obsolete Servers to Private Cloud in 3 Easy Steps
1. Assemble the Pieces
CentOS is the free version of the popular Red Hat Enterprise Linux operating system. It is a community-supported, mainly free, software operating system based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux. It exists to provide a free, enterprise-class computing platform, and it strives to maintain 100 percent binary compatibility. CentOS stands for Community ENTerprise Operating System.
We knew that CentOS had clustering capabilities, so we installed it across all five of our servers. Once we patched them and hardened the servers, we used the native clustering functionality to run all five servers as one environment. The really nice thing here is that the enterprise investment in the RHCE certification for us was not wasted. Our server administrators already had the skills to carry out the architecture design, so right there we were able to avoid contractor or training expenses.
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Wanted: Virtual Personal Email Servers
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Audiocasts
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The Linux Link Tech Show #355 May 26 [Ogg]
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Podcast Season 2 Episode 9
In this episode: We discuses the three big Linux-related announcements from Google. We present our amazing discoveries from the last fortnight and ask whether anyone is excited by the HP Slate.
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Graphics Stack
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Radeon “R600g” Gallium3D Driver Merged To Master
Those owners of ATI Radeon HD 2000, 3000, and 4000 series (R600/700) graphics cards not only have a reason to celebrate today over the voltage adjustment support to improve their GPU power management, but there’s another reason too. The Radeon R600 Gallium3D driver known as “R600g” has been merged to Mesa’s mainline “master” code-base.
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Applications
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View3ds, simple viewer for 3D Studio files and Video4Linux Loopback Device.
This is simple realtime 3DS file previewer based on the lib3ds library by J.E. Hoffmann. It won’t display any 3DS model, but it can properly display 3DS scenes. lib3ds was developed as part of the support libraries for FAMP, the Free Animation and Modeling Project.
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Instructionals
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Manual disk partitioning guide for Linux Mint 9 and Ubuntu 10.04
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How to Install Sun Java on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS
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Snippet: How to Remove Repositories In Ubuntu
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The command line PostScript swiss knife: a2ps
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How to generate and update ODF spreadsheets without OpenOffice
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A Collection of Silly Little Snippets
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Detailed tutorial about AppArmor for ubuntu users
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Making Movies in Linux with Kdenlive, part 2
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Hassle-free Backup with Déjà Dup
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Running Gentoo Linux on HP Pavilion dm1-1110ev – Result: Success
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The top 10 tricks of Perl one-liners
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Dependency-based & Event-based init daemons and launchd
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Install Compiz Fusion and Emerald in Fedora 13 Goddard
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How to mount samba share on Linux client
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Personalizing Vim
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Building an Image Slideshow using Scripty2
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Tech Tip : Sending Email from Command line
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Desktop Environments
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K Desktop Environment (KDE SC)
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KDE 4.5 beta brings window tiling, new notifications
One of the additions that I’m particularly enthusiastic about is support for tiled window management in KDE’s KWin window manager. This feature allows users to snap windows together in non-overlapping arrangements and resize them together, much like the behavior of Ion and other tiled desktop environments. The feature was implemented as a Summer of Code project last year and was finally merged last month. I’ve long been a fan of tiled window management, so I’ve been looking forward to seeing this feature land ever since work on it was started.
KDE 4.5 is getting a new panel notification area that is designed to be more consistent and functional. This feature is based on a D-Bus protocol that the KDE development community has submitted to the FreeDesktop.org organization with the aim of making it a cross-desktop standard. Although the upstream GNOME community has rejected the protocol, it has been adopted by Canonical and is used to power the new application indicator feature that is included in Ubuntu 10.04.
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Distributions
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Sabayon 5.3 Progress, Get Involved with Testing, Bumps
It must be about time for an update, tough to blog when summer is here. 5.3 is in the works and is at a RC2 status. Some of the changes include bug fixes of course, btrfs support, mono removed from grub and installer fixes. Keep in mind that btrfs is very young in development and should not be used in a stable environment. I did try it out in a virtual box setting and it seemed to work good for the little bit of time I worked with it. Mitch follows the progress of it and has been a good source for information. It sounds like in kernel 2.6.36 things will even be better for btrfs. I’ll have to try and keep an eye on it myself, seems promising.
