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    Lenovo servers debut with Windows, Linux support 28/10/2008 16:36:00

    Choice is good for everyone
    A recent decision by Lenovo to cut back sales of pre-installed Linux PCs has not altered the company’s commitment to offer operating system choice for its new server products launched this week.
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    Zoho launches e-mail app with offline, mobile access 11/10/2008 03:53:00

    Zoho has added an e-mail application to its suite of Web-hosted applications.
    Zoho has added e-mail to its portfolio of Web-hosted applications for individuals and organizations.
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    Lenovo halts online sales of Linux-based PCs 12/09/2008 08:52:00

    Vendor will continue offering pre-loaded Linux machines directly or through partners
    Lenovo is cutting back on sales of desktops and laptop systems with the Linux operating systems pre-installed.
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    IBM bundles middleware on Linux systems 06/08/2008 09:17:01

    IBM will try to break Microsoft's stranglehold on the business desktop market by preloading Notes software in Linux distributions.
    IBM on Tuesday said it wants to free desktops from Microsoft software, announcing an alliance with Linux vendors to preload its middleware on Linux distributions.
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    'World's cheapest laptop' now available 29/07/2008 08:57:10

    A Taiwanese company is selling what it calls the "world's cheapest laptop."
    A company is now selling what it calls the "world's cheapest laptop," which at US$130, is not a bad deal if you can bear some hardware limitations.
Features
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    Recession Worries? Go Open Source to Cut Costs 17/10/2008 13:34:00

    These days you have many open source products that are just as feature rich, reliable, useful, and usable as their closed source counterparts.
    With the world economy in shambles many businesses are already battening down the hatches expecting rough seas ahead. IT budgets will shrink along with all other budgets, and maybe even more than other budgets. After all, companies still need to advertise and pay their workforce, but they may be able to do without new servers or software for a while. And that is where open source software vendors can help keep the ship sailing.
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    Is Sun Solaris on its deathbed? 25/09/2008 09:35:00

    Linux backers claim Solaris is irrelevant; Sun of course disagrees
    Linux is enjoying growth, with a contingent of devotees too large to be called a cult following at this point. Solaris, meanwhile, has thrived as a longstanding, primary Unix platform geared to enterprises. But with Linux the object of all the buzz in the industry, can Sun's rival Solaris Unix OS hang on, or is it destined to be displaced by Linux altogether?
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    Building a new window into crime 12/09/2008 10:18:00

    By mashing together search, BI and mapping, police can now gather real-time crime data from multiple agencies with crime records and incident reports
    By combining business intelligence and two foundations of Web 2.0 -- search and mapping -- a police department in the US state of Kentucky has built a brand-new window into crime. This Web-based BI portal allows patrol officers to enter data -- or even pieces of data such as a few numbers from a license plate -- into a simple search interface and retrieve information from their own databases and those of neighboring towns.
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    10 open source companies to watch 05/09/2008 08:13:00

    Products range from databases to data integration
    With the Open Source Conference (OSCon) and IDG's LinuxWorld show in the rearview mirror of 2008, it is clear that open source is no longer just a trendy conversation.
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    Can open source replace Microsoft Exchange? 27/08/2008 10:43:00

    Open source projects and vendors are trying a variety of technical approaches to replacing the expensive but ubiquitous Microsoft Exchange. While none is yet a drop-in replacement, some administrators can get a TCO advantage by switching.
    Once upon a time at a NASA space flight center a long way away, I was an e-mail administrator. At the time, the 1980s, e-mail was still chaotic. The RFC 822 standard was only beginning to bring rhyme and reason to e-mail. One of RFC 822's competitors, the Common Messaging Calls (CMC) X.400 standard, wasn't making much progress, but then Microsoft adopted it in 1992, added the concepts of folders to it, and re-named the result Mail Application Programming Interface (MAPI). And, ever since, the e-mail world can broadly be divided into two camps: the RFC 822 Internet compliant e-mail group and the MAPI-compliant Microsoft Outlook/Exchange pack.
Interviews
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    Open Enterprise Interview with Ryan Bagueros, North-by-South 19/06/2008 12:40:48

    Latin America is emerging as a real hotbed of open source
    Like the future, open source is already here, it's just unevenly distributed. In particular, Latin America is emerging as a real hotbed of not only free software coding, but free software uptake by governments - to an extent that puts the UK's pathetic bumblings in this area quite to shame.
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    CTO Strategies: Greg Royal of Cistera Networks 29/05/2008 11:27:50

    Cistera Networks helps tie business applications and phone systems together. Company CTO Greg Royal explains how the company looks for scalability, integration, and agility, through measures such as minimizing the desktop software load, and Which open source software he finds useful.
    Greg Royal founded Cistera Networks six years ago to provide a convergence server platform that connects a company's enterprise applications to telephone users, using voice over IP. Greg continues at Cistera as CTO and EVP, and writes a blog We spoke to Greg to discuss his company and its embrace of Linux in his industry.
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    Rails creator on Java and other 'junk' 03