Feb 16 2009

MS and Red Hat team up on patent-free interoperability

For years Microsoft has insisted that open-source vendors acknowledge its patent portfolio has a precursor to interoperability discussions. Today, Microsoft shed that charade and announced an interoperability alliance with Red Hat for virtualization.

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Feb 16 2009

Microsoft and Red Hat Team Up On Virtualization

mjasay writes “For years Microsoft has insisted that open-source vendors acknowledge its patent portfolio as a precursor to interoperability discussions. Today, Microsoft shed that charade and announced an interoperability alliance with Red Hat for virtualization. The nuts-and-bolts of the agreement are somewhat pedantic, providing for Red Hat to validate Windows Server guests to be supported on Red Hat Enterprise virtualization technologies, and other technical support details. But the real crux of the agreement is what isn’t there: patents. Red Hat has long held that open standards and open APIs are the key to interoperability, even as Microsoft insisted patents play a critical role in working together, and got Novell to buy in. Today, Red Hat’s vision seems to have won out with an interoperability deal heavy on technical integration and light on lawyers.”

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Feb 16 2009

How Many Open Source Licenses Do You Need?

jammag writes “Bruce Perens, who wrote the original licensing rules for Open Source software in 1997, notes that there are a sprawling 73 open source licenses currently in existence. But he identifies an essential four — well, actually just two — that developers, companies, and individuals need. In essence, he cuts through the morass and shows developers, in particular, how to protect their work. (And yes, he favors GPL3 over GPL2). For his own coding work, he’s fond of the ‘sharing with rules’ license, which stays true to the Open Source ethos of shared code yet also enables him to get paid by companies who use it in their commercial products.”

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Feb 15 2009

World of Goo Linux Version is Ready!

Lovers of both games and Free Open Source Software will be pleased to see that the popular indie puzzle game World of Goo has been released for Linux. It was designed by a small team of two ex-Electronic Arts developers, Kyle Gabler and Ron Carmel, who used their entire combined savings of ,000.00 USD to create the gooey game

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Feb 14 2009

Open Source Study Included In US Stimulus Package

gclef writes “Buried deep in the details of the US stimulus package is an interesting provision that might go a long way toward helping Open Source software break into the medical area. It says that the Secretary of Health and Human Services should study the availability of open source health technology systems (PDF, page 488), compare their TCO against proprietary systems and report on what they find no later than Oct 1, 2010. Slashdotters may also be interested in the language that starts on page 553 of that PDF to see just what the final package says about broadband.” The stimulus plan was approved by the Senate on Friday and is expected to be signed by President Obama by Monday.

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Feb 14 2009

Moonlight – Run Silverlight on Linux

Moonlight is an open source implementation of Silverlight, primarily for Linux and other Unix/X11 based operating systems. Download it here.

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Feb 14 2009

Canadian Federal Government Mulling Open Source?

An anonymous reader points out a CBC report discussing a request from the Canadian government for information about open source software and free proprietary software. Evan Leibovitch, an advocate for open source, says the government’s interest was spurred by a desire to reduce expenditures during the recession. “…Leibovitch said he hopes the request will lead to government policies that give ‘a level playing field’ to vendors of open-source software services, who provide technical and administrative support to companies that use open-source programs. He alleges these service providers currently face barriers when competing with proprietary software vendors in the government procurement process. … When the government purchases software, it often assumes that it will have to pay for a licence and asks software vendors to bid for the contract, McOrmond said. Vendors of open source software services don’t respond to that initial call for tender because they have no licences to sell. But then, the government might ask for a separate round of bids for providing support services for the software, which open-source vendors could provide.”

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Feb 13 2009

Configuring GIMP 2.6 to Replace Adobe Photoshop

If you’re used to the Photoshop interface, the open source alternative GIMP can be somewhat confusing. You can, however, configure it to look and behave the same way.

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Feb 12 2009

Brave New World of Open-source Game Design

Greg Chudecke writes “The New York Times recently ran an article on game companies that get input design input from gamers. The Article is Branded as “The Brave New World of Open-source Game Design”. The title may be a little misleading as it isn’t exactly like the game design is open source for editing, however it is interesting that gamers are getting an opportunity to shape the games they play.”

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Feb 12 2009

BeOS Successor Haiku Keeps the Faith

kokito writes “OSNews managing editor Thom Holwerda reviews Haiku, the open source successor of the Be operating system. According to the review, Haiku faithfully/successfully replicates the BeOS user experience and ‘personality,’ boasting very short boot times, the same recognizable but modernized GUI using antialiasing for fonts and all vector graphics as well as vector icons, a file system with support for metadata-based queries (OpenBFS) and support for the BeAPI, considered by some the cleanest programming API ever. The project has also recently released a native GCC 4.3.3 tool chain, clearing the way for bringing up-to-date ports of multi-platform apps such as Firefox and VLC, and making it easier to work on Haiku ports in general.” (More below.)

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