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PCLinuxOS/Mandrake/Mandriva Family
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PCLinuxOS
The fact that I really like about PCLinuxOS is its small community with great connection between one another. I can always reach to its developers easily. I know who is working on the distro that you are using. This is a great advantages for me to learn about Linux and grow to love it. I learned about packaging even though I seldom practice it.
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Ubuntu
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Guitars to Goat Festivals – Ubuntu For All!
Pete found a local place, B-Sharp Music.Pete started talking to the owner Stan, who as it turned out is an advocate of Open Source. After they talked and he took a look at Ubuntu, he switched his computers over to Ubuntu. Karmic at the time, but now Lucid. Stan also asked for some CD’s and fliers so that when people asked what he was running on the computers in the music store he could tell them and help them switch to Ubuntu.
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Devices/Embedded
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Pandora Open Source, Linux-based Handheld Game Console Now Shipping
Pandora is also designed for the emulation of older computer systems and video game consoles. It has working emulators for Dreamcast, PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Amiga, SNES, Atari Jaguar and Sega Mega Drive software.
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Nokia
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Impressions of the latest MeeGo release
MeeGo, in its first release, is pretty damn good, and this coming from a KDE loving maniac! It used to be Maemo, all Gtk in the backend, but now it is MeeGo with Qt (v4.6) as its backend now with a really nice MeeGo API as well. With MeeGo using Qt, KDE apps and Qt apps integrate nicely. What I don’t get is this, why in the hell are all of the Apps Gtk-based then? Chromium, OK I can understand, it is an amazing browser, and my browser of choice right now. Banshee? I think Amarok would have been a better app for media. Evolution? Oh hell no! I would rather they ship Mutt. You want me to say KMail or Kontact don’t you? Well I won’t, just yet. If I used POP3 for email, then yes, KMail/Kontact for the win! But seeing as I am lazy and use GMail’s IMAP settings, KMail needs help here. Thunderbird seems like a good choice, but for what I am guessing to be as a netbook operating system for those who aren’t hardcore mostly, I would think KMail/Kontact would be perfect. You can’t beat Kontact’s tight integration, you can’t, so don’t even try to argue that. Empathy is nice and light, so I understand it, even though I do not like it. I would have loved to have seen Kopete here, especially with its Skype plugin.
Overall though, I am still impressed with MeeGo, though I don’t think it is my replacement for the KDE Plasma Netbook Workspace. I think it is a perfectly fine solution for many though, and I am excited to see the ongoing work that is going into it. I know a few of the developers and I know they will be doing an amazing job on it in the future, especially as it starts getting on the more mobile devices out there. It uses Yum/RPM, which took me a few minutes to get used to again, but package management was as fast as I am used to when using APT or some other Debian package manager.
Good job MeeGo devs, and keep up the good work! I am fairly certain my review here sucked, so if you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask them in the comments section, or email me at nixternal AT gmail DOT com, or even hit me up on IRC (freenode) as nixternal.
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Android
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Key WebOS developer jumps ship to Team Android
Departure of Palm’s Matias Duarte may signal a vote of no confidence in HP’s ability to compete on mobile
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Top 10 Android 2.2 Features Developers Can’t Wait to Use
Android 2.2 (codename: Froyo) is a minor SDK release, but it still packs some punch, providing both developers and users with some much-anticipated features. After attending the Google I/O conference and witnessing the Froyo announcement, here are the top ten features (in no particular order) that we think developers cannot wait to get their hands on.
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OLPC
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One Laptop Per Child Revamps Tablet Plans
The One Laptop Per Child foundation’s aim to create the world’s most innovative tablet computer for the developing world just took a giant leap toward reality. But as is often the case, reality may not be quite as exciting as imagination.
On Thursday the foundation announced a partnership with chip maker Marvell to collaborate on a sleek and cheap touch-screen tablet for developing-world school children, a device it now plans to launch at the Consumer Electronics Show in January 2011 for less than $100. One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) says that’s close to two years ahead of its scheduled release for the so-called XO-3, the long-awaited upgrade to the non-profit’s XO, the so-called “hundred-dollar laptop” launched in 2007.
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Free Software/Open Source
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A Thriving FOSS Community on the North
Living in Sweden, conferences usually include travelling abroad. This is all fun, but it also means spending time away from family and work. This in turn means catching up on work, i.e. spending even less time with the family. Not exactly what I want to do all my life.
