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11.14.09

Links 14/11/2009: Linux 2.6.32 at Seventh RC, Fedora 12 Release Imminent

Posted in News Roundup at 5:58 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME bluefish

Contents

GNU/Linux

  • Smart Power Monitoring with Network UPS Tools

    An uninterruptible power supply (UPS) is a must-have in server environments, and for many desktop users as well. But although simply connecting your PC or server to a UPS will protect you from intermittent power outages and give you the chance to shut the system down at the keyboard, an unattended power outage could still cause problems. For added protection, you can run a power-monitoring utility that will read status information from the UPS and perform a clean shutdown of the connected machine (or machines), preserving data and stopping processes in the proper state.

  • Google Could Double Web Speeds With SPDY Protocol

    We know that it will be Linux-based and that the primary interface will likely be the Chrome browser.

  • Where Linux stands to make huge gains

    I want to both address an area that can be profoundly affected by Linux/FOSS and give a plug at the same time.

    There is a market area that can accommodate for the most part, three groups. Small business, Schools and non-profit organizations. Small business counts for up to 70% of all businesses in the U.S.

  • Did the Economic Meltdown set the perfect launch time for LINUX desktops?

    Though the challenges which where were earlier faced by the LINUX desktops remain largely unsolved , buisness adoption of linux desktops is on rise. May be it is not because of their commitment to the OPEN SOURCE world but more possibly motivated by the low cost budget.

  • Visuals

  • Desktop

    • One hour with the XO laptop in a Nepali school

      On Nov. 5th, 2009, during the first OLE Assembly in Kathmandu, I visited a class that uses the XO laptop in the Binayak Bal School of Badal Gaun, Nepal (several pictures available at the bottom of this page).

    • Desktop Linux + Idea Net Setter Wireless Internet = A Good Idea

      Idea Cellular provides the lowest tariff for mobile internet access through its Net Setter devices. And it promises of plug-n-play zero-cd installation of the devices.

    • Boot Windows XP in 20 secs !.

      So if you are a dual booting Linux enthusiast I can recommend giving Virtualbox a try. You never know, you may decide to give up that Windows partition after all and leave more room for your favorite Linux OS and your data.

  • Google

  • Server

  • Kernel Space

    • HookSafe Protects Kernel from Rootkits

      A research group in the computer sciences faculty at North Carolina State University has written a prototype to prevent rootkits from manipulating kernel object hooks to do their damage.

    • Kernel Log: Coming in 2.6.32 (Part 2) – Graphics

      Earlier this month, Linus Torvalds released 2.6.32-rc6 – due to the Kernel Summit, RC6 was not released the usual week after RC5, but two weeks after. As usual at this point in the development cycle, mostly minor patches have been merged over the past few days to avoid making changes that might introduce new bugs in the three to six weeks that remain until the final release of Linux 2.6.32.

    • Linux 2.6.32-rc7 Kernel Released

      While there is already work building up for the Linux 2.6.33 kernel like the just talked about KMS page-flipping ioctl, we are still in the middle of the Linux 2.6.32 development cycle. Linus Torvalds has just issued the 2.6.32-rc7 release after it was delayed by another serious — but now fixed — regression (this time in the resume support).

    • NVIDIA Legacy Driver Updates For X Server 1.7

      While many of the distributions arriving this autumn and winter are shipping with an X Server 1.6 build rather than the new X Server 1.7, if you are using Fedora 12 or another distribution shipping with the latest X.Org 7.5 packages, there is good news if you are a customer of NVIDIA’s older graphics hardware.

    • A Virtual Gallium3D Driver Coming For VMware

      It was almost one year ago that VMware acquired Tungsten Graphics, but now their motives behind that acquisition are becoming more clear. Being hosted at VMware’s headquarters today in Palo Alto, California was a Gallium3D Workshop, where various open-source Mesa developers are currently at and others connecting remotely.

    • The State Of Gallium3D, Its Future, Etc
  • Applications

    • The Wine development release 1.1.33 is now available.

      What’s new in this release (see below for details):
      – Gecko now installed at wineprefix creation time.
      – Better support for certificates in crypt32.
      – Improved sound support in mciwave.
      – Some more Direct3D 10 functions.
      – Many cleanups for issues spotted by Valgrind.
      – Various bug fixes.

    • MPlayer Now Supports Most HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Codecs

      This news is coming a few days late (MPlayer’s web-site lacks any RSS or syndication support), but the latest MPlayer code in their SVN trunk now supports most HD-DVD and Blu-ray codecs. Earlier this year we talked about possible Blu-ray support for FFmpeg and developers becoming more interested after we interviewed the FFmpeg developers and there ended up being an outpouring of support by our readers offering up Blu-ray drives and other forms of help.

    • FFmpeg Gains VDPAU MPEG-4 ASP Acceleration

      What we were in the process of writing about when we discovered MPlayer’s support for most Blu-ray and HD-DVD codecs was that there is now support for MPEG-4 ASP decoding with VDPAU (NVIDIA’s Video Decode and Presentation API for Unix) in the mainline FFmpeg tree.

    • Tweet from the command line with Twidge

      For the longest time I refused to see the value in Twitter. Over the last six months I have changed my tune on that. Now I use Twitter primarily as a PR tool for my articles. And since my renewed belief in micro-blogging, I have found plenty of tools with which to enact with Twitter.

    • Software ahead of the curve: Gwibber 2.0

      Gwibber is an open source microblogging client for GNOME that supports Twitter, Jaiku, Facebook, Pownce, Identi.ca and other popular social web services.

    • The best Linux collection managers compared

      At first glance, Tellico seemed like the obvious winner of the bunch. It’s got built-in templates, it’s configurable and provides good documentation. The design is elegant, if not pretty, but it’s been superseded by a superior program, one that’s pushed the heights of what a collection manager can be.

