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Jun 07, 2004

Nat Friedman on Novell's Linux Strategy

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 9:50 PM

Novell is an interesting company, and has only become more so since it decided to dive head first into GNU/Linux last year. Nat Friedman, formerly of Novell acquired Ximian and now the veep of Novell's Linux Technologies Group took some time to answer our questions about exactly where the company is heading with GNU/Linux.

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Desktop FreeBSD Part 3: Adding Software

By Ed Hurst | Posted at 9:46 PM

FreeBSD is very much a source-based system. The operating assumption of the architects of FreeBSD is that you will compile most things from the source code. The system is designed to work that way, and does it exceptionally well. The famous "Ports Collection" is rather unique in making a large number of packages available ready to build and seldom requires anything but a few commands in a terminal window. Having tried to build specialized applications on several different versions of Open Source operating systems, I can assure you that compiling on FreeBSD is about as easy as it gets.

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May 11, 2004

The Open CD

By Ed Hurst | Posted at 4:26 PM
How does one write a review of a project like this, without reviewing the software that's included? Since all the software on the CD has been reviewed repeatedly in other places, there's not much to gain by doing it one more time. In this case, it is the concept itself that needs a little more attention from the world.
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Apr 20, 2004

A Switch to the Extreme Side

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 8:13 PM

Perhaps it is a new laptop that will compliment rather than replace your desktop or perhaps you have found the need for both a PC and a Mac. Whatever the case, if you have the need to operate two or more computers, the idea of a KVM switch — which provides a way to control multiple systems with just one keyboard, monitor and mouse — becomes very attractive. Unfortunately not all KVM's are created equally — many do not get along that well with Mac or Linux systems. What are you to do? Join me for our look at the first two of several promising new KVM switches we've been testing — IOGear's MiniView Extreme KVM's.

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Apr 07, 2004

X.org Releases X11R6.7

By Staff Staff | Posted at 11:59 PM

an Francisco, CA., April 6, 2004 - X.Org Foundation today announces their
first release of the X Window System since the formation of the Foundation in
January of this year. The new X.Org release, called X Window System Version
11 Release 6.7 (X11R6.7), builds on the work of the X.Org X11R6.6 and
XFree86TM Project Inc. V4.4RC2 releases to combine many of the latest
developments from a large number of the participants and companies working
with the X Window community. The X Window System X11R6.7 release can be found
at http://www.x.org/.

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Panther Secrets Declassified

By Staff Staff | Posted at 8:05 PM

With all the buried features and subtle changes hidden away in OS X 10.3 (alias: Panther), you'd think that Steve Jobs were running a covert operation. Sure, you know about Exposé and Fast User Switching — but look deeper, and you'll find that there's much more to this cat than meets the eye.

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New Fink Binary Installer Released

By Staff Staff | Posted at 8:00 PM

The Fink Project has released an update for Fink Binary Installer, bringing it to version 0.7.0 and 0.6.3. Fink Binary Installer is a utility designed for open sourced software development. The update features an improved package manager.

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Microsoft Invented Personal Computing?

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 6:36 PM

Apple computer has a long and distinguished list of “firsts” in
personal computing, not to mention the least of which, they invented
personal computing as we know it today. The others include a long line
of stuff, including, but not limited to, in personal computer “firsts,”
first with a GUI, first with a mouse, first with a color monitor, first
with a floppy drive, first with a hard drive, first to have a CD-ROM,
first to make home movie editing possible, first with USB and Firewire,
first with 64-bit processor — the list goes on.

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Apr 03, 2004

Corel to test WordPerfect for Linux

By Staff Staff | Posted at 1:16 AM

A Corel representative said the company's online store will begin selling a “proof-of-concept” Linux-native version of WordPerfect on April 15. “This pilot project is designed to determine the feasibility of developing future Linux versions of WordPerfect or WordPerfect Office,” the representative said.

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Apr 02, 2004

Just About Right: Revisiting Mandrake 9.2 and Fedora Core 1

By Timothy R. Butler | Posted at 11:51 PM

The Fall distribution release period of 2003 was not the most interesting, nor the least interesting in recent memory. For
the most part all of the distributions got better, but not so much
that those running distributions now going on a year in age are
really missing anything terribly substantial. We did find a few
interesting points worth revisiting, however, and those deal with
Mandrake Linux 9.2 and Fedora Core 1.

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