Recently this has changed. First of all, the free community conference FSCONS (held in Gothenburn Sweden), has gained more and more technical content (without losing the free community angle!). This means that it is more and more attractive to my flavour of geeks. This year, in November, they are even pursuing an embedded track and I definitively plan on both attending and speaking!
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Why Open Source Makes Sense: Scientifically Proven
Check out this video below. Its basically an animation about an MIT social experiment, where sociologist found a bizarre pattern when it came to work and incentives. When the task at hand was a mundane and a repetitive task, money was found as perfect incentive. However, when the task required “rudimentary cognitive” skills, money, it turns out, wasn’t the best incentive. This makes perfect sense when we look at the amazing open source projects out there. From Linux to Wikipedia to Open Street Map, all these project tap into this basic human behavior.
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Open source pays off for TimeTrex
Many open source businesses have a multi-tiered product model, offering an open source version for free and a closed source version with extra features that users have to pay for. TimeTrex, a Canadian company that offers a web-based payroll and time management application, offers free Standard and commercial Business and Professional editions of its TimeTrex software, but all of them are open source. “Having a freely available edition allows potential customers to test out the software without any restrictions before deciding if they require support or features available in our other products,” says developer Jon Hutchison.
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Free as in Speech
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Wiki As an Example to Demystify Cloud Computing
Cloud computing is supposed to save you money and make things easier for your business/organization. If a self-proclaimed cloud computing provider tries to sell you some expensive and fancy new technology that requires a lot of training on your employees, then be alerted that this may just be a hoax. Try partially replacing MS Word and Frontpage with wiki before buying any cloud solutions. Wiki is a minuscule, and yet most used form of cloud computing. It takes more cultural changes than monetary investment to introduce cloud computing into your organization/business. You can forget about cloud computing if your employees cannot get accustomed to this new culture of transparency, participation, and democracy.
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Openness, transparency, and community: The future of commenting on the web
But should that be the default for the entire web? Is complete openness always the best way? Are there valid reasons for completely closing comments (as a policy, not for specific posts) on a news site like NPR? What about the heavy policing implied in this comment? At the very least, shouldn’t it be more transparent–visible comment deletions, and reasons given to banned users?
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What is “open source”? (And why should you care?)
Although the term gets used quite a lot in technology circles, there is often some confusion about exactly what it means, particularly when it comes to questions of whether or not software that is “open source” is necessarily “free.” In an oft-repeated saying, open source is free as in “free speech” not free as in “free beer.” In other words, it is meant to be open and accessible, but that doesn’t necessarily come without a price-tag.
In other words, open source is a practice that opens up the source (in the case of technology, this is typically the source code) so that others beyond the original creators can develop, expand, and modify the code. Unlike proprietary systems in which you are forbidden to “open the hood” to tinker with the moving parts, open source allows anyone to download the code and then alter it without restriction or fear of punishment.
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Databases
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CouchDB Moves to the Cloud With Couchio
According to its motto, the underlying premise behind the open source CouchDB NoSQL database is about helping developers “relax” — chiefly by providing them with a simple, powerful database alternative.
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Government
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European Union lost open source decision C(2006) 7108
A final version of the decision is not found in the register. In Europe you can file a request for public document access under the regulation EC/1049/2001 and usually get what you ask for. IDABC is now superceded by a new EU programme for interoperability, ISA. Apparently the Commission decision was later updated when the 1.1 version of the European Union Public License was approved. The EUPL is a wise choice for software from the public sector and enterprises as it is the legally best reviewed license for European market jurisdictions, available in all EU languages, it does not contain a political agenda and is compatible to most common licenses such as the GPL.
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Open Hardware
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Five Reasons Willow Garage is Going to Succeed
4. Willow Garage is community first, personal gain second. The whole company is focused on how they can work with the global community to advance the field of robotics as a whole. This is largely expressed in the open source licensing of everything they do, and their insistence that everyone who uses the PR2 follow the same open sharing. Even more than that, it’s apparent in their attitudes. Keenan Wyrobek, Co-Director of Personal Robotics, freely admitted that other groups are working on PR2 like robots, and may soon make them cheaper and perhaps even better. He liked this idea. He wants other groups to innovate, to expand, and to improve the field of robotics. It’s cooperation first, competition later.
