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Category Archives: news

Ubuntu Dev Summit Lays Out Plans For Hardy Heron

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

Opurt writes “On the first day of the Ubuntu Developer Summit in Boston this week, a roundtable session focused on the vision for the upcoming Hardy Heron Ubuntu release. Unlike Gutsy Gibbon, which brought a handful of experimental features along with some new functionality, the focus with Heron will be on robustness as it will be supported on the desktop for 3 years. ‘The Compiz window manager, which adds sophisticated visual effects to the Ubuntu user interface, will be a big target for usability improvements. Keyboard bindings and session management were noted as two areas where Compiz still needs some work.’ PolicyKit and Tracker will also be significantly tweaked, while Heron is also likely to see a complete visual refresh.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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$200 Linux PCs On Sale At Wal-Mart

Posted on November 11, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

Placid sends in a Wired blog entry on Wal-Mart’s new sub-$200 Linux-based PC. Wired calls it “a custom distribution of Ubuntu Linux,” and the AP identifies the distro as gOS, made by a small company in Los Angeles. Wal-Mart began selling Linux PCs in 2002 but they have been out of stock for a while. From the Wired blog: “It has a 1.5 Ghz VIA C7 CPU embedded in a Mini-ITX motherboard, 512MB of RAM and an 80GB hard drive. Normally, this would simply mark it as unacceptably low-end for use with modern software. By using the fast Enlightenment desktop manager (instead of heavier-duty alternatives like Gnome or KDE), the makers say it’s more responsive than Vista is, even on more powerful computers.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Will GNOME’s betrayal lead to Microsoft Victory?

Posted on November 3, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in desktop environments, gnome, news, open source, quotes & thoughts .

Microsoft’s efforts to overturn a vote earlier this year denying its Open XML “fast track” standards certification seem to be getting a boost from the GNOME Foundation.GNOME Foundation founder Miguel deIcaza is a Novell employee, and his actions have been closely scrutinized since Microsoft signed its controversial “patent licensing” deal with the company a year ago.

OpenXML, also called OOXML, was denied “fast track” International Standards Organization (ISO) approval in September, but a final vote on making it a standard will take place in February, and Microsoft is anxious to get the earlier decision reversed.

To that end Microsoft is working with the ECMA TC 45 group to answer detailed questions which accompanied the negative ballots in September, in hopes of changing hearts and minds by February. GNOME’s participation in that group is upsetting Open Document Format (ODF) advocates.

ODF is the format used by Open Office.

Opponents of making the Microsoft Word format an ISO document standard, like OpenDocument Fellowship member Russell Ossendryver, compare GNOME’s actions to Democrats offering counters to President Bush’s 2005 plan on privatizing Social Security — any counter-proposal makes it more likely something bad will happen.

Dave Neary, a member of the GNOME Foundation and community manager for OpenWengo, says it’s all safe as milk. Quoting Jody Goldberg, who calls supporting ODF “significantly more difficult” than supporting OOXML, he suggests ODF will never be the “one true format” without destroying its utility.

In arguing for Open XML on his blog yesterday, Jason Matusow of Microsoft insists no one’s hands are clean, that any decision gives proprietary advantage to someone, and the place to fight all this out is the marketplace, not a standards-setting process.

The issue is vital for this reason. Microsoft Office has a dominant market share. Microsoft Office is proprietary. Microsoft’s XML formatting was changed just before Office 2007’s final release, destroying interoperabiity with ODF until fixes could be found.

Once a proprietary standard is approved by the ISO, and made a standard, its eventual replacement by a truly open standard like ODF becomes impossible. At best the two stand side-by-side, and Microsoft’s market dominance is baked into the market.

That’s why, despite the fact OOXML or OpenXML may be a better format today, groups like NOOOXML are fighting so hard against ISO approval. (The cartoon is from the NOOOXML site.)

Once a proprietary format becomes a standard, the era of truly open standards is over, and the way becomes clear to making anything proprietary.

– by ZDNET

1 Comment .
Tags: Document Format, gnome, Gnome betrayal, ISO, Microsoft, MS Office, NOOOXML, oasis, odf, OOXML, Standard Battle .

Apple’s Leopard Features ODF

Posted on November 1, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, mac/osx, news .

