You are viewing page 96 of 128.
Oct 07, 2004

Safari supports new CSS properties

By Staff Staff | Posted at 5:50 PM

I have been experimenting a lot with Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) lately to see what can be done in designing a simple Web site. If you are using Apple's Safari 1.1 or later, you are seeing things on this Web page that people using Camino, Firefox, Internet Explorer and most other browsers don't: text shadows. Using shadows for story headlines is nothing knew; people have used Photoshop for years to make graphics with sophisticated layers and drop shadows, but the text shadows you see on this page are all done with CSS — not a graphic in there at all.

link | Post a Comment

Tech Investor on Apple

By Staff Staff | Posted at 5:48 PM

A growing number of computer users, fed up with the attacks on Windows computers, have been buying or at least taking a look at buying Macintosh computers from Apple Computer. Even USA TODAY's own tech columnist, Kevin Maney, recently wrote about how his Windows computer was taken down by malicious code.

link | Post a Comment

Xserve-empty SMEs are Apple's 'bread-and-butter'

By Staff Staff | Posted at 5:43 PM

The well publicized Xserve clusters at Colsa and Virginia Tech, have helped Apple overcome its reputation as the high-priced option, but it's the smaller customers that really matter, according to analysts.

link | Post a Comment

Mandrake Announces Move

By Staff Staff | Posted at 5:41 PM

PRESS RELEASE: With the
release of Mandrakesoft's new Move, Linux becomes a viable option to
millions of first-time Linux users. A « live » Linux system that teams
up with a USB key, Move lets beginners get a first taste of Linux and
gives advanced users a full Linux system they can take anywhere.

link | Post a Comment

Griffin Ships SecuriKey For Macs

By Staff Staff | Posted at 5:40 PM

PRESS RELEASE: Griffin Technologies, LLC, a
leading provider of information security solutions for software protection and
user authentication, today announced it has begun shipping SecuriKey® for
Macintosh Professional Edition, the first-ever USB-based authentication
solution for individual Macintosh users. Featuring a USB token that acts like
an 'ignition key' for any desktop or portable Macintosh, SecuriKey for
Macintosh is the most convenient and reliable way yet to protect Macs from
unwanted use.

link | Post a Comment

Interview with Chris Schlaeger

By Staff Staff | Posted at 5:37 PM

At aKademy I had the chance to talk to Chris Schlaeger about SUSE, its relationship with the KDE community, his view of the Linux enterprise desktop and the speed of development of several key features in KDE.

link | Post a Comment

Desktop FreeBSD Part 6: User PPP Connections

By Ed Hurst | Posted at 5:33 PM
By this time, you should have guessed that running KDE takes a large chunk of machine resources. Really old machines will run this latest version of KDE quite slowly. I chose it for the FreeBSD beginner because it's a good safe place to start, with so many built-in tools. One of the most important ones up to now has been KPPP -- the dialup tool. In this lesson we are going to learn how to dialup without KPPP. With that, about the only reason to keep using KDE is simply that you like it.
link | Post a Comment
Oct 05, 2004

The 2004 OfB Choice Awards

By Staff Staff | Posted at 10:05 PM

Today marks Open for Business's third year of informing you on the latest enterprise computing news. It seems very appropriate for this day to also mark the announcement of our third annual OfB Choice Awards. We have spent the last year testing and reporting on the very best open computing offerings and it finally comes down to this time when we must choose the very best of that elite group of products to report to you as our OfB Choices.

link | Post a Comment
Sep 24, 2004

RadTech's Tech Makes Good on Promises

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 12:47 AM

Here is a scenario that probably sounds familiar if you have owned a laptop. You buy a sparkling new laptop and, no doubt, you would like to keep it in good shape — this is a machine that will be traveling with you for a long time. But soon, the case becomes marred and, if it is a particularly compact unit (such as an Apple PowerBook), your screen may start to show the impression of the keyboard on it. How could this have happened to your trusty companion? How can you prevent it next time? RadTech seems to offer some of the best solutions we have seen for these problems.

link | Post a Comment
Sep 17, 2004

Basic Lesson #4: Can You See It?

By Ed Hurst | Posted at 12:34 PM
In this lesson in the Clueless Computer User series, Ed Hurst will discuss more about stability issues. A popular buzzword these days is "interface". That's just a fancy word implying that two or more people are face to face. In actual practice, it usually means anything but face to face. It's a means of interacting with another. You are said to "interface" by some means. So it is with computers.
link | Post a Comment
You are viewing page 96 of 128.