Bonum Certa Men Certa

Links 03/04/2009: ASUS Linux Phones, More Free Software in Russia





GNOME bluefish

Contents





GNU/Linux

  • Shuttleworth: Windows 7 an Opportunity for Linux
    "The principals of diversity in the desktop space are well established," Shuttleworth told InternetNews.com. "The benefits to consumers and industry of having an alternative are very substantial. Any change in the status quo is an opportunity."


  • Downloading and first impression of Ubuntu-Linux
    I would suggest you to shift to linux ASAP. More update on my Linux experience soon.


  • Linux Outlaws 84 - Ext4 Brains
    This time on the show: Last.fm, Microsoft and the German state FAIL miserably, Linux router worm, an ATI rant and Dan reviews Arch Linux.




  • Applications





  • KDE

    • wallpapers and other bobbles for 4.3
      We have a number of new Plasma components lining up to make it into 4.3. Not least among them is a geolocation DataEngine, making it absolutely trivial for anything Plasma to get at the information either via a GPS device or by looking up the location of your network address if you are online. Along with a handful of new widgets, some I've already written about recently, we also have no less than six new wallpaper plugins that may make it into 4.3!


    • KDE 4.2.2 and Konqueror
      To the entire KDE community, great job on the 4.2.2 release today. Everything upgraded smoothly, KMail seems to be syncing faster now with GMail in dIMAP. Once again thank you and congratulations on a job well done!








  • GNOME

    • Gnome sets sights on 2010 for 3.0 release
      With Gnome 2.26 safely out the door the Gnome development team is now planning for Gnome 3.0, a release it expects to make in March next year. Responding to growing criticism that the Gnome project lacks vision the team says that the 3.0 milestone release will have to have “big user-visible changes”.

      “If you look closely at our community, it’d be wrong to say that people are lacking a vision; but the project as a whole does indeed have this issue,” the team said in its public posting. With this in mind the team is looking at a release that will both streamline the desktop as well as revamp the overall user experience by giving users new ways of interacting with their desktop and managing files.


    • GNOME plans for run up to 3.0
      A roadmap for the immediate future of GNOME desktop has been published on the GNOME Live site. The roadmap charts the planned progress of the Linux and Unix desktop from its recently released 2.26 version and the 2.26.1 update due in April, through a GNOME 2.28.0 release in September to a GNOME 2.30.0, which will be renumbered as 3.0.0 when released in March 2010.








  • Distributions

    • Review: Moon OS 2.0
      MoonOS is one of those elegant distros, where it focuses a lot on eyecandy and looking good. And it definitely has a lot of good things to look at. Sorta like something that comes by and catches your eye in a way that nothing else can. But good looks don't mean that what's underneath is all that great. But sometimes the good looks are only the beginning of the greatness hidden beneath that flashy exterior. So which is it for MoonOS? Let's find out.


    • Slitaz Linux - Tiny but fierce
      When someone asks you to name a small Linux distro, under 100MB, names like Puppy and Damn Small Linux come to mind. Now, the featherweight category has another candidate, a 25MB fighter called Slitaz.

      [...]

      At 25MB, Slitaz cannot possibly satisfy every need. Slitaz is an incredibly light and fast distro, visually pleasing, stable, and well made. It has a solid, modest baseline of programs and a very convenient software management utility that makes it quite easy to expand. Other functions are lacking, like networking and automounting of drives. I'd like to see improved Wireless support, connectivity for Windows (Samba) and better multimedia.


    • Debian 5: Lenny
      The installation was smooth. In the same server when we installed Windows server 2003 it could not detect the RAID driver and hence it didn't detect the HDD as well.

      Bottomline: Considering its features and support architecture, it is well suited for work stations and servers.


    • Red Hat

      • CentOS 5.3: This Works
        All I can say is “WOW!” No, not the fan-boy stuff; it has to work the way I work. I can be quite merciless about discarding the most expensive, the best supported and wildest hyped, and I really could care less who you are and what matters to you — if it won’t work for me, it’s not worth my time. I haven’t tested every detail, but I’m getting there. However, the things I always look at first are the things which impress me most about CentOS.