    • Commercial Editor UltraEdit Now Also for Linux

      The multi talented UltraEdit is now available as UEX in a commercial version for Linux. The editor is extremely popular, especially in the world of Windows.

  • Games

    • How to Play Classic Console Games in Linux

      If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you grew up with classic video game consoles like the NES and Sega Genesis. For years Windows users have been enjoying high quality game emulation software, but many of the Linux options have been buggy or incomplete. It’s time to take a look at where things stand when it comes to playing console games in Linux. Here at MakeTechEasier, we’ve touched on console game emulation here and there, but never done a guide covering multiple systems. Today, we’ll show you how to run games for NES, SNES, Genesis, original Playstation, and Dreamcast.

    • FreeOrion Is A Science Fiction Strategy Game For Windows, Linux And Mac OSX (Free, Open Source)
    • Interactive Ideas boosts gaming offering

      There’s something to be said for having a diverse product portfolio. As we heard earlier in the year, North London distributor Interactive Ideas has been doing very nicely on the back of its strong Linux for enterprise offering. But at this time of year, its peripherals business comes to the fore.

    • Icculus on Aquaria

      Ryan “icculus” Gordon updated his .plan file this week with an update on the Aquaria port:

      This is almost done, but I’m crunching on something very important. Hopefully I’ll start passing some Linux builds to Bit-Blot for testing in ~2 weeks when this other project is off my shoulders.

  • KDE

    • Thank you!

      I just wanted to post a quick thank you to everybody who congratulated me on the German Medal of Merit, I truly appreciated it.

      To get the facts straight: the Medal of Merit is the lowest class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, unofficially but commonly described as Federal Cross of Merit. The medal does indeed feature a big cross, so the familiar name fits well. In order to get the next class – the Cross of Merit – you will typically have to be at least 40 years old, so this is a good as it gets and it does feel very satisfying indeed.

    • Flicking around

      For KDE 4.4, we’re giving a bit of touchscreen friendliness around Plasma, a thing common on touchscreen based uis is the so called flick lists and scroll views. They can be web browsers, simle item views, image explorers and so on.

    • Windows 7 sure looks a lot like KDE 4…

      At work we have a new machine with Windows 7 on it. While setting it up for a new employee, it was my first chance to play with Windows 7. My impression is that its pretty much the same Windows as always, with a shiney new graphical interface. If you liked Windows before, its not all that different. In some places (Control Panel), options are gone for setting up new users and the like; but in many other places just below the surface, its all the same as before, such as adding a new printer.

    • Kopete – The KDE Messenger for Linux

      If you are using KDE and not Gnome, Kopete is the better choice than Pidgin. It uses less memory under the KDE desktop environment. If you want a native KDE app that can handle multiple messenger connections, this is a great program. My only problem with this program is that it currently don’t support microphone and audio/video conferences.

    • The KDE adventure continues
  • Distributions

    • What about the unknown Linux distros?

      Check out the waiting list below, you never know, you may find a hidden little gem of a distro that hasn’t got the backing of the likes of Canonical or Novell, so remains unknown. (Take into account that the list goes back to 2004 and some projects have been discontinued)

    • Red Hat Family

      • Fedora 12 Linux Tackles Virtualization

        Virtualization has been a big push this year for Linux vendor Red Hat (NYSE: RHT). It’s also a big area of focus for the Red Hat-sponsored Fedora Linux 12 release, which is due out next week.

        The Fedora Linux distribution has been including virtualization technologies beginning with the Fedora Core 5 release in 2006 and has been steadily adding new virtualization features ever since. In Fedora 12, the open source Linux community project is adding new technology to improve virtualization memory management and performance.

      • Getting Ready for F12: Media Sleeves and Labels

        Fedora 12 is not out yet, no. However, thanks in a big part to Luya being on the ball and getting started on the media artwork, and with his help, we have put together a full set of Fedora 12 media artwork. So now you can have a head start at getting your media all prepared and ready to burn next Tuesday!

      • Fedora 12 One-Page Release Notes PDF

        We’ve [1] been working on a set of one-page release notes for Fedora 12, and now that those are set I took some time today to put them into a single PDF file. However, there are 3 pages…! So, for your event, you might like to print out two sets of release notes: Page 1 + Page 2 for desktop users, and Page 1 + Page 3 for system administrators and developers.

      • Heard it through the grapevine

        I’ve heard that when the RedHat developers present new open-source packages to their local Linux User-Group, before the meeting is over one of the Foresight people will have downloaded the source, created a Foresight package, uploaded it to the repository for folks to get, and it will be available for anyone to use.

    • Mandriva

      • Mandriva and Me….perfect match

        The good thing about Mandriva is that it’s a distro for both the newbies and the Geeks. I will be using it from now and will surely post my experiences here. I hope that it continues to impress me. Watch out.

      • Mandriva 2010 Spring development has begun

        One week ago, Mandriva Cooker, which will lead to version 2010 Spring in about 6 months was opened again. In 8 days, this has resulted in almost 1100 package updates.

      • Ubuntu 9.10 Live CD and Mandriva One 2010: Reviewed and Compared

        The Edge: Mandriva One obviously packs more useful software than Ubuntu, but why the absence of games? Any application not part of the default installation is likely available in the repositories. In terms of default installed applications, I’m yet to review a distro that tops Sabayon.

    • Debian Family

      • Kubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala is really nice

        Kubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala is very, very nice. It’s a pleasant surprise. And it’s better than Ubuntu.

      • New Ubuntu OS Features Create Good Karma

        Still, no operating system is ever flawless. This latest Ubuntu release fixes some lingering problems and builds in several useful enhancements. Its eye candy is tasty. Its performance is like a sugar rush!

        Ubuntu users with netbooks received a double benefit with the final release from Canonical. The Remix version not only contains the Karmic code upgrade, but it also has a revamped interface that better displays applications on 8-inch to 10-inch LCD screens.

