The Real Reason For Microsoft’s TomTom Lawsuit
Glyn Moody writes “We now know that Microsoft’s lawsuit isn’t just against TomTom, but against Linux too: but what exactly is Microsoft hoping to achieve? Samba’s Jeremy Allison has a fascinating theory: ‘What people are missing about this is the either/or choice that Microsoft is giving Tom Tom. It isn’t a case of cross-license and everything is ok. If Tom Tom or any other company cross licenses patents then by section 7 of GPLv2 (for the Linux kernel) they lose the rights to redistribute the kernel *at all*. Make no mistake, this is intended to force Tom Tom to violate the GPL, or change to Microsoft embedded software.’ Maybe embedded Linux is starting to get too popular.”
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Firefox eclipses IE6 in web share, threatens IE7
Firefox 3 has become the first non-Microsoft web browser to overtake Internet Explorer 6 in market share, according to new data from StatCounter. The open source browser climbed to 24 percent of users in February while IE6 dipped to just over 22.6 percent, making Firefox the second most popular browser by individual versions.
Windows 7 Lets You Uninstall IE8
CWmike writes “A just-leaked build of Windows 7 lets users remove Internet Explorer, the first time that Microsoft has offered the option since it integrated the browser with Windows in 1997, two bloggers reported today. The move might have been prompted by recent charges by the European Union that Microsoft has stifled browser competition by bundling IE with its operating system, the bloggers speculated. One solution under consideration by the EU would require Microsoft to disable IE if the user decided to install a different browser, such as Mozilla’s Firefox or Google’s Chrome. Microsoft had no comment when asked to confirm whether Windows 7 will let users dump IE8 or whether the option was in reaction to the EU charges.”
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Microsoft Windows, On a Mainframe
coondoggie writes with an excerpt from Network World: “Software that for the first time lets users run native copies of the Windows operating systems on a mainframe will be introduced Friday by data center automation vendor Mantissa. The company’s z/VOS software is a CMS application that runs on IBM’s z/VM and creates a foundation for Intel-based operating systems. Users only need a desktop appliance running Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Connection (RDC) client, which is the same technology used to attach to Windows running on Terminal Server or Citrix-based servers. Users will be able to connect to their virtual and fully functional Windows environments without any knowledge that the operating system and the applications are executing on the mainframe and not the desktop.”
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Outliers, The Story Of Success
TechForensics writes “Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell, is subtitled “the story of success”. It is a book that purports to explain why some people succeed far more than others. It suggests that a success like Bill Gates is more attributable to external factors than anything within the man. Even his birth date turns out to play a role of profound importance in the success of Bill Gates and Microsoft Corporation.” Look below for the rest of Leon’s review.
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Red Hat Hit With Patent Suit Over JBoss
An anonymous reader writes “A small software company is claiming that Red Hat’s JBoss open source middleware violates one of its patents and is asking a court to stop Red Hat from distributing the product. Software Tree LLC claims that JBoss infringes on its database patent for ‘exchanging data and commands between an object oriented system and a relational system.’ Software Tree’s partners include Microsoft, and that the suit was filed in Eastern Texas, which is known as a plaintiff’s paradise for patent actions.”
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7 Cool Projects From Yahoo Research
The proof is in the pudding, as they say. At Yahoo, the pudding is quite murky at present, what with Jerry Yang out as CEO, a disastrous 2008 in terms of stock price and failing to be taken over by Microsoft. Yet, just in the past few weeks, as Carol Bartz took over as CEO, it’s as though the dark cloud has lifted.