    • Ubuntu

      • Ubuntu server adoption slow but steady in the data center
        Although the Ubuntu desktop has won wide popularity, Ubuntu's fairly sophisticated server OS has yet to establish significant inroads in U.S. data centers.

        In a recent Ubuntu global user survey, nearly a third of the respondents worked for companies with 10 or fewer employees and only 28% worked in the U.S. (compared to 55% from Europe). And the overwhelming majority are using it for basic functions like Web, print and file, database and backup servers, with only a small minority using it for advanced tasks like virtualization or cluster computing. (The low usage for the latter mirror the findings for Linux as a whole in a TechTarget data center survey last year.) The most prevalent Ubuntu industry sectors, unsurprisingly, were technology and education.


      • Ubuntu Netbook Remix 9.04 Beta released
        The Ubuntu team is pleased to announce the beta release of Ubuntu Netbook Remix 9.04. This is the first release of UNR to be fully integrated into the Ubuntu family, fully up to date with the latest applications and hardware support.


      • Ubunchu! The Ubuntu Manga is now in English
        Now thanks to the author (Hiroshi Seo), two ubuntu-jp LoCo members (Fumihito Yoshida and Hajime Mizuno) and myself*. We finally got the rights to translate the comic into English, got the script translated and re-edited each image page, replacing the Japanese with English.


      • Ubuntu Podcast Episode #24 - Mark Shuttleworth
        Mark Shuttleworth joins us for a video podcast to discuss the upcoming 9.04 release, Ubuntu history, Linux on the desktop, impacts of cloud computing, Ayatana, the community and Ubuntu, Ubuntu and Canonical, Google Summer of Code, Ubunet, and much more!


      • Five years with Ubuntu
        The third secret Ubuntu community is enthusiastic. Account throughout the world with 5,000 volunteers dedicated to promoting their use and distribution 38,000 translate to multiple languages. Most of this community is in Europe, but sympathy is extended throughout the world. Like him, as at the time happened to Google and others. In fact, Google employees use a modified version of Ubuntu, the Goobuntu.


      • Which Ubuntu Derivative Is Right For You?
        If you’re interested in Linux then most likely you have taken a look at Ubuntu. And if you have taken a look at Ubuntu then you know there are a lot of derivatives out there that specialize in one cross section of society or another. But which one is right for you? That is where gHacks comes in.


      • Ubuntu Server's Ambitions No Longer Cloudy - Er, Murky
        A big feature for 9.04 is cloud compatibility, in the form of a) being able to run instances of 9.04 directly on Amazon EC2 clouds and b) being able to provision cloud-computing infrastructures with local servers (Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud). There's a whole raft of other goodies, too, most of them built around making servers that much easier to provision and manage, but the cloud features made me sit up and pay attention.










  • New Releases

    • Clonezilla 1.2.1-50


    • AsteriskNOW 1.5.0


    • Webconverger 4.4


    • VectorLinux 6.0 Light released
      The VectorLinux team is pleased to announce the final release of VL6.0 Light. Find it here:

      * VL6.0-Light-Final.iso * md5sum 770b8789100a8097f3d200561205c0bb

      Light is aimed at users with some Linux experience. It is biased towards technical simplicity and high performance. Based on VL6.0 Standard, the most resource hungry applications have been removed or replaced with lighter alternatives. Running services are kept to a minimum.


    • GParted 0.4.4-1






  • Devices/Embedded

    • The newly-formed phone maker finally let us get our hands on the Garmin-Asus Nuvifone G60 and the new, Windows Mobile, Nuvifone M20. Was it worth the wait?
      Though it's not technically a smartphone, the Nuvifone G60 is still based on Garmin's own Linux-based platform, and the company bragged quite a bit about the length their own software developers went in order to make this an original device.




    • Phones

      • Asus Eee Linux-based Skype Videophone
        Appearing a somewhat solitary member of the Asus Eee product family, the unique AiGuru SV-1 Videophone stands alone in more ways than one. At around 25cm tall, with curves akin a to Brancusi sculpture, this tabletop unit bearing a widescreen 7in LCD features built-in 802.11b/g Wi-Fi and a rechargeable battery to deliver round-the-home portability.