      • The yin and yang of Ubuntu 9.10
    • Mint

      • Linux Mint 8 “Helena” RC1 released

        The Linux Mint team announced the release of Linux Mint 8 Helena RC1. The 8th release of Linux Mint comes with numerous bug fixes and a lot of improvements.

      • Linux Mint 8 RC1 released
      • ‘Simple computer’ introduced to help elderly

        Former Blue Peter presenter Valerie Singleton has launched a new ‘simple’ computer designed for the elderly.

      • New SimplicITy PC Encourages Elderly to get Online

        A new computer has debuted in the UK called SimplicITy that is aimed directly at the elderly. The computer forgoes the complexities of the full windows operating system and uses Linux. Rather than offering users direct access to the normal Linux start up screen the machine goes directly to a screen called “square one.”

      • Breakfast briefing: a closer look at Eldy, retweet or not, iPhones and HP+3Com=?

        Firstly: yes, the computers run Linux Mint and Eldy, but it is *not* the version of Eldy that is available for download from Vegan Solutions in Vicenza. We have been working with Enrico Neri and his team at Vegan Soln’s for about six months now, building a special custom version of Eldy for our customers.

        Eldy has some 180,000 users already in Italy, and it is an Italian product. They have produced versions for international users, but it must be admitted, their English translations do leave something to be desired in places. We are working on that with them, but our first priority was to get our own product on the market.

  • Devices/Embedded

    • Top 5 iPod Alternatives for Linux Users

      The selected MP3 players on the list not only support Linux natively, without the use of any extra programs, but in many cases also offer better sound quality, better battery life, and better file format support then an iPod.

    • Hands-On: Chumby Classic vs Chumby One

      The newly released Chumby One arrived in the mail today, and we couldn’t wait to see how it compared to the original digital connected companion device. The Chumby, in case you haven’t heard of it, is a multi-function gadget that can serve as an alarm clock, RSS reader, gaming device, or music player. It connects to the internet with Wi-Fi, and runs user-created widgets to do cool things like read your Gmail or send you Twitter updates. You interact with it through a 3.5 inch resistive touchscreen, but it also has an accelerometer inside, since it’s made to be held and encourages user interaction.

    • ARM9, Cortex-A8 modules support Linux

      Avalue announced two Linux-compatible, ARM-architecture computer-on-module (COMs). The RSC-W910 is based on a Nuvoton W90P910 ARM9 CPU, and the RSM-MX515 SoM is based on a Freescale Cortex-A8-based i.MX515 system-on-chip (SoC), says the company.

    • Dell

      • Dell PCs cram multimedia power into tiny package

        Dell announced a miniature PC using single- or dual-core AMD processors that is available with Ubuntu Linux. Starting at approximately $230, the Inspiron Zino HD sports up to 8GB of RAM and a 1TB hard disk drive, comes in ten different colors, and is available with discrete graphics, the company says.

      • Dell gets into smartphones

        The box maker has inked deals with China Mobile and Claro to bring its Android based Dell Mini 3 Smart Phone to market.

      • Dell confirms Android-based Mini 3i smartphone

        Dell’s Mini 3i Android-based smartphone. Vergrößern Following previous reports that Dell’s Mini 3i smartphone was merely a proof of concept, the computer giant has now confirmed that it’s planning on releasing the device. Dell says that it’s Android-based phone will feature a 3.5 inch capacitive touch screen display and that it will be launching this year in Brazil and China. Additional specifications have yet to be released, but, according to reports, the mobile will be available in 2G and 3G models.

      • Dell confirms first Android-based smartphone

        Dell has, so far, only said that its smartphone will be launched into China this month through carrier China Mobile. Brazil will be second on the list in December, Dell added.

      • Dell to sell smartphone, starting in China, Brazil
    • Phones

      • Why Sony Ericsson is embracing Android

        Our commitment to the Open Handset Alliance stems from a vision of the Google Android OS as an environment that enables developers to create rich user experiences with some of latest technologies available on the Internet. The Xperia X10 is the first of a family of products, some of which will use this technology.

      • Verizon Won’t Offer Free Tethering But Droid Hackers Might (Updated)

        Similar to the jailbreak community hacking the iPhone, there’s a group of Android developers determined to grant any Google-powered phone free access to every feature imaginable. And they’re able to accomplish this task more legitimately than underground iPhone hackers, since Android’s source code is completely open to developers.

      • Windows Mobile loses nearly a third of market share

        The open-source Android operating system did not have any market share in Q3 2008, as it had only recently been introduced. In Q3 2009, however, it had a market share of 3.9 percent of the smartphone market. Palm’s WebOS had 1.1 percent, and other Linux-based mobile operating systems had 4.7 percent.

      • Palm shares rising on Nokia bid rumor

        It’s also developing a new Linux-based operating system called Maemo that could vault it into the smart phone market in the U.S.

      • Nokia Rumored To Buy Palm Triggers Stock Surge
      • 15 Ways Nokia’s N900 Is Better Than Apple’s iPhone (and 5 ways it’s not)

        For almost 3 years, Apple’s iPhone has set the standard for mainstream smart phones. Recently, Apple has taken over a large portion of the smart phone market, now manufacturers like Nokia are taking the iPhone threat seriously and bringing out new phones to try to compete. One phone that looks like it has a real chance to compete with the iPhone is Nokia’s new N900 phone/internet tablet. Here are 15 ways we think that the N900 is better than the iPhone, and a few reasons why the iPhone is still better.

    • Sub-notebooks

      • ARM netbook sells for $80
      • Qualcomm Smartbook Powered by Snapdragon

        Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs showed off first Snapdragon chips powered Smartbook at an analyst meet held in New York. This Smartbook, a mini-laptop, will be Lenovo branded and will arrive in U.S. though AT&T. Lenovo Smartbook will have HD capable display and a longer battery life.

