Mar
16
2009
gubm writes “A February survey of IT managers by IDC indicated that hard times are accelerating the adoption of Linux. The open source operating system will emerge from the recession in a stronger data center position than before, concluded an IDC white paper.”

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Comments Off on Linux Gaining Strength In Downturn | tags: google, linux, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
15
2009
Microsoft’s own speed tests show IE beating Chrome, Firefox. Microsoft has released its own tests that show IE8 can load many websites faster than two open source browsers: Firefox and Chrome…
Comments Off on Is IE8 a Fast Browser? | tags: microsoft, open source, web | posted in technical news
Mar
15
2009
I Believe in Unicorns writes “Red Hat’s patent policy says ‘In an attempt to protect and promote the open source community, Red Hat has elected to… develop a corresponding portfolio of software patents for defensive purposes. We do so reluctantly…’ Meanwhile, USPTO Application #: 20090063418, ‘Method and an apparatus to deliver messages between applications,’ claims a patent on routing messages using an XQuery match, which is an extension of the ‘unencumbered’ AMQP protocol that Red Hat is helping to make. Is this a defensive patent, or is Red Hat cynically staking out a software patent claim to an obvious extension of AMQP? Is Red Hat’s promise to ‘refrain from enforcing the infringed patent’ against open source a reliable contract, or a trap for the unwary? Given the Microsoft-Red Hat deal in February, are we seeing Red Hat’s ‘Novell Moment?'” Reader Defeat_Globalism contributes a related story about an international research team who conducted experiments to “quantify the ways patent systems and market forces might influence someone to invent and solve intellectual problems.” Their conclusion was that a system which doesn’t restrict prizes to the winner provides more motivation for innovation.

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Comments Off on Red Hat Patenting Around Open Standards | tags: google, Intel, microsoft, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
15
2009
volume4 writes “The switch has been flipped and Jaiku has been moved to App Engine. Google will no longer be developing Jaiku, so the code and the future of Jaiku is in the hands of the open source community. From the Jaiku blog: ‘Today, we are open sourcing the Jaiku code base under the Apache License 2.0. The code is available as JaikuEngine on Google Code Project Hosting as of now. Anyone can set up and run their own JaikuEngine instance on Google App Engine.'” We discussed Google’s purchase of Jaiku in 2007, and their subsequent decision to halt development a few months ago.

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Comments Off on JaikuEngine Gets Open Sourced | tags: developer, google, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Observer writes “Bugs in software are nothing new, but when they’re discussed in the open, how do open source projects adapt policy? A major regression in the Gnome project’s session manager has seen some major distributions choose to refuse to follow the update rather than drop a major feature. Between Gnome’s public bug tracker and similar trackers from distributions which released (and still distribute) the buggy version, months of debate provide an interesting case-study in the way front-line users and developers interact for better or for worse. What lessons can be learned here for release planning, bug triage, and marketing for a major open source project?”

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Comments Off on Public Bug Tracking and Open-Source Policy | tags: developer, google, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
volume4 brings news that David Wood of the Symbian Foundation has made a post detailing their plans for a release schedule, with new versions due out every six months. We discussed Nokia’s acquisition of Symbian for the purpose of open sourcing the popular mobile OS last year. Quoting: “There’s a lot of activity underway, throughout the software development teams for all the different packages that make up the Symbian Platform. These packages are finding their way into platform releases. The plan is that there will be two platform releases each year. … Symbian^2, which is based on S60 5.1, reaches a functionally complete state at the middle of this year, and should be hardened by the end of the year. This means that the first devices based on Symbian^2 could be reaching the market any time around the end of this year — depending on the integration plans, the level of customisation, and the design choices made by manufacturers. Symbian^3 follows on six months later — reaching a functionally complete state at the end of this year, and should be hardened by the middle of 2010.”

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Comments Off on Symbian Introduces Open Source Release Plan | tags: google, mobile, news, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
The repository system is a great strength of open-source operating systems, but some people want the latest-and-greatest of a particular application while keeping the core system unchanged. There is also the situation where non-free applications aren’t available from within the standard repositories. So you can add extra repositories…
Comments Off on Extra Repositories for Ubuntu 8.10 You Might Want | tags: open source, ubuntu | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
The next time someone suggests that open source can’t innovate, is not user-friendly, etc., point them to Adium. It’s simply incredible. What Adium isn’t, however, is a good Twitter client. That’s about to change, starting with Adium’s next version (1.4), when sophisticated Twitter functionality will be integrated into Adium.
Comments Off on Adium gets its Twitter on in version 1.4 | tags: open source, twitter | posted in technical news
Mar
13
2009
If you like to research web apps, one of the original directories of Web 20 apps just got a whole lot better. Go2Web20 just launched a major redesign in beta. It is an information aggregator for Websites and apps, collecting data from as many open sources as possible, akin to what you find at Quarkbase and the more recently launched Dataopedia.
Comments Off on Web App Directory Go2Web20 Gets a Major Upgrade | tags: open source, web | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
An anonymous reader writes “After many years of release-free development, FFmpeg, the most widely used audio and video codec library, has finally returned to a regular release schedule with the long-awaited version 0.5. While the list of changes is far too long to list here, some high-profile improvements include the reverse-engineering of all Real video formats, WMV9/VC-1 support, AAC decoding, and of course vast performance improvements across the board. To commemorate the ‘lively’ discussions predating the release, 0.5 is codenamed ‘half-way to world domination A.K.A. the belligerent blue bike shed.’ The new version can be downloaded from the official website.” As another reader points out, FFmpeg is what makes some open source multimedia apps (like MPlayer, Xine, VLC and Kdenlive) so versatile.

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Comments Off on FFmpeg Finally Releases Long-Awaited Version 0.5 | tags: google, open source, web | posted in technical news