      • Some Fun Facts About The Google Phone
        Robert Dotson, chief executive of T-Mobile USA, delivered a keynote speech this week at CTIA in Las Vegas. It was full of revealing facts and figures about Google’s G1 smartphone, which launched last fall. An estimated 1.5 million of these phones were ordered, though it’s still not clear how many phones have been sold by T-Mobile, both here and abroad. Here are the best bits from Dotson’s speech...


      • AT&T mistakes netbook for phone, sells with service plan
        AT&T is testing whether customers will want to buy their laptops like they do their mobile phones: cheap at first but expensive over the long haul. Subsidized netbooks sold like phones is a service supported by Linux leaders as a way to beat Microsoft's Windows in the growing netbook segment, and that's been mooted as a possible direction for Google.

        At this stage, though, it's not clear whether AT&T will make Linux or Windows available on its netbooks.


      • The Palm Pre Will Be an iPhone Killer
        After seemingly disappearing off the face of the earth while companies like Nokia and RIM released multiple phones, and while Apple's iPhone 3G has continued to enjoy immense popularity, Palm has finally hit back. The Pre is considered a make-or-break release for Palm — the smartphone is built on an entirely new Linux-based operating system called webOS.




    • Sub-notebooks

      • Microsoft losing control of netbooks
        The Wall Street Journal has reported how HP and other PC OEMs are currently exploring their options for Android-based netbooks.


      • The year of the netbook
        After doing all the research, I pounced on a President's Day sale and bought a 2.2 lb. Dell Mini 9 for $199, pre-installed with Linux Ubuntu. While this computer hardly sets the world on fire with speed or features, it cost $900 less than my entry-level MacBook. It's taken some getting used to, but it's a capable backup and perfect for working on the road. It has decent speakers, modest battery life, good wireless connectivity, several USB ports and a built-in memory card reader. Mine has a tiny 4 gigabyte hard drive (it comes in larger sizes, too). In this world of Web-based Gmail and Google Docs, I actually doubt I'll fill it up, since Ubuntu is lean and mean, and I'll still use my MacBook for my photos and music.










Free Software/Open Source

  • Mozilla Support Announces Version 1.0
    Earlier this week, we launched version 1.0 of Mozilla’s community support project called SUMO — this is the project behind the popular support site Firefox Support. Driven by the Mozilla community, SUMO has already made a big difference to Firefox users around the world.


  • IT for health
    The solution to the problem of flexibility lies in free and open source software. India has already adopted open source approaches in administrative systems and education projects. This represents a good policy foundation on which to build a national eHealth system. It could, for a start, leverage the strengths of the large open source software community.


  • DimDim Version 5: Better Performance, Security for Online Meetings
    There are also many performance and security enhancements in DimDim version 5. The application automatically recognizes webcams and microphones, and the company claims that DimDim uses less bandwidth in this version. You can also share videos and the like with meeting attendees, not just static web pages.


  • A downloading guide for freeloaders
    RICHARD Stallman once wrote that the point about free software is it is "free as in freedom, not free as in beer", meaning people should be at liberty to do as they pleased with software, rather than subscribe to its restrictive licences.


  • 5 Best BSD Distributions
    As some of you may know, Linux is not the only Unix-like operating system available. There are other UNIX derivatives, and one of the most popular among them is called BSD. If you have been to Distrowatch, you will see different BSD distributions listed in there.

    I have said before that I'm interested in trying BSD distros, but until now I still can't find the time to actually do it. I just did some research about several BSD distributions and read a couple of reviews so if I have the time to finally take the plunge, I'll be prepared.


  • 25 Cool and Geeky BSD Wallpapers


  • VLC 0.9.9: The best media player just got better
    If you've yet to try VLC, do so. Whether you just want to play media files or also want to convert them, VLC can handle just about anything you throw at it. When all other media players fail, whether on Windows, Linux, or the Mac, VLC will almost always deliver.