      • Netbook OS news roundup: Chrome, OpenSUSE, Mandriva, Jolicloud

        The folks at JoliCloud are hard at work developing an operating system designed specifically for netbooks. It’s designed to integrate closely with web-based applications like Gmail and Google Docs as well as social software such as Twitter and Facebook. The OS is based on Linux, and this week the Jolicloud team updated its netbook compatibility list to include a number of additional models including the Acer Aspire One D150, the LG X110 and X120, Samsung NC10, Toshiba NB200, Lenovo IdeaPad S10-2, and HP Mini 110 and Mini 5101. For a complete list, visit the Jolicloud netbook compatibility page.

      • Qualcomm unveils Lenovo smartbook, new Scorpion chipset

        At Qualcomm’s annual analyst meeting today, the company demonstrated a Linux- and Qualcomm Snapdragon-based “smartbook” from Lenovo, say reports. Qualcomm also announced a new 1GHz MSM7x30 smartphone chipset family which incorporates the same superscalar Scorpion CPU technology as the Snapdragon, and is capable of 720p video at 30fps, says Qualcomm.

      • Lenovo returns to the Linux desktop

        Lenovo might not describe their return to the Linux desktop like that, but that’s what they’re doing. Yesterday, November 12th, Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs gave the world a sneak peak at the Lenovo ARM Snapdragon-powered smartbook, a cross between a smartphone and a netbook. Jacobs added that Lenovo Linux-based smartbook would make its debut at January’s CES (Computer Electronics Show).

Free Software/Open Source

  • Promoting FOSS with Analogies: Ford vs BK

    Now Open Source is entirely the opposite way. It very truly follows the BK mentality of “Have it your way.” You can share it, customize it, tweak, hack, and crack it, you can look at the source code (aka accountability) and so much more. The only restrictions that a FOSS project might have are either technical (some technical limitation prevents you from doing something you want to) or legal (IE, the law prevents you from doing certain things). Otherwise, you’re free to do whatever, however, whenever, etc, etc, you want.

    Now when using this analogy, most people won’t understand the technical or legal limitations that may exist naturally in the software (IE, the language it’s written in may not support doing what you want, or what you’re asking for is nearly impossible to code) unless they’re complete tech heads. So I recommend keeping the comparisons to the bare minimum. Find something they like to do, or want to do, and use that as your base when using this analogy in the promotion of FOSS.

  • Nicaragua Builds An Innovative Agricultural Information System Using Open Source Software

    An experiment in Nicaragua shows just how powerful Open Source software can be in leveling the playing field. The second poorest country of the Americas now has one of the best software solutions for displaying agricultural data in the western hemisphere.

  • Open-source software summit opens in City

    A leading Free and Open Source Software event, the GNOME Asia Summit, will be held in HCM City’s Quang Trung Software Park from November 20-22.

    More than 700 participants from 10 countries, including China, Cambodia, India, Singapore, Australia, Germany, France, the UK and the US, will take part.

  • Great Documentation Is Key to Open Source Success

    Listen up open source developers, if you want your project to succeed you’re going to have to do more than write great code; you’re going to have to document it, teach new users how it works and provide real-world examples of what you can do with it.

  • MySQL/Sun

    • Communities Vs. Teams: Open Source Needs Both

      Some of this thinking arose from talk about some of the gloomier prospects for MySQL, speculation which goes as far back as Sun’s purchase of the company. What good is the software without the team of people who built it? It’s difficult to replace the synergy you get from such people (and I hate that word, but it’s really the only one that fits) with folks who have been largely on the outside looking in.

    • The MySQL question – free or free-market?

      Is MySQL free in a free-market? With the European Commission’s ongoing investigation, a debate over what makes free software free has emerged, ironically, centred on how money is made from free software.

    • The High-Exposure Company

      A few years ago Sun Microsystems paid $1 billion for open-source database maker MySQL. At the time, Chief Executive Jonathan Schwartz justified spending that kind of money on the profitless venture for the exposure it would give him to millions of potential customers and software developers around the world. They were the kind of people Sun needed to reach in order to sell Sun’s computer servers, he said, and the authenticity Sun gained from being so heavily in open source was important in winning their loyalty. “We are all media companies now,” he said.

  • Mozilla

    • Mozilla Launches Contest For Mobile Add-Ons

      Mozilla, creators of the web browser Firefox and the Thunderbird, have recently announced a new contest for application developers. As some of you may already know, Mozilla Firefox is a free open source software that made its name and reputation for being one of the most stable and easily customized browsers available.

      [...]

      A new contest by Mozilla will have developers’ skills in creating add-ons for mobile put to the test. All submitted Mozilla Firefox add-on for mobile will be eligible for the contest as long as it is submitted before December 7, 2009. At stake are 10 Nokia N900 mobile phones, one will be given to each of the developers of the “top ten mobile add-ons that best represent user experience and innovation”.

    • 10 Firefox extensions that enhance security

      If you install only one extension, make sure it’s NoScript. By default, it blocks all scripts — a good thing. That’s because bad guys love to use scripts to install malware. This way, you decide whether JavaScript, Java, and other content are allowed to run.

    • Mozilla Jetpack Gets an Update

      Mozilla Labs is continuing in its quest to make it as easy to extend the browser as it is to write a Web page. The latest update to Jetpack came out this week, and brought a few new APIs and a gallery of community contributed Jetpacks. There’s been quite a bit of progress, but Jetpack isn’t quite there just yet.

  • Fog Computing

    • Open-source tools could make it easier to build a hybrid cloud

      Of the two packages, Eucalyptus is farther along in terms of development: NASA uses Eucalyptus for its Nebula cloud. The Energy Department’s Argonne National Laboratory is also exploring Eucalyptus, for scientific research. Deltacloud is still in development, though agencies could participate and help define it features.

