May 8 2009

Hackers Broke Into FAA Air Traffic Control Systems

PL/SQL Guy writes “Hackers have repeatedly broken into the air traffic control mission-support systems of the US Federal Aviation Administration, according to an Inspector General report sent to the FAA this week, and the FAA’s increasing use of commercial software and Internet Protocol-based technologies as part of an effort to modernize the air traffic control systems poses a higher security risk to the systems than when they relied primarily on proprietary software, the report said. Intrusion detection systems (IDS) are deployed at only 11 of hundreds of air traffic control facilities. In 2008, more than 870 cyber incident alerts were issued to the organization responsible for air traffic control operations and by the end of the year 17 percent (more than 150 incidents) had not been remediated, ‘including critical incidents in which hackers may have taken over control’ of operations computers, the report said.”

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May 7 2009

Windows 7 "Not Much Faster" Than Vista

PLSQL Guy writes “Tests of the Windows 7 Release Candidate in a PC World Test Center found that while Windows 7 was slightly faster on our WorldBench 6 suite, the differences may be barely noticeable to users. The PCs tested were slightly faster when running Windows 7, but in no case was the overall improvement greater than 5 percent, considered to be a threshold for when an actual performance change is noticeable to the average user. One of the major complaints about Windows Vista was the fact that it was consistently slower than Windows XP. If Windows 7 can’t significantly improve that situation, what chance does it have to convince people to move away from Windows XP?”

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May 7 2009

Duke Nukem For Never

PLSQL Guy writes “Duke Nukem Forever developer 3D Realms is shutting down, according to Shacknews. They cite ‘a reliable source close to the company,’ who said the developer is finished and employees have already been let go. It looks like all of the Duke Nukem Forever jokes are turning into reality; DNF might turn out to be the ultimate vaporware after all.” 3D Realms’ webmaster, Joe Siegler, confirmed the closing, saying that he didn’t know about it even a day beforehand. Apogee and Deep Silver, who are working on a different set of Duke Nukem games (referred to as the Duke Nukem Trilogy) say they are not affected by the problems at 3D Realms.

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May 6 2009

US Trustee Asks To Send SCO Into Chapter 7

Several readers including Pop69 inform us that the US Trustee’s office has asked to convert SCO’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy to Chapter 7 — a.k.a. liquidation. Groklaw has the text of the filing: “…not only is there no reasonable chance of ‘rehabilitation’ in these cases, the Debtors have tried — and failed — to liquidate their business in chapter 11.”

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Apr 28 2009

Queries over Pakistan's ability to hold onto terrain – Radio Australia


BBC News

Queries over Pakistan's ability to hold onto terrain
Radio Australia
The military says it will take up to a week to clear an estimated 500 militants from Buner district near the Swat Valley. It follows an attack on the Taliban in nearby Lower Dir on the weekend … that forced more than 30-thousand people to flee their
Video: Taliban On The Defense CBS
Taleban advance is halted by Pakistan's combined air and ground Times Online
New York Times – AFP – The Associated Press – Aljazeera.net
all 1,233 news articles  Langue : Français
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Apr 24 2009

Oracle Top Execs Answer Sun Employee Questions

The Register writes “Sun invited Oracle president Charles Phillips and chief corporate architect Edward Screven to an employee-only town hall this Wednesday, where they took questions on what’s coming. They said they’d be ‘crazy’ to close Java, that Oracle ‘needs’ MySQL, and all Sun’s processors look appealing. They hedged on OpenOffice — Phillips said he couldn’t comment on any product line — and on Sun’s work in high-performance computing. Screven made it pretty clear the Sun vision of cloud computing does not fit with Oracle’s; Oracle sees itself as a provider of infrastructure like virtualization to make clouds, not a provider of hosted services. As for who’s staying and who’s getting cut at Sun: Phillips said Oracle needs Sun, but warned ‘tough decisions’ will be coming. Don’t forget, this is the company that couriered pink slips to the PeopleSoft staff it cut following that acquisition.”

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Apr 23 2009

Sun Announces New MySQL, Michael Widenius Forks

viktor.91 writes “Sun Microsystems announced three new MySQL products: MySQL 5.4, MySQL Cluster 7.0 and MySQL Enterprise Partner Program for ‘Remote DBA’ service providers.” which showed up in the firehose today next to Glyn Moody’s submission where he writes “Michael Widenius, founder and original developer of MySQL, says that most of the leading coders for that project have either left Sun or will be leaving in the wake of Oracle’s takeover. To ensure MySQL’s survival, he wants to fork from the official version — using his company Monty Program Ab to create what he calls a MySQL “Fedora” project. This raises the larger question of who really owns a commercial open software application: the corporate copyright holders, or the community?”

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Apr 21 2009

Oracle buys Sun. Is MySQL doomed? Java? -Linux?

With Sun it tow, Oracle will now finally have its own operating system with Solaris, instead of just its Oracle Enterprise Linuxon Red Hat).Perhaps more importantly with one swift stroke Oracle has effectively cornered even more of the database market than it already owned.

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Apr 9 2009

What If Oracle Bought Sun Microsystems?

snydeq writes “Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister believes Oracle is next in line to make a play for Sun now that IBM has withdrawn its offer. Dismissing server market arguments in favor of Cisco or Dell as suitors, McAllister suggests that MySQL, ZFS, DTrace, and Java make Sun an even better asset to Oracle than to IBM. MySQL as a complement to Oracle’s existing database business would make sense, given Oracle’s 2005 purchase of Innobase, and with ‘the long history of Oracle databases on Solaris servers, it might actually see owning Solaris as an asset,’ McAllister writes. But the ‘crown jewel’ of the deal would be Java. ‘It’s almost impossible to overestimate the importance of Java to Oracle. Java has become the backbone of Oracle’s middleware strategy,’ McAllister contends.”

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Mar 30 2009

Locating the Real MySQL

An anonymous reader writes “In a blog post, Patrick Galbraith, an ex-core engineer on the MySQL Server team, raises the question: “What is the official branch of MySQL?” With Monty Widenius having left Sun and forked off MySQL for MariaDB, and Brian Aker running the Drizzle fork inside of Sun, where is the official MySQL tree? Sun may own the trademark, but it looks like there is doubt as to whether they are still the maintainers of the actual codebase after their B acquisition of the code a year ago. Smugmug’s Don MacAskhill, who is the keynote at the upcoming MySQL Conference, has commented that he is now using the Percona version of MySQL, and is no longer relying on Sun’s.”

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