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Programming
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Dynamic Open Source Languages Head to the Cloud
According to a poll conducted by analyst firm Redmonk and sponsored by dynamic language vendor ActiveState, over half of the developers surveyed have deployment plans for cloud applications within the next 12 months. Those cloud deployments are likely to be a hybrid of both public and private cloud platforms, according to 37 percent of respondents.
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Standards/Consortia
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WebM – The New Open Source Codec on the Block
In August 2009, Google acquired codec developer On2 Technologies for a rumoured $106 million. The flagship On2 codec was VP8 and it was also rumoured at the time that Google may open source this technology in the future, although a number of challenges lay ahead.
Late last week this rumour became reality and WebM was born. Alongside Theora and Dirac, WebM now enters the open source HTML 5 ready codec battle. Almost immediately all major web browsers, except one, but including Internet Explorer announced support for the codec. Using the might and muscle of Google WebM must have a solid chance of taking on the dominance of H.264 in the web video delivery battle. This really will be a solid kick in the pants for Theora, which now seems destined to remain a reasonably niche product, even with direct HTML 5 support from Firefox.
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VLC 1.1.0 Release Candidate supports WebM / VP8
The VideoLAN Project developers have announced the availability of a release candidate for version 1.1, the next major release, of their popular VLC Media Player. According to the developers, the latest 1.1 branch of VLC is much faster and more stable, thanks in part to a substantial amount of “important code clean-up” and rewrites. VLC is a free open source cross-platform multimedia player for various audio and video formats.
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Mozilla trying to build VP8 into HTML5 video
Mozilla is working to incorporate Google’s newly released VP8 video technology as part of the specification for Web video.
“That’s our hope,” said Mozilla Chief Executive John Lilly when asked if VP8 could be built into the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) specification for Web-based video. “We’d love for VP8 to be specified in the HTML5 standard. Once it’s in the spec, it can really get better traction from other players.”
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Intel eyes hardware acceleration for Google’s WebM
Google last week announced the high-definition WebM video file format to deliver high-quality Web video to multiple devices including TV sets and handhelds. WebM files will include video streams compressed with the open-source VP8 video codec, which was acquired by Google when it bought On2 Technologies in February.
“Just like we did with other codecs like MPEG2, H.264 & VC1, if VP8 establishes itself in the Smart TV space, we will add it to our [hardware] decoders,” said Wilfred Martis, general manager for retail consumer electronics at Intel’s Digital Home Group.
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Leftovers
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UK
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The EGM debate: BCS v Len Keighley
The BCS is facing a call for an Extraordinary General Meeting from 50 BCS members. Supporters of the EGM motion, led by former BCS trustee Len Keighley, have listed 20 reasons for suppporting the EGM. In the debate below, the BCS and Len Keighley put forward their arguments for and against the EGM.
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A search wall for UK Times
The UK’s Times and Sunday Times are putting up search walls in addition to pay walls.
The papers, which plan to start charging users for access to their newly redesigned Web sites in late June, will prevent Google and other search engines from linking to their stories.
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Science
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Weird Exoplanet Orbits Could Prevent Alien Life
From the beginning, exoplanets have defied our expectations for what a solar system would look like.
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Security/Aggression
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Identity cards scheme will be axed ‘within 100 days’
The 15,000 people who voluntarily paid £30 for a card since the 2009 roll out in Manchester will not get a refund.
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New proposal would require identification to buy prepaid cellphones
A bipartisan pair of Senate leaders have introduced a first-of-its-kind bill aimed at stopping terrorist suspects such as the would-be Times Square bomber from hiding their identities by using prepaid cellphones to plot their attacks.
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CERT Releases Basic Fuzzing Framework
Carnegie Mellon University’s CERT (Computer Emergency Response Team) has released a basic fuzzing framework to help identify and eliminate security vulnerabilities from software products.
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44 Million Stolen Gaming Credentials Uncovered
In previous blogs, Symantec has highlighted threats that steal user data. We recently analyzed a new sample submitted to Symantec and came across a server hosting the credentials of 44 million stolen gaming accounts. What was interesting about this threat wasn’t just the sheer number of stolen accounts, but that the accounts were being validated by a Trojan distributed to compromised computers. Symantec detects this threat as Trojan.Loginck.
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Environment
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Obama defends handling of gulf oil spill
As BP continued its effort to gain control of its untamed deep-sea well, President Obama announced more restrictions on offshore oil drilling Thursday and insisted his administration is firmly in charge of the response to the spill, now believed to be the largest in U.S. history.