    • Cloud is Just Another Word for “Sucker”

      The cloud, software as a service, hosted applications, whatever you want to call it is coming. The concepts are useful, but I have little faith in the implementations.

      A Practical Alternative

      As always in Linux-land, there is a role for the do-it-yourselfer to turn dung into gold. Come back next week and I will tell about this.

  • Audiocasts

    • Linux Outlaws 121 – See Popey for Details

      This week on the show: KDE founder gets German medal of honour, Harald Welte says Android is crap, Open Office releases the worst computer mouse in history, Dan reviews Mandriva 2010 and much more…

    • [Meet the GIMP] Episode 126: Quick Karmic Frames

      A short one this time – I upgraded to Karmic Koala and did a clean install with new partitions and EXT4 file system. And now I am getting the important stuff back on the disk and leave the cruft out. This meant that a lot of the files needed for a proper podcast are still on the external disks.

    • FLOSS Weekly 95: The Open Rights Group

      The Open Rights Group, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights of people in the digital age.

    • CAOS Theory Podcast 2009.11.13

      Topics for this podcast:

      *Cavium-MontaVista continues embedded Linux consolidation
      *Day Software’s unique open source story
      *DataSync and an update on open source for SMBs
      *Our Cost Conscious survey and coming report

  • CMS

    • Eric Clapton using Drupal

      The legendary singer, guitarist, songwriter and composer Eric Clapton is using Drupal for his website http://www.ericclapton.com.

    • Drupal Wins First Inaugural Packt Hall of Fame Award

      This week Packt (news, site) is announcing one new award winner a day. Already they’ve revealed that:

      * Plone (news, site) won 2009 Best Other Open Source CMS
      * Drupal (news, site) won Best Open Source PHP CMS
      * ImpressCMS (news, site) won 2009 Most Promising Open Source CMS

    • WordPress Wins Packt Overall Best Open Source CMS

      The WordPress project receives US$ 4,000 in prize money, while MODx and SilverStripe each receive US$ 2,500. In addition to the money, WordPress also becomes eligible for the Hall of Fame category next year.

  • Programming

    • Python 3 moratorium now official

      The Python 3 language syntax has been frozen until June 2011 under a moratorium imposed by Guido Van Rossum, Python’s creator and BDFL (Benevolent Dictator For Life). The moratorium, proposed at the end of October, is now defined in PEP3003 and sets out what is not to change in future Python 3 versions.

    • Learning Python, fourth edition

      It has been a long time since I did any programming. My life took a different path. This book has reminded me of how fun it is to write and read code in Python and made me wonder how I might find or create opportunities to return programming to my busy life (but this time around, if I make the time to write anything, it will be in Python 3.x). This book is why.

    • Perl.org refresh goes live

      Following six weeks of development, the Perl.org web site, home of the Perl programming language, has now been redesigned and relaunched. According to a journal post by Senior Perl developer Leo Lapworth, the complete redesign and content review is aimed at providing a cleaner and easier to use page for visitors to better find the information they are after.

  • Standards/Consortia

    • BSkyB, Virgin Media Agree ‘No Need For Project Canvas’

      Keen to keep growing their marketing share in the ruthless pay TV market against an open source IPTV standard, both companies could do without a partnership of the BBC, Five, ITV (LSE: ITV) and BT (NYSE: BT) marketing an affordable set-top-box against their premium options.

Leftovers

  • Google gives Voice to ‘open standard Skype

    Google has acquired VoIP startup Gizmo5, intending to roll the company’s engineers into the team that develops the telephony application/controversy magnet known as Google Voice.

  • Finance

  • Internet/Censorship/Web Abuse/Rights

    • Consent will be required for cookies in Europe

      A law that demands consent to internet cookies has been approved and will be in force across the EU within 18 months. It is so breathtakingly stupid that the normally law-abiding business may be tempted to bend the rules to breaking point.

    • Fox News Declares Cyberwar on Liberal Blogosphere

      How do you annoy the maximum number of Liberal blogs with minimal effort? If you’re Fox News, all you have to do is shut down the YouTube channel that supplies them with infuriating O’Reilly Factor clips. They did this today!

      Spend even a few minutes on a politically-inclined blog that leans to the left, and you’ll spot the little red-and-white “News1News” logo (above) attached to the upper-left corner a YouTube clip, usually of Glenn Beck ranting hilariously or otherwise being horrible. News1News specializes in capturing and uploading Fox bloviator’s most outrageous statements for all of eternity. And each day, we bloggers—from the Huffington Post, Mediaite, Truthdig, Gawker, etc.—plucked newsworthy clips from News1News’ Youtube channel, surrounded them with our words, and put them on our sites. (In fact, Mediaite’s feature “Your Moment of Glenn” is all News1News clips.) From all this blog love, News1News videos had more than 20 million cumulative views by the time it was shut down. It was the simple, convenient way to stoke Liberal ire!

  • Intellectual Monopolies/Copyrights

    • Newspaper Industry Lawyers Attack Fair Use, Claim Google Is Illegal

      Hmm. So, on Monday Rupert Murdoch suggests that the courts would reject fair use as a concept, and by Friday two newspaper industry lawyers just happen to have an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal explaining how Google violates copyright law by caching the websites it indexes.

    • Shorter copyrights stimulate artistic creation

      As I have expressed before on this blog, I am no big fan of patents and copyrights, and monopoly power in general. I am particularly annoyed, on a personal level, by copyrights on music that have been menacing Internet radio for a while now. I have always believed that the fact that artists have a free medium that allows them to be discovered is much better for them than being fed on commercial radio what the big labels deem good for the general public.

    • A short telephone jingle leads to a lawsuit tangle

      What started out as a sweet little ditty to promote tourism in Lake County, Ind., has turned into a long, bitter copyright battle – one that has piled up thousands of dollars in lawyers’ fees and inundated the courts, leaving one frazzled federal judge to quote rapper DMX: “Y’all gonna make me lose my mind. … Y’all gonna make me lose my cool!”

