Apr
11
2009
christian.einfeldt writes “It seems as if almost every other week there is news of another government migration toward Free Open Source Software. Two of the most recent such moves come from Hungary and the tiny independent former Russian republic of Tatarstan. On April 2, The Hungarian government announced that it will be modifying its procurement rules to mandate that open source procurement funding match expenditures for proprietary software, according to Ferenc Baja, deputy minister for information technology. In Tatarstan, a Republic of 3.8 million inhabitants, the Deputy Minister of Education announced that by the end of this school year, all 2,400 educational institutions in Tatarstan will have completed a transition to GNU-Linux, following a successful pilot program in rolled out in 2008.”
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Comments Off on Hungary, Tatarstan Latest To Go FOSS | tags: google, linux, news, open source, program, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
prostoalex writes “At QCon San Francisco, Aditya Agarwal of Facebook described how his employer runs its software stack (video and slides). Facebook runs a typical LAMP setup where P stands for PHP with certain customizations, and back-end services that are written in C++ and Java. Facebook has released some of the infrastructure components into the open source community, including the Thrift RPC framework and Scribe distributed logging server.”
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Comments Off on How Facebook Runs Its LAMP Stack | tags: facebook, google, linux, open source | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
GNU Radio is an open source Software Defined Radio (SDR) project that was started about ten years ago by Eric Blossom, an electrical engineer. The main idea which is behind this project, as its founder says, was to turn all the hardware problems into software problems….
Comments Off on GNU Radio: the open-source software defined Radio | tags: open source | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
palegray.net writes “Inspired by a recent Ask Slashdot, I’ve written a step-by-step tutorial for setting up an Openfire server on Debian Linux, for those interested in running their own open source collaboration server. Aimed at those just getting started with collaboration software, the tutorial shows precisely how to get Openfire up and running quickly on a base Debian install, and offers a basic feature tour of the software’s plugin and IM gateway functionality.”
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Comments Off on How To Build an Openfire Chat Server On Debian 5 | tags: google, linux, open source | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
In response to the report I posted a few days ago that the Openmoko FreeRunner phone had been discontinued, Pat Meier-Johnson writes on behalf of Openmoko to say that this isn’t so. “Some bloggers have been misinterpreting a presentation by Openmoko CEO, Sean Moss-Pultz last week in Switzerland to think that the company is getting out of the phone business. That’s not true. In fact, the Openmoko FreeRunner (their current model) is alive and well. (Also in Switzerland, Sean announced another project — not a phone — that they are calling ‘Project B.’ No details yet.) The next version of the phone, codenamed GTA03, has been suspended and there were some associated layoffs, but the GTA03 was in constant flux as a design. So the company is being prudent and focusing on the FreeRunner which has lots of open source community and most recently, embedded developer support.” Glad to hear this, because the FreeRunner is an interesting phone.
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Comments Off on Openmoko Phone Not Dead After All | tags: developer, google, mobile, open source, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
Glyn Moody writes “Are there ever circumstances when software patents that require payment might be permitted by an open source license? That’s the question posed by a new license that is being submitted to the Open Source Initiative (OSI) for review. The MPEG Working Group wants to release a reference implementation of the new MPEG eXtensible Middleware (MXM) standard as open source, but it also wants to be able to sell patent licenses. If it can’t, it might not make the implementation open source; but if it does, it might undermine the fight against software patent proliferation.”
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Comments Off on Working Toward a Patent-Agnostic Open Source License | tags: google, open source | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
pinguin-geek writes “Researchers at the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science at Northwestern University have identified a new “guilt-by-association” threat to privacy in peer-to-peer (P2P) systems that would enable an eavesdropper to accurately classify groups of users with similar download behavior. While many have pointed out that the data exchanged over these connections can reveal personal information about users, the researchers shows that only the patterns of connections — not the data itself — is sufficient to create a powerful threat to user privacy. To thwart this threat, they have released SwarmScreen, a publicly available, open source software that restores privacy by masking a user’s real download activity in such a manner as to disrupt classification.”
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Comments Off on Privacy In BitTorrent By Hiding In the Crowd | tags: applied science, google, open source, privacy | posted in technical news
Apr
8
2009
A new version of Boxee brings an app store and API, allowing developers to expand the increasingly popular open source media center software in entirely new ways. Apps for Pandora and RadioTime, as well as a Mozilla-based browser for (once again) accessing Hulu.
Comments Off on Boxee gains an app store, to appear on hardware in 2010 | tags: developer, open source | posted in technical news
Apr
6
2009
nandemoari writes “T-Mobile is planning to use Google’s open source operating system ‘Android’ on devices that blur the line between cellphone and home PC. In addition, Samsung says they will also produce Android phones, but need to work out the kinks first. Both announcements come shortly after HP revealed that it is investigating the idea of using Android to power some of its low-cost netbook computers in place of Windows.”
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Comments Off on T-Mobile To Launch Android Tablet | tags: computers, google, mobile, open source, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
5
2009
Forrester Research suggests that we’re at the front end of a long cycle of open-source infrastructure and application adoption.
Comments Off on Forrester Surveyed Lots of Room for Open-Source Growth | tags: open source | posted in technical news