 

Apple’s latest incarnation of OS X “Leopard” will be able to read OASIS’s ODF.

Good news for open source community and for the compatibility as whole, but then how does ECMA’s Office XML correspond to UNIX specs!!! How about saving files in ODF … is it there in Save As option. Here is what else Leopard is going to feature.

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Tags: apple, apple leopard, leopard, linux, oasis, oasis odf, odf, open source, os x, osx, osx leopard .

Fluxbox 1.0 Released! Finally!

Posted on October 9, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in applications/software, news, system .

Finally after almost four and a half years with 0.9.x release we got to 1.0.0! This release includes a lot of bugfixes, new styles, updated language support, better shaped corners nd much more. Grab it here!

More info about the release here.

What is FluxBox
Fluxbox Fluxbox is a windowmanager for X.
It’s based on the Blackbox 0.61.1 code. Fluxbox looks like blackbox and handles styles, colors, window placement and similar thing exactly like blackbox (100% theme/style compability).

So what’s the difference between fluxbox and blackbox then?
The answer is: LOTS!
Here is a list of features that fluxbox already has, or is in the works…

Features
Implemented:

  • Configurable window tabs. |
  • Iconbar (for minimized/iconified windows) |
  • Wheel scroll changes workspace
  • Configurable titlebar (placement of buttons, new buttons etc) |
  • KDE support |
  • New native integrated keygrabber (supports emacs like keychains)
  • Maximize over slit option
  • Partial GNOME support
  • Extended Window Manager Hints support
  • Slit dockap ordering
  • Other minor features
1 Comment .
Tags: blackbox, fluxbox, windowmanager, x manager, x windows .

Dell Preps for Next Linux Desktop Release

Posted on October 9, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in debian/ubuntu based, desktop & laptop pc, hardware, linux/unix/os distros, news .

A major desktop Linux upgrade is set to be released on October 18. Michael Dell is expected to personally use it. And the PC giant will pre-load it on selected desktops and notebooks. Buzz about this next Linux release — dubbed Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon — is growing across the web. But what exactly does Gutsy Gibbon (aka Ubuntu 7.10) offer to desktop customers and solutions providers? Here’s a look.

Canonical (the company that develops Ubuntu) has outlined a long-term road map for the operating system. During the UbuntuLive conference back in July, Canonical CTO Matt Zimmerman said Ubuntu 7.10 would feature several core enhancements for desktop and server users. On the desktop, 7.10 will support:

  • a 3D interface out of the box
  • multi-monitor configuration
  • laptop power profiling
  • more details still to come

On the server, 7.10 will offer:

  • Turn-key web administration
  • One-step server recipes
  • Proactive security with AppArmor, an increasingly popular open source security option
  • “desktop” type simplicity

So, what does that mean to Ubuntu resellers and customers? Quite a lot. Ubuntu moved from niche status into the spotlight when Michael Dell himself began running the operating system.

If Ubuntu 7.1o continues that positive buzz, it could help desktop Linux to gradually become a mainstream operating system. But don’t expect that to happen overnight. In an exclusive TechIQ interview with Dell’s Linux gurus last month, the company indicated that it would take a slow-and-steady approach to Ubuntu. Translation: Don’t expect Dell to throw marketing dollars at Ubuntu PCs just yet.

I do not expect that to happen for at least another year because Dell doesn’t want to over promise and under deliver to frustrated Windows users and small business owners who are seeking alternatives.

In the meantime, the countdown to Ubuntu 7.10 continues. And the buzz surrounding Ubuntu 7.1 will only grow louder as the upgrade’s October 18 launch date approaches.

1 Comment .
Tags: dell, linux, linux pc, ubuntu .

Ubuntu project is now shipping free ubuntu 7.10 CD (Code name: Gutsy Gibbon)

Posted on October 9, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in debian/ubuntu based, linux/unix/os distros, news .

The shipit service of Ubuntu is now taking orders for Gutsy shipments. Standard options: 1 or 2 x86 cd’s or 1 x86_64 cd’s

https://shipit.ubuntu.com/

Here’s the links to the whole family:

https://shipit.ubuntu.com

https://shipit.kubuntu.org

https://shipit.edubuntu.org

Leave a comment .
Tags: gutsy gibbon, linux, ubuntu, ubuntu 7.10 .
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