    • Verizon tests sending RIAA copyright notices

      Customers of Verizon Communications who pirate music files may soon receive an unwelcome letter from the company.

    • Police can keep seized property pending private prosecution

      The police could retain property they seized after the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to prosecute but a private prosecution was being contemplated or taking place.

      The Court of Appeal so stated when allowing the appeal of the defendants, the Chief Constable of Northumbria and the Federation against Copyright Theft, from a decision on a preliminary issue made by Mrs Justice Sharp ([2009] 2 Cr App R 365) at the commencement of civil proceedings in which the claimants, Scopelight Ltd, its directors, Anton Benjamin Vickerman and Kelly-Ann Vickerman, owners of a website called SurfTheChannel.com, sought to recover property including computers, servers, memory sticks and mobile phones, seized by the police pursuant to a warrant in the investigation of contemplated criminal proceedings.

    • Music fee hike backfires

      A PUSH by Australian record companies to make clubs, hotels, restaurants and cafes pay tens of millions of dollars more in fees to play their music has backfired.

    • UK Dev Survey: Piracy a Problem, But Not a Threat

      The developers were also asked if Digital Rights Management (DRM) was “an irrelevance, a solution or a problem.” 50% responded that DRM is “an irrelevance,” 30% called it “the solution” and 20% labeled it “the problem.”

    • Don’t jail illegal music sharers – UN agency

      The heavy punishment of illegal file sharers on the web will be counter-productive in the global fight against Internet piracy and copyright infringement, the director-general of a United Nations agency said on Thursday.

      Francis Gurry of the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) said music copyright protection was “under the most severe stress” and the problem will likely spread to films as web connections speed up.

      The music industry has been hit by rampant Internet piracy and has so far struggled to persuade consumers to pay for downloaded music.

      Some 40 billion music files were illegally shared on the web in 2008, a piracy rate of 95 percent, WIPO cites industry estimates as showing.

OSS Speaker Series: The State of the Linux Kernel

Direct link

Novell News Summary – Part III: Pulse Again, SCO’s Jeff Hunsaker is Out, GroupWise Items

Posted in Mail, NetWare, Novell, OpenSUSE, SCO, Servers at 11:52 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Zion National Park

Summary: A bundle of news about Novell Pulse, SCO-Novell news, and various other items

With OpenSUSE being the main item this week, not much else could be said about Novell. We wrote about Pulse last week and it is still the most unique item of Novell news.

Read the rest of this entry »

Novell News Summary – Part II: SUSE Case Studies, Xandros and Bada

Posted in GNU/Linux, Samsung, Scalix, Servers, SLES/SLED, Xandros at 10:23 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Big lizard

Summary: News about SUSE, about Xandros and about Samsung, all of which pay Microsoft for Linux

THIS week was all about OpenSUSE and there was little to see elsewhere at Novell. Nonetheless, it turns out that Paul Cutler from GNOME received some financial help from Novell.

Thanks to Novell and Google’s sponsorship, nine of us are converging in Google’s Chicago office for two days.

SUSE Studio was mentioned again by Tux Radar, which generally likes (and has always liked, even under the “Linux Format” banner) the OpenSUSE/SuSE distribution.

Novell recently launched SUSE Studio, a service that enables you to create OpenSUSE respins from any browser. At the time we went to press this service was so exclusive it was strictly invite-only, though you could request an invitation via www.susestudio.com.

Ross Chevalier wrote about the SUSE-based OES 2 and more use of SLES can be seen in this new article.

Boardsports, be it snow, skate, or surf, is a multi-million dollar industry, populated with large manufacturers and cottage shops, all trying to get a piece of these sports’ action. With such competition in place, particularly when the current economic climate is discouraging discretionary spending on boarding equipment, it’s no small feat to reduce part of an IT budget by 80 percent.

That’s exactly what happened when The Burton Corporation shifted its SAP-related infrastructure from HP-UX on proprietary big iron to SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) on commodity boxes last year.

The Indian press — and one publication in particular — did something interesting. It is suspicious that they just publish three Novell case studies out of the blue (without any for other companies to be covered), namely:

i. Clustering on SUSE Linux

HRI employs SUSE Linux Enterprise Server to power its supercomputing clusters, enabling globally recognized research projects in cosmology, high-energy physics and condensed matter physics, writes Nivedan Prakash

ii. Managing data center migration

Gupta added that PlateSpin Migrate enabled them to take snapshots of their systems and move them across a 155 Mbps line to new hardware in the new facility, “We moved each server during weekends on a four-week cycle, preparing the target platform and then using PlateSpin Migrate to migrate the data. The whole migration was completed within six months, with no significant disruption to users.”

iii. Moving towards an improved desktop environment

The migration from Microsoft Windows to SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop at ING Life, India has generated considerable cost savings for the company. The company has also gained a faster and more stable working environment.

It’s like 3 Novell adverts that are labeled “casestudy”. Here is another new case of Novell:

The demand for such tools has attracted the attention of a variety of vendors, including BeyondTrust, which last month unveiled what it termed the first first privileged account management product for heterogeneous IT environments, along with CA, Quest Software and Novell.

Xandros

Xandros, which consumed Linspire and Scalix, is generally very quiet these days, but some press releases are still floating about without getting attention from reporters. Corel is said to be close to being bought.

[Xandros] BridgeWays Partner Inframon Brings Cross – Platform System Center Services to the United Kingdom

ASUS and Xandros appear in conjunction again:

If the machine does have an ARM processor, it also won’t be able to run Windows XP or Windows 7, although it’s not clear if it will run Google Android, Google Chrome or a Linux distribution such as Xandros, Ubuntu, or Moblin.

Samsung

Another Microsoft-encumbered distribution which we wrote about this week would be Bada, and it’s still appearing in some places.