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Finance
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Mathematical Logic Finds Unexpected Application on Wall Street
The monetary advantage of the current strategy is rapidly exhausted after a lifetime of approximately four seconds–an eternity for a machine, but barely enough time for a human to begin to comprehend what happened. The algorithm then switches to another trading strategy of higher ordinal rank, and uses this for a few seconds on one or more electronic exchanges, and so on, while opponent algorithms attempt the same maneuvers, risking billions of dollars in the process.
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Genetics
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Prof. Correa in Munich – Jul 19 2010
In the past decade, an increasing number of patents on plants and animals have been granted, especially in industrialised countries. The negative impacts of these patents on farmers, on breeders and on innovation have became more and more evident during the last years, as has the patents’ contribution to market concentration. There is a growing rejection of these patents by NGOs, farmers’ organizations, breeders and even governments. The conference “Patents on Seeds – The turning point?” shows current trends, highlights the negative impacts of the current patent system. Conference participants will discuss what the necessary changes are and what the possibilities are to effect such changes.
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Genetically Engineered Bugs Can Smell Blue Light
Fruit fly larvae made this mistake while participating in a study recently published in Frontiers in Neuroscience Behavior. By adding a light-sensitive protein to certain smell receptors in the larvae, German scientists allowed the genetically engineered bugs to essentially smell light.
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Copyrights
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ACTA
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Tell Your Lawmakers: “Anti-Counterfeiting” Treaty Is a Sham
ACTA is being negotiated by a handful of countries behind closed doors and is on track to be finished by the end of this year. Despite its potentially far-reaching impact for consumers and the future of the open Internet, the U.S. Trade Representative has claimed that it can shut out Congressional oversight by treating ACTA as a “sole executive agreement” under the President’s executive power, rather than a treaty.
We can’t sit back and let this fake “anti-counterfeiting” agreement become law! If your congressional representative is on one of the committees below that has oversight over the U.S. Trade Representative, tell your lawmaker not to be fooled by this chicanery and demand that ACTA be limited to addressing international counterfeiting.
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Clip of the Day
NASA Connect – VE – Systems (10/16/2003)
Novell for Sale: Impact on OpenSUSE, Mono, and SCO
Summary: Novell is “acting as a lap-dog and providing Microsoft with good PR while simultaneously dividing and hurting the FLOSS community,” argues The Source, which sees no substantial future for Novell’s projects
THE SOURCE has just published an excellent analysis (as always) of Novell’s situation now that it's up for sale. The impact on projects like OpenSUSE, Mono, and Moonlight is also mentioned. To quote some portions:
Right, so, Novell is up for sale and there’s a couple dozen potential buyers.
First, let me tell you what is not going to happen:
Microsoft is not going to buy Novell.
Novell has served their purpose to Microsoft, which is basically acting as a lap-dog and providing Microsoft with good PR while simultaneously dividing and hurting the FLOSS community.
Microsoft could not have hoped for a better partner in the Open Source space, but Novell is of ever-diminishing use to their Redmond masters: anyone naïve enough to accept Microsoft’s “golly-gee-we’ve-changed” overtures has done so and Microsoft is now backing off “interoperability” talk and going back to the “customers just want one solution from one provider” strategy in public (which they never changed in private, mind you.)
Furthermore, Microsoft wants nothing to do directly with selling Linux. Novell served as a DMZ between the GPL and Microsoft, and staring across a DMZ is about as close to Linux as Microsoft wants to get. Microsoft is not about to get into the business of directly distributing/selling/supporting Linux.
[...]
OpenSUSE is greatly diminished under this scenario: as a community-only distro and without corporate backing, it’s looking at the bottom end of the Top 10 List. With Novell’s stained name out of the picture, OpenSUSE may become acceptable to people who actually care about FLOSS, so I won’t count it out of the picture.
Team Apologista takes a major hit, but sadly probably not a finishing blow. I wouldn’t be surprised to see a Mono-based spinoff. There’s money to be made there and Lord knows Team Apologista has some players with personal, professional and emotional investment in Mono that guarantees they won’t be giving up that fight.
