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Category Archives: linux.com

GNOME/OOXML podcast shows two sides closer than appears

Posted on December 6, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

Despite technical difficulties with the phone lines, Linux.com’s live podcast with Jeff Waugh of the GNOME Foundation and Roy Schestowitz, cofounder of the Boycott Novell site, attracted a large audience eager to discuss GNOME’s involvement with the efforts to make the Microsoft Office Open XML (OOXML) document format an ECMA standard. Hosted by Rod Amis on his Lightning Strikes show at BlogTalkRadio, and with questions from Linux.com’s Editor in Chief Robin Miller and me, the discussion revealed that the two sides of the issue are closer than they have appeared in the past.

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Adding extended character support

Posted on December 6, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

If you need to type a diacritical mark such as an acute "e" (é) — let alone a character not found in a Western European language — the standard English keyboard layouts for GNU/Linux users are barely ahead of those of typewriters. However, adding support for both extended characters and multiple keyboards has become much easier in the last few years. These days, you can quickly add extended character support from both GNOME and KDE, and, should either desktop fail you for any reason, you can fall back on other methods to improve your input.

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Linux traffic analysis, quick and simple

Posted on December 6, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

Full-featured traffic analyzers for Linux systems such as ntop and vnstat are widely available, but sometimes you just want a simple program that gives you fast, basic information about the amount of traffic going in and out of the hosts on your network. Darkstat, a packet sniffer that runs as a background process, fills that role. It gathers statistics about network usage and displays them over HTTP.

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Risk gamers use free software to take over the world

Posted on December 5, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

How are GNU/Linux users preparing for Linus Torvalds’ plan of world domination? By playing free software computer games based on the classic world conquest board game Risk. You can perfect your strategy by playing the games XFrisk, TEG, or Ksirk.

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Live podcast discussion about OOXML today starring Jeff Waugh, Roy Schestowitz, and… you (updated)

Posted on December 5, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

Linux.com ran an article headlined GNOME Foundation defends OOXML involvement on November 23. Jeff Waugh, the press officer on the GNOME Foundation Board, was prominently mentioned in that article and in several others to which it links. So was Roy Schestowitz, who wrote a post titled Anti-symbiosis: ODF, OOXML, Mono, GNOME, and OpenOffice.org on the Boycott Novell site, where he is a regular contributor. We thought getting them together might be illuminating. After-show update: And it was illuminating, despite some tech glitches at the beginning. Here’s the MP3 download.

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Fontmatrix: Font management for the desktop finally arrives

Posted on December 5, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

The GNU/Linux desktop lacks a font manager for design work. Ideally, such a font manager should support currently used font formats, including TrueType, Type1, and OpenType, and allow sets of fonts to be activated on the fly, so that system memory is not choked with rarely used fonts. Until now, the closest to this ideal has been Fonty Python, but, when last seen, it fell short because of it supported only TrueType fonts and had a needlessly complicated interface. Now, however, newcomer Fontmatrix has proved itself a contender for the role. In fact, despite some weaknesses in its features, its basic functionality is already dependable.

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Control your Linux PC from your mobile phone with Amora

Posted on December 5, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

Standing next to your laptop to control the slides during a presentation is not cool. Nowadays everyone uses a presentation device or their laptop’s remote controller, but a presentation device can be expensive, few laptops come with a remote controller, and for those that do, Linux compatibility may be an issue. The Amora project turns your Symbian mobile phone into a Linux presentation device using Bluetooth.

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How to make Kontact work with Google Apps

Posted on December 4, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

Recently, Gmail added IMAP support, giving the powerhouse email host the ability to interact better with third-party clients. And Google, being the friendly neighborhood do-gooder that it is, provided instructions on how to use IMAP with a variety of third-party clients. However, it forgot one popular client: KMail, the email portion of the KDE Kontact personal information management suite. Google also neglected to mention that several of its other services, such as Google Calendar and Google Reader, can work well with Kontact. Here’s how you can integrate them.

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Nokia’s new OS streamlines, syncs tablet platform with desktop Linux

Posted on December 4, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

Nokia recently announced its Linux-based N810 tablet, and although the device is not yet widely available, the accompanying software is. The new operating system, designated Internet Tablet OS2008, is available as a free download for owners of the previous N800 model. In that rarest of all outcomes, the new release actually improves the older tablet — it is faster, improves battery life, and should make it easier for developers to port applications over from desktop Linux.

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The Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment: A return to basics

Posted on December 4, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux.com, news .

The Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE) resembles a classic Unix project — it’s partly constructed out of pre-existing programs, its emphasis is on speed, and its configuration requires taking time in a text editor. Even the relatively low quality of fonts on the desktop makes it feel like a vintage program. The result is a desktop environment that is short on innovation, but performs well on low-end machines, and blazingly fast on recent ones.

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Recent Posts

  • Does an un-confirmed Bitcoin transaction expire?
  • Looting of the Fox: The Story of Sabotage at ShapeShift
  • Decentralization, Scalability, and Fault Tolerance of Bitcoin
  • Stripe will soon accept Bitcoin payments
  • Zynga announces Bitcoin acceptance in game
  • How to import very large sql dump via phpmyadmin
  • How to compare the content of two folders automatically
  • Top 5 reasons to start experimenting with Linux
  • The day our mind became open sourced
  • Mark Shuttleworth wants to turn canonical (ubuntu) into the next Apple Inc.

Categories

  • applications/software (26)
    • browsers (2)
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