Samsung’s first Bada-powered device has been leaked in photo form – it would appear to be a style-conscious touchscreen device

[...]

Following on from the widespread adoption of the Android operating system, several smartphone players are branching out into alternate, open source interfaces, as we saw with the Vodafone 360 H1 – a phone also made by Samsung.

Samsung pays Microsoft for Linux. All too troublesome to be accepted.

Novell News Summary – Part I: OpenSUSE 11.2 Release

Posted in GNU/Linux, Novell, OpenSUSE at 9:47 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Iguana

Summary: An assemblage of a lot of coverage about OpenSUSE 11.2, which was released on Thursday

THIS WEEK is the big week OpenSUSE has been waiting for. The major new release is finally out there.

Just before the release we saw the GM preparations from developers and also some promotional material. OpenSUSE has an official “boosting” team now.

openSUSE 11.2 DVDs

As I already mentioned before, we were giving out openSUSE 11.2 promo DVDs to the people attending conference. GoldMaster was created at Friday and we were burning DVDs during night and during conference and printing out covers to have something really fresh to give to the people. And we weren’t burning new DVDs fast enough as people were really interested. We came with 30 pre-burnt DVDs and they were out in no time and the rest had to wait till we burn some more. In the end 50 people was lucky enough and received shiny new openSUSE 11.2 directly from the oven.

Parties have taken place following the announcement of the release, including one in Nürnberg. Andreas Jaeger shares some photos.

Many release announcements have appeared, including:

Here is the official page and evidence of optimism. A Malaysian news site covered it in advance.

Furthermore, you can use it to install openSUSE as well as it contains all the basic installation files and programs to get you started.

Ryan Paul did a short review.

Novell’s community-driven openSUSE distribution got a major update today with the release of version 11.2. The shiny new version brings the latest apps and a new look.

Jason Brooks’ review and accompanying screenshots suggest that it’s a good release. He adds:

Linux distributions are all about combining clusters of open-source components into well-integrated and easy-to-manage operating systems. OpenSUSE, one of the oldest and most popular Linux distributions, is packed with just this sort of integration, including worthwhile enhancements around pulling in community-packaged applications and extending the reach of the system’s well-loved suite of administration tools.

KDE4 is the default desktop environment, but here is a look at the GNOME part of OpenSUSE 11.2 (traditionally, SUSE has been very pro-choice and over-encompassing, with just a little bias towards KDE, to which it is back now, unlike SLED).

Gilouche has been the openSUSE theme for a while now and 11.2 introduces a new default, Sonar. Sonar is a metatheme consisting of window manager decorations and a widget theme. Unfortunately a key element didn’t make it in time — the icon theme. By default you still get the familiar Gilouche folders. You can, however, install the Sonar icon theme from Factory. It’s also the first time we’re using the openSUSE font, 5th Leg, for window titles. 5th Leg is the result of openSUSE’s Hackweek and have to express my gratitude to Novell for this event yet again.

This release turns out to have its GTK theme shared very openly. Joe Brockmeier, the community manager of the project, seems to be dipping his toes in the latest GNOME for the sake of a demonstration.

With openSUSE 11.2 right around the corner, let’s take a look at what’s new and interesting in the GNOME desktop for this release. Highlights include a preview of GNOME 3.0, new applets and application updates, and the incredibly attractive Sonar theme new for 11.2.

Brockmeier is actually a bit of a KDE person too and he set up his machine just before the release, later sharing some other material.

Only a few days until the openSUSE 11.2 launch. Spending time today checking media and getting ready to have the openSUSE promo DVDs created. Don’t forget: 11.2 will be released on Thursday!

Advice on setup was posted by Nikesh Jauhari, as usual.

Other notable people from SUSE have upgraded their machines to this latest solid release and then wrote about the experience, which was rarely an ordeal (reviews were overwhelmingly positive).

On Saturday I upgraded my wife’s laptop from openSUSE 11.0 to 11.2 RC. I did it using zypper dup, and there were some problems so here I describe them for the benefit of others who might try the same.

Here are some screenshots and advanced instructions for persistent LiveUSB, which is a nice feature.

The OpenSUSE community still looks for some new leaders (board) and it turns out that there is a bit of interaction between SUSE/Novell and Bugzilla. It’s really more of an upgrade.

The bugtracking tool used by the openSUSE project is the Novell bugzilla and this system will be updated to a new upstream version (version 3.4) together with some changes requested by openSUSE community and Novell employees.

A new, specialised distribution called “Ocean OS” turns out to have been created out of SUSE. A lot of this game has changed since the arrival of SUSE Studio. There is more information here.

Ocean OS is based on OpenSUSE, and users will be able to choose from the KDE or GNOME desktop environment and the OS will support 3D desktop effects using Compiz Fusion or kwin/KDE4. You’ll also be able to run a boatload of open source Linux apps including OpenOffice.org, Firefox, GIMP, and PIDGIN. The OS will support WiFi, 3G, and Bluetooth wireless connections.

Honours are given to OpenSUSE, which is technical but nonetheless cutting-edge, with many packages that continue to arrive via OBS.

There ought to be more links in Weekly News, which has now an accompanying audiocast in German. It’s not the first.

Here at Boycott Novell we recommend against the use of OpenSUSE because it helps Novell. But objectively speaking — from a technical point of view — it seems like a strong release.

IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: November 13th, 2009

Posted in IRC Logs at 3:52 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME Gedit

Read the log

Enter the IRC channel now

To use your own IRC client, join channel #boycottnovell in FreeNode.

11.13.09

Microsoft’s Slog Becomes a Song

Posted in Audio/Video, Microsoft at 5:13 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Microsoft dirty tactics

Summary: Microsoft’s illegal strategy now in audio

A Boycott Novell regular, Marti van Lin, has created the following track whose lyrics are Microsoft evangelism documents, as he describes in his blog. The track is playable below (requires browser support for the <audio> element).

