Jan 12 2009

How Microsoft Beats GNU/Linux In Schools

twitter writes “Ever wonder why schools still use Windows? Boycott Novell has extracted the details from 2002 Microsoft email presented in the Comes vrs Microsoft case and other leaks. What emerges is Microsoft’s desperate battle to ‘never lose to Linux.’ At stake for Microsoft is more than a billion dollars of annual revenue, vital user conditioning and governmental lock in that excludes competition, and software freedom for the rest of us. Education and Government Incentives [EDGI] and “Microsoft Unlimited Potential” are programs that allows vendors to sell Windows at zero cost. Microsoft’s nightmare scenario has already been realized in Indiana and other places. Windows is not really competitive and schools that switch save tens of millions of dollars. Because software is about as expensive as the hardware in these deals, the world could save up to 0 million each year by dumping Microsoft. Now that the cat is out of the bag, it’s hard to see what Microsoft can do other than what they did to Peter Quinn.”

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Jan 12 2009

SCO Group proposes sale of assets to continue litgation

The embattled SCO Group Inc. is proposing to auction off its core products and use proceeds to continue its controversial lawsuits over the alleged violations of its copyrights in Linux open-source software.

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Jan 11 2009

Ubuntu and Its Leader Set Sights on the Mainstream

The notion of a strong Linux-based competitor to Windows and, to a lesser extent, Apple’s Mac OS X has been an enduring dream of advocates of open-source software. They champion the idea that software that can be freely altered by the masses can prove cheaper and better than proprietary code produced by stodgy corporations.

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Jan 11 2009

Chrome On the Way For Mac and Linux

TornCityVenz writes “I’ve seen many complaints in the feedback on Slashdot every time an article on Google’s Chrome browser hits; the calls for true cross platform availability have struck me as a valid complaint. So now it seems Google is answering your calls, promising in this article on CNET a deadline for Mac and Linux support.” I’d really like to not care about the name of the browser I’m using, but the mental cost of switching could be high for someone used to particular Firefox extensions, unless or until they can all be expected to work seamlessly with Chrome.

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Jan 11 2009

SCO Proposes Sale of Assets To Continue Litigation

gzipped_tar sends in this excerpt from the Salt Lake Tribune: “The embattled SCO Group Inc. is proposing to auction off its core products and use proceeds to continue its controversial lawsuits over the alleged violations of its copyrights in Linux open-source software. The Lindon company has filed a new reorganization plan with the federal court in Delaware where it sought bankruptcy protection from creditors after an adverse ruling in the Linux litigation. If approved by a bankruptcy judge, the plan could mean SCO’s server software and mobile products lines are owned by other parties while SCO itself remained largely to pursue the lawsuits under the leadership of CEO Darl McBride. ‘One goal of this approach is to separate the legal defence of its intellectual property from its core product business,’ McBride said in a letter to customers, partners and shareholders. Jeff Hunsaker, president and COO of The SCO Group, said the litigation had been distracting to the company’s efforts to market its products. ‘We believe there’s value in these assets and in order for the business to move forward it’s imperative we separate it from our legal claims and we allow our products business to move forward,’ he said Friday.”

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Jan 11 2009

7 Bittorrent Clients for Linux

It’s a common misconception that Linux doesn’t have applications for day to day computing, nothing can be further from the truth. In fact I would wager that there is an alternative for any app/function out there. For Bittorrent, here’s all you need to know…

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Jan 11 2009

Open Firmware Released For Broadcom Wireless

mcgrof writes “Linux developers have announced the release of a reverse-engineered open source firmware for Broadcom 4306 and 4318 wireless hardware, licensed under the GPLv2. ‘Although the base firmware is not fully 802.11 compliant, e.g., it does not support RTS/CTS procedure or QoS, we believe that someone could be interested in testing it. The firmware does not require the kernel to be modified and it uses the same shared memory layout and global registers usage of the original stuff from broadcom to ease loading by the b43 driver.’ You can go check out and download the firmware at the Italian Universita’ Degli Studi Di Brescia Open FirmWare for WiFi networks project page. This is a good example of clean room reverse engineering design where one group worked on specifications while another worked on the the driver and the firmware. Kudos to the specification writers and bcm43xx development team for their hard work.”

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Jan 10 2009

Latest Chrome a Step Closer to Linux, Mac

Some technologies move fast, while others blaze at lightning speed such as Google’s latest Chrome browser, now at version 2.0.156.1.The latest release includes a major new version of the WebKit rendering engine, security and speed enhancements as well as a new HTTP (define) engine that could herald the introduction of Chrome for Linux and Mac.

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Jan 9 2009

Linux-based HP Mini Mi ships with command line disabled

Linux is hitting the consumer product big time but while doing so, it’s hiding many of its most hobbyist friendly features.

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Jan 9 2009

gOS 3.1

gOS, the Ubuntu-derived Linux desktop that’s focused squarely on Google products and other webapps, has updated with newer versions of its core products, including the Windows-app-running WINE, Firefox 3, and support for newer Google Gadgets.

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