  • FSF/GNU

    • Libre.fm - Building An Open Last.fm
      Now there are plans afoot to create a completely free (as in freedom) alternative called Libre.fm. I’ve been on Last.fm for a couple of years now and the main benefit for me is keeping track of the music I listen to whilst also advertising my fabulous *ahem* taste and sharing with friends. It keeps track of the music you play through a back-end system called Audioscrobbler which records song names, artists, albums etc and shows them on your profile page.








  • Government

    • Russia's geek-in-chief
      As a true geek, Medvedev is probably also not a big fan of Microsoft. While the rest of the world has been battling Bill Gates' empire for almost two decades, it's only now that Russia has waken up to the challenge and has placed the company on a government antitrust watchlist. CNET has more.

      I wonder if the persecution of Microsoft is somehow related to much-discussed plans for the development of a genuine Russian “national open-source operating system” that could overtake other open-source projects like Ubuntu. Most open-source systems are - how should I put it – already (or still?) very hard to use; giving them an extra Russian edge would make them appealing only to the small tech-masochist niche – or, perhaps, the Russian bureaucrats who are the usual victims of such experiments (in late 1990s, they were all complaining about having to drive Russian cars to work). But of course, the situation would change dramatically if the Russian geek-in-chief were to ban Microsoft from Russia!








  • Programming

    • DreamFace 2.0 Web App Development Platform Announced
      DreamFace 2.0 will be available under a dual-license open source model based on GPL 3.0. DreamFace 2.0 Beta 1, including the enhanced widget platform and the new mobile services features, will be available this month. DreamFace 2.0 Beta 2, including the social networking framework, will be available next month. In order to get the beta, you have to join DreamFace's community and a notification will be sent when the first beta is available.








  • Standards/Consortia

    • floating players subtle victory for web standards
      What all these apps which have adopted this model have in common is something that will delight people who are passionate about the use of open standards rather than proprietary tools: you can’t make a player float over the page using pure Flash, so none of these players are 100% Flash anymore. Pure-Flash in-browser playback has become a lagging edge thing.








Leftovers

  • Residents challenge Google camera
    Police were called to Broughton, near Milton Keynes, after residents staged the protest accusing Google of invading their privacy and "facilitating crime".


  • Gang of villagers chase away Google car


  • HADOPI Law Passed - by 12 Votes to 4
    It is difficult to believe in democracy in which we aim to live and write. After 41 hours and 40 minutes of passionate discussion on the text, there remained only a handful of courageous members around 22:45 Thursday evening when the National Assembly decided, on the instructions of the Secretary of State Roger Karoutchi to pass immediately to vote on the Creation and Internet law, which was not expected before next week. One exception, which allows you to hide the large number of UMP deputies who would have abstained if the vote had been, as tradition dictates, after the government issues Tuesday night. Thus wished Nicolas Sarkozy.

    [...]

    So one of the most important, and contentious piece of legislation in recent years is passed by trickery. In this way, those pushing this law have shown their true colours and their contempt for the democratic process.


  • French pass 'three strikes' file-sharing law


  • "Piracy Law" Cuts *Traffic* not "Piracy"
    All this means is that people aren't sharing so much stuff online. But now that you can pick up a 1 Terabyte external hard drive for less than a hundred quid - which can store about a quarter of a million songs - guess what people are going to turn to in order to swap files in the future?




  • Censorship/Web Abuse

    • The State Of DRM: Is The Customer Right?
      McSherry says it's that control — not piracy prevention — that's the real goal of Digital Rights Management. Which is why it may be around for a long time.


    • Canadian ACTA Consultation Report Revealed
      In an earlier post, I noted that the Department of Foreign Affairs will be holding a consultation meeting on ACTA next week. DFAIT first consulted on ACTA in the spring of 2008. While I discussed some of the findings based on documents obtained under the Access to Information Act, I did not previously have access to the entire draft report. I do now (through ATIP) - it is posted below for research and news reporting purposes.


    • Consumer Interest Groups Ask Obama To Stop Appointing RIAA Lawyers
      With the Obama administration appointing a whole bunch of copyright maximalists to various positions (despite an early indication that perhaps he recognized issues with copyright law), a bunch of public interest and consumer interest groups have gotten together to write a letter to Obama, asking him to recognize that he seems to be filling every open slot with a very heavily biased viewpoint which could do significant harm towards innovation. Some of the letter may be inspired by the rumored candidates for the IP Czar position -- all of whom also fall into the copyright maximalist camp. Though, the fact that it's taken Obama so long to appoint this position (upsetting the Senators who wrote the law requiring the position in the first place) suggests (at the very least) he isn't considering this to be a priority.






  • Copyrights

    • Shepard Fairey Challenges AP Copyright by Jonathan Hunter
      By all accounts, President Barack Obama’s road to the Oval Office was one replete with firsts. For example, the 2008 presidential campaign marked the first time many had heard of Los Angeles street artist Shepard Fairey. Fairey’s stylized poster of Obama—which bears the Obama campaign watchword, "hope"— became a symbol of Obama’s candidacy among many supporters. Now that image has landed Fairey in a legal battle with the Associated Press, which claims that Fairey’s poster infringes on its copyright to a 2006 photograph. On Feb. 9th of this year, Fairey fired back, seeking a declaratory judgment that his poster of Obama does not infringe on any AP copyrights.


    • Record Labels In Germany Learning That YouTube Has The Leverage
      Just as in the UK, where Google decided to block all music videos from the major record labels, after those labels demanded payments that Google felt was way out of line with what could be made from advertising, it looks like Google has now pulled music videos in Germany as well. Once again, the record labels will likely complain and demand investigations -- even as other artists have learned that they don't need to profit directly from their videos on YouTube, but that they can profit indirectly and that pulling their videos down actually does a lot more harm than good.


    • Congrats, Recording Industry: You May Now Have Killed Seeqpod Too
      The record labels' animosity towards Seeqpod has never made much sense. Seeqpod is a basic search engine that seeks out music files online. Some of these files are, undoubtedly, unauthorized copies, but Seeqpod has always been focused on streaming the music rather than letting you download the tracks.


    • User-Generated Content: Microsoft vs. Google
      Now, I'm not naïve enough to believe that José Manuel Barroso will personally ponder my ideas on this issue, but I hope that someone, somewhere, in the European Commission will at least note their existence when offering a summary of the views expressed. In other words, I do think it's worth giving your two ha'p'orth on this matter, if only to counterbalance other views.

      Talking of which, it's fascinating to compare and contrast what two giants of the computing world, Microsoft and Google, have to say on the subject in their submissions.

      As you might expect, Microsoft loves copyright, and wants everything to be done to keep it as it is, nice and strong, with no silly exceptions that might let people do anything so subversive as taking content and using it to create something new. Here's its opening comments...


    • Users rights MEPs chair EU anti-piracy conference
      One could reasonably ask why four members of the European Parliament's committee which is putting through such an important piece of legislation which affects users Internet rights, and which should be giving full consideration to the users' views, agreed to chair presentations at a conference which is geared towards measures that will erode users rights ?


    • Trautmann deal wraps up Internet limitations
      Limitations are being written in, and any hints of users rights in respect of the Internet are struck out, as the Council moves to close the deal with the European Parliament.


    • Using The DMCA To Stop Patients From Rating Their Doctors
      Of course, it does bring up a few interesting points of discussion. First, is that the main purpose of using copyright here is so that the doctors can make use of the DMCA's notice-and-takedown safe harbor provisions, rather than be stymied by the similar (but not quite the same) CDA section 230 safe harbors for things like defamation.










Digital Tipping Point: Clip of the Day



Nat Friedman 11

Ogg Theora





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

Recent Techrights' Posts

Social Control Media and GAFAM as National Security Threats (Domestically and More So Abroad)
"Algorithms control messages, swayed 2024 presidential election"
It's Not a GAFAM World Anymore and There Are Far More Operating Systems Than Google's, Apple's, and Microsoft's
we're not getting the full picture of what's happening
Microsoft's XBox is Going Away Like Microsoft's Skype (Slowly But Surely, Then All at Once)
XBox is dying rapidly
Codecs and Software Patents - Part IV - Things Got So Bad That Some Laptop Sales Got Banned in the EU (Over Software Patents!)
If software patents lead to such severe outcomes, shouldn't the media pay closer attention to the problem?
 
Gemini Links 08/05/2026: Slop Falsely Marketed to Greedy Administrators and New Official Maintainer of Antenna Confirmed
Links for the day
Links 08/05/2026: French Prosecutors Seek Charges Against MElon, Europe Wants Young People Without Skinnerboxes (Smartphones)
Links for the day
2,000-4,000 More Layoffs Expected at IBM's Kyndryl, Some Say Over 10,000 Layoffs
They use euphemisms like "restructuring" or "rebalancing"
Gemini Links 08/05/2026: Dissociated Pride and Prejudice, Smallnet Protocols Roundup
Links for the day
Links 08/05/2026: Slop Profiteer NVIDIA (and Circular Financing/Accounting Fraud Leader) May Be Liable for Mass Copyright Infringement, Kyndryl (IBM) Layoffs
Links for the day
Outgoing OSI Chief Was Paid by Microsoft to Advocate for GPL Violations (Using the OSI's Name). Now, Inside OIN, He Says GPL Violations Are 'Freedom'.
It seems like only compromised people can be "allowed" to run today's OSI
SLAPP Censorship - Part 70 Out of 200: Microsoft's Graveley Injunction Request 100% the Same as Garrett's (Pure 'Copy-paste', Not Even a Word or Single Character Changed!)
Not so funny at all
Over 97% of the 'Linux' Foundation's Budget Goes Not to Linux
There is a term for this: mission creep
Cloudflare is a Giant Pile of Debt, Now There Are Mass Layoffs and Media Coverage About This is Churnalism, Sometimes by Slopfarms (False Excuses)
If Cloudflare goes under, it'll be great news
NDAs as a Price Tag on Criticism (or Honest Expressions of Opinion)
What ever happened to accountability? Suppressed by reverse bribes (via NDAs)?
Internal Microsoft Communications Confirm: "Buyout" Offer Worse Than a Year's Salary and Microsoft Offers "Retirement" to Young People Who Cannot Retire
Does that sound like a good offer or marching orders?
Site Overhauls at Cybershow and at analognowhere.com (Less is More!)
They seem to be replacing the heavy PHP backend with static HTML pages
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XVI - EPO Had Data Breaches, Covered Them Up, Now Lectures Staff That Didn't Do It and Didn't Cover It Up
Imagine what would happen to staff if (non-anonymously) blowing the whistle on management leaking and then covering up EPO data breaches
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Thursday, May 07, 2026
IRC logs for Thursday, May 07, 2026
Mass Layoffs at IBM's Kyndryl, Slop Won't Save Kyndryl
Kyndryl is a "done deal". It's done. It's finished.
Kyndryl Holdings Inc Falls Almost 15% in 2 Days, What Does That Tell Us About IBM?
The "Big Blue" 'shell game' isn't working
Companies That Say They Are "Hey Hi" (AI) Leaders Don't Really Do Well, They Have Mass Layoffs Because Hype and Storytelling Won't Live Up to Shareholders' Expectations
Microsoft's investment in slop is not going well
Gemini Links 07/05/2026: Unicode and "RSS 4 Noobs (Getting Started)"
Links for the day
During IBM's Annual Event/Bash IBM's Stock Fell to (Almost) Lowest Level in a Year, Insiders Explain "IBM is on the Brink of Collapse."
Anthropic - like IBM - pays the media for puff pieces, exaggerations, and obvious vapourware
Servers Became "Cloud", VR Became "Metaverse", Now Bots Become "Agents" (of Slop)
Changing the name of things won't prevent rejection, only delay the negative reaction some more
Links 07/05/2026: "The ‘Perfect Storm’ Hanging Over Britain’s Public Debt" and "Internet Shutdowns Spread in Africa"
Links for the day
OSI Partners With Microsoft to Help Pretend Proprietary (GitHub) 'Celebrates' Open Source
And a Microsoft operative announced this as well
Links 07/05/2026: "Most Vibe-coded (Slop) Tools Are Not for You" and "Prepare for the PCB Shortage"
Links for the day
SLAPP Censorship - Part 69 Out of 200: Microsoft's Graveley Strangles, Gets Arrested, Charged, Then Asks for Apology From Those Who Reported It by Recycling Garrett's Plea for Apology
Garrett realised that his "funny" lawsuit wasn't so funny anymore
Codecs and Software Patents - Part III - AOMedia Video 1 (AV1) and Antitrust Issues