Patents Roundup: OIN Calls for Patent Reform, Microsoft’s ‘Sudo’ Revisited

Posted in GNU/Linux, Law, Microsoft, OIN, Patents at 4:52 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Sudo on Ubuntu

Summary: OIN joins the Bilski debate; some sources claim misinterpretation of new Microsoft patent

DESPITE a questionable strategy, the Open Invention Network (OIN) has been helpful to Free software and its CEO published an article in CNBC just a few days ago, titled “The Case for Market Based Patent Reform”

In the wake of the financial crisis and its attendant repercussions across the global economy, the U.S. Congress stands poised to address the issue of patent reform. Much debated and long anticipated, patent reform legislation is back under consideration with the bill possibly coming up for vote, prior to the end of 2009. Under the stewardship of a set of legislators well sensitized to the salient issues and with the thoughtful counsel of David Kappos, President Obama’s business savvy head of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), the stars are aligning to usher in legislation that promises to offer significant advances in an arena that has been overdue for reform.

[...]

OIN has created a model that can be replicated across many industries. OIN, a defensive patent pool established by IBM, NEC, Novell, Philips, Red Hat, and Sony to keep the Linux Community free of patent-related issues and ensure freedom of action, launched Linux Defenders in December 2008. The program and associated website (www.linuxdefenders.org) enables the contribution of prior art through its portal. For already granted patents, Linux Defenders’ Post Issue Peer to Patent program solicits prior art that can be used to support requests for patent reexam. The third element of the Linux Defenders platform highlights the difference between patents and defensive publications and leads inventors through a process that allows inventions to be codified and made accessible to patent examiners as an effective form of prior art.

[...]

The foregoing dynamics underscore the need for legislative, regulatory and judicial patent reform coupled with market-led patent reform. Absent a joint market, industry and government effort that is comprehensive and seeks to resolve all of the challenges posed by today’s patent system, the result of legislative reform will be suboptimal.

The above was published around the same time that Bilski hearings commenced [1, 2, 3]. Among the latest coverage (from patent opponent Timothy B. Lee it ought to be said), we have this article at Ars Technica:

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the Bilski case on Monday. The wide-ranging discussion included significant discussion about the patentability of software and also touched on the patentability of horse-training and speed-dating methods.

A Groklaw member has just published this introduction to computation theory for lawyers. The need for such a document is explained by Pamela Jones as follows:

If I had to describe the fairly universal geek reaction to the oral argument at the US Supreme Court on Monday in In Re Bilski, I would have to say it’s a worry that some of the participants didn’t seem to understand computers or the tech behind software very well.

A couple of days ago Groklaw claimed that Microsoft had patented sudo but Heise does not agree with Groklaw and neither does The Register, which adds:

Microsoft’s patent comes as the US Supreme Court wrestles with the issue of business methods, such as those included in software, and whether they qualify for patent protection. Critics contend only physical inventions should be eligible, while a large swath of technology companies maintain that software-driven features such as Amazon’s one-click checkout and Priceline’s reverse auctions are fair game.

Here is a summary of posts on the subject and also interpretation from Microsoft boosters. It is being claimed that Microsoft patented the equivalent of PolicyKit, not sudo.

Microsoft, the EPO, and the European Patent Mafia (Sisvel) Join Hands

Posted in Antitrust, Europe, Intellectual Monopoly, Microsoft, Patents at 4:14 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Alison Brimelow

Summary: Familiar bedfellows come together for an event that celebrates intellectual monopoly (Innovation 2009)

SEVERAL months ago we argued that the European Patent Office (EPO) sells out to Microsoft. This relationship is proving problematic for Free software, but Microsoft is a major client (i.e. payer that feeds this whole self-fulfilling, mutually-protecting patent system). Someone has just shown us this event called “Innovation 2009″. President of the EPO, who was harshly criticised before deciding to quit (in 7-8 months from now), is spotted as a speaker in this event (conflict of interests), which is sponsored by the armed & dangerous patent bully, Sisvel [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12].

A corporate viewpoint is to be provided by allegedly former communist [1, 2] Jan Muehlfeit, who is now the European chairman of Microsoft. He is lobbying in Europe [1, 2, 3, 4] and participating in questionable practices that we covered before.

The panel is to be moderated by a patent maximalist, who makes a living out of an excess of patent news (which usually means legal actions). “But the best are the questions,” says our source, which quotes:

• How to describe the relationships between innovation, IP, and wealth creation?
• Is IP really a remedy against crisis? if so, why? and how?
• How to treat the global “4.2 million unprocessed patent applications” problem. What would solutions to this bring to the economy?
• How far is Europe concerned? Are parts of the issue already addressed? What lies ahead?
• Sharing the Backlog, act 1: what are Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) programmes for? What is the expected benefit?
• Trilateral pilot projects: what expectations for their implementation at the beginning of 2010 ?
• Sharing the Backlog, act 2: would the mutual exploitation of search and examination documents, and/or of patent data, be a major step?
• Global harmonization of patent-granting rules and criteria: dream or possible reality?
• Can translation be entirely automated? What are the other tracks in terms of workflow optimization?
• Does the impressive growth in China call for new co-operation agreements, notably between the EPO and the SIPO? Beyond the implication of EPO though the IPR-2 initiative, what could these cover?
• Financing the European Patent Office: what are the related challenges for member states and the industry?

We have also been told about this new interview with Detlef Eckert, who was hired (and thus silenced) by Microsoft*. According to our source, he might be “back at the Commission, looking for revenge.”

It is important to remember what is happening with Microsoft’s Courtois these days [1, 2]. He forms close relationships with the very same people who are supposed to regulate his behaviour and penalise his company.
_____
* As we noted back in September, Microsoft loves hiring the very same people who become a threat to Microsoft because this way “they are removed from the “gene pool” of those who can tell the story and provide satisfactory material to support strong claims.”

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