Yesterday we explained why OpenSUSE developers ought to fork and rename. “SUSE” is just too tainted a name after the Microsoft association (the Microsoft boosters promote this relationship even after the patent vouchers ran out), although technically it is a powerful distribution with a new release coming soon. One of the best things about SUSE is YaST, which has this new article about it:
Continuing with our look into OpenSuSE, we examine YaST. One of the best things going for OpenSuSE (and SuSE as well) is their take on the tried and true “control panal” YaST. YaST is, quite literally, a one-stop-shop for configuring Linux. Among the cornucopia of Linux configuration tools, YaST might very well be the top of the heap. It’s really that good. And with reason. YaST has been around for a long, long time, so it’s had plenty of time to mature.
One must also wonder what Novell’s situation will mean to the SCO case. Pelican is being brought up again (for background see [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]) and it seems like SCO will continue fighting against Novell without much interference. What would happen if Novell’s new owner decided not to bother with the SCO case anymore?
Added below are some other bits of news about Novell. We will shortly cover the company’s financial results. █
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[1] Nuance, Novell Veteran Takes Channel Reins At Meru Networks
“I remember Eric Schmidt when he’d just joined Novell, and I remember him saying, walking around, ‘There’s more technology oozing out of the offices around here’ than he’d ever seen before,” Cole said. “I see that at Meru in a different way, with solutions. With my solutions background, it’s like a kid being in a candy store around here.”
[2] Former A&M star joins senior PGA field
Veriato, 64, is a former Texas A&M standout who won the 2001 Novell Utah Showdown on the Champions Tour. The ex-head pro at Onion Creek Country Club in Austin was the 1996 PGA Senior Club Professional Player of the Year.
[3] PDS Wins Novell Partner of the Year in End-User Computing Category (also here)
[4] Heads in the Cloud at Gov 2.0
Equally enthusiastic about cloud computing was Randi Levin, CTO of Los Angeles, who ditched the city’s Novell collaboration software for Google’s enterprise solution last year — a decision, she says, that will save the city $5 million “in cash” over three to five years (the cost of the contract is $7.25 million over five years).
Prior to switching to Google, the Los Angeles Information Technology Agency (ITA) was using Novell GroupWise 7, but citizens complained about the email system and calendaring — and the city was dealing with a budget crisis.
MeeGo is Hijacked by the Mono Team
Summary: Novell/Microsoft influence in MeeGo is threatening Nokia and Intel with software patents tax
A MICROSOFT MVP seems to be confirming what we feared 3 months ago and knew after Lyle warned us yesterday. Here is what Lyle told us an hour ago:
May 28th, 2010 – 11:08:47-12:21:56
| lyle | schestowitz: did you see about MeeGo? | May 28 11:08 |
|---|---|---|
| lyle | it’s contaminated by MONO |
May 28 11:08 |
| oiaohm | How lyle | May 28 11:09 |
| lyle | it comes with banshee by default | May 28 11:09 |
| lyle | and comes with mono compiler | May 28 11:09 |
| lyle | but no gcc | May 28 11:09 |
| oiaohm | meego 1.0 has gcc in it. | May 28 11:10 |
| lyle | my copy doesn’t | May 28 11:10 |
| lyle | I’m using LiveCD | May 28 11:10 |
| lyle | is that what you are using? | May 28 11:10 |
| lyle | meego-netbook-ia32-1.0.0.20100524.1.img | May 28 11:11 |
| lyle | there’s no gcc | May 28 11:12 |
| oiaohm | That is a 800 meg image ? | May 28 11:13 |
| lyle | yea | May 28 11:13 |
| lyle | is there a different one with gcc? | May 28 11:13 |
| oiaohm | I have development straith out git | May 28 11:14 |
| lyle | I’m sure I can install it after the fact, but the LiveCD doesn’t have it | May 28 11:14 |
| oiaohm | What gets me is straight out git does not have mono. | May 28 11:15 |
| lyle | weird | May 28 11:15 |
| oiaohm | At all | May 28 11:15 |