As we'll show in later parts, this already results in bans of some hardware sales in Europe
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XV - Talking About Responsibility and Accountability While Failing to Hold Themselves Accountable
what outlet is there for justice or for the Rule of Law?
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, May 06, 2026
IRC logs for Wednesday, May 06, 2026
Gemini Links 07/05/2026: Dissociated Jekyll And Hyde, New Antenna 2.0.0
Links for the day
Google Slop Contains Serious Errors, Google Has Just Been Sued for 1.5 Million Dollars by One Victim of It
If he wins, the floodgates will open for millions of other people
Keeping Server Costs Under Control in Age of Zombie-Majority Net
The Web has become such a sordid mess not just due to chatbots and LLM bots
People Work for Microsoft Because They Fear No Other Company Would Hire Them
Why do people still work at Microsoft?
The Register MS Does "Microsoft Says", Fails to Accept XBox is Dying and Slop is a Failure
The real news today isn't some tweets from Microsoft
IBM Seems to be Imitating the European Patent Office's "Young Professionals" (YPs) With Client Innovation Center (CIC), Which is About Mass-Hiring Inexperienced People on Very Low Salaries (Sometimes Unlivable)
So the future of IBM now is college students without experiences?
IBM Spammers With LLM Slop Discourage Discussion About IBM Problems and Layoffs
they would likely not bother had those discussions not hurt IBM's management [...] There is a similar problem this year in IRC
The Register MS is All About MS After the Site Overhaul, Now They Are a Platform of "Microsoft Says"
They rewrite history for sponsors [...] Microsoft says. Hence, it must be true!
Pop the Slop Bubble, Don't Ask When It'll Pop or Expect Others to Pop It for You
It has all along been sold on a lie and it relied a great deal on corrupted (captured) media which played along with deliberate lies because it got paid to do this [...] The slop bubble is similar to the fake-coins bubble
SLAPP Censorship - Part 68 Out of 200: Based on Their Particulars of Claims, Microsoft's Graveley and Garrett Seem Like the Same Person (Exactly Same Words Used, Sloppily Recycled)
almost identical (even a description of who they are and how they feel)
The Operating Systems statCounter Cannot Identify or Classify
Is it possible that statCounter just cannot properly decipher and classify systems brought by and controlled by eastern Asia as opposed to Europe and North America?
Gartner Group Paid The Register MS. And Now The Register MS is a "Gartner Says" Rag.
Follow the money
IBM Allegedly Used Apptio to Target and Sack (RA) Productive or 'Expensive' Employees, Are Apptio Staff Now Subjected to Layoffs?
Apptio is one of several companies that IBM buys only to sink together with the IBM boat, RMS Watson
Gemini Links 06/05/2026: "Who Knows That You Blog?" and New Official Antenna by Michael Nordmeyer
Links for the day
Links 06/05/2026: Apple Accepts That It Misled People on Slop and Begins Blocking Software/Games Made With Slop
Links for the day
Microsoft's XBox Exodus Carries on: Corporate VP of Gaming Ecosystem Organization and Corporate VP of XBox Devices and Ecosystem Both Leave Microsoft
Don't expect what's left of the media to properly report the true scale of the XBox cuts and executive-level departures
Codecs and Software Patents - Part II - AV1 and HEVC Not Really Safe
We are, in effect, looking at a sort of cartel (like the one which came out of Germany with MP3)
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XIV - Antisemitism Inside the EPO
A sensitive topic for the European Patent Office (EPO)
Gemini Links 06/05/2026: Childhood Memories, Intense People, and Natural Web Exploration
Links for the day
Links 06/05/2026: Narges Mohammadi in Critical Condition and Copyright Infringement Rampant in Reddit
Links for the day
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, May 05, 2026
IRC logs for Tuesday, May 05, 2026