| lyle | seriously, try the LiveCD – you will see MONO | May 28 11:16 |
| lyle | what media player does meego have in git? | May 28 11:16 |
| lyle | rhythmbox? | May 28 11:16 |
| lyle | I think I see my boss | May 28 11:17 |
| lyle | finally | May 28 11:17 |
| lyle | yep, that’s him | May 28 11:17 |
| lyle | what media player does your mego git have oiaohm? | May 28 11:18 |
| oiaohm | QT based one. | May 28 11:18 |
| lyle | I wonder what player got pushed aside | May 28 11:18 |
| oiaohm | As I say wiered. | May 28 11:18 |
| lyle | did MONO boosters hijack the project at the last minute and force their MONO into meego? | May 28 11:20 |
| lyle | maybe that explains it | May 28 11:20 |
| MinceR | are the image and the git repo from the same site? | May 28 11:20 |
| oiaohm | Yes | May 28 11:21 |
| lyle | I got it from meego.com | May 28 11:21 |
| oiaohm | And he is right. | May 28 11:21 |
| oiaohm | Question now is why. | May 28 11:21 |
| lyle | btw, just saw this: http://tirania.org/blog/archive/2010/May-27.html | May 28 11:22 |
| Techrights | Title: Linux for Consumers: MeeGo Updates – Miguel de Icaza .::. Size~: 16.62 KB | May 28 11:22 |
| lyle | this is worrying | May 28 11:22 |
| oiaohm | Wound not been pulled in by evolution would it not. | May 28 11:22 |
| lyle | banshee is MONO too | May 28 11:22 |
| lyle | btw gotta go, shop opened up – gotta get to work | May 28 11:23 |
| lyle | would love to find out wtf happened tho | May 28 11:23 |
| lyle | good luck guys | May 28 11:23 |
| *lyle has quit (Quit: Page closed) | May 28 11:24 | |
| -BNtwitter/#boycottnovell-[schestowitz] #Microsoft is Not an Open Source Company, It’s a Software Patents Company With Lobbyists http://ur1.ca/040wz #swpats | May 28 11:48 | |
| Techrights | Title: Microsoft is Not an Open Source Company, Its a Software Patents Company With Lobbyists | Techrights .::. Size~: 107.97 KB | May 28 11:48 |
| oiaohm | Posted question to meego developers over mono. schestowitz | May 28 12:13 |
| schestowitz | Hey | May 28 12:14 |
| schestowitz | I’m working on a post about it | May 28 12:14 |
| schestowitz | Remember Moblin | May 28 12:14 |
| oiaohm | banshee included as a sample app cased the include. | May 28 12:14 |
| schestowitz | OpenSUSE+mono has their grubby hands on it. | May 28 12:14 |
| schestowitz | Banchee is a big patent trap | May 28 12:15 |
| schestowitz | More so then others | May 28 12:15 |
| oiaohm | Mono might magically disappear. | May 28 12:15 |
| schestowitz | It contains libs that Microsoft /EXPLICITLY/ excluded | May 28 12:15 |
| oiaohm | Or there might be an agreement with Intel that covers mono. | May 28 12:15 |
| schestowitz | So we already know that Microsoft uses Banshee as a Trojan | May 28 12:15 |
| schestowitz | oiaohm: yes, that’s what I reckoned | May 28 12:16 |
| oiaohm | I want to find out what is there. | May 28 12:16 |
| schestowitz | Intel must be x-licensing w/ Microsoft already | May 28 12:16 |
| schestowitz | Same with H-P | May 28 12:16 |
| schestowitz | But… | May 28 12:16 |
| oiaohm | Depends on how its licenced. | May 28 12:16 |
| *Python1320 (Python1320@dsl-tkubrasgw1-fe2cdc00-164.dhcp.inet.fi) has joined #boycottnovell | May 28 12:16 | |
| *Python1320 has quit (Changing host) | May 28 12:16 | |
| *Python1320 (Python1320@unaffiliated/python1320) has joined #boycottnovell | May 28 12:16 | |
| schestowitz | Nokia’s Ari said Nokia would defend against Microsoft swpats attack | May 28 12:16 |
| oiaohm | Novell one suxs for downstream. | May 28 12:16 |
| schestowitz | So I’m mildly baffled | May 28 12:16 |
| schestowitz | Mixed msgs | May 28 12:16 |
| oiaohm | If Intel one is good for downstream. | May 28 12:17 |
| oiaohm | We might have a mono solution that makes everyone bar Novell happy. | May 28 12:17 |
| MinceR | oiaohm: how? | May 28 12:19 |
| oiaohm | If intel has a downstream protection agreement it can be exploited. | May 28 12:21 |
Mono is a threat to software freedom. Join us now at the IRC channel where the subject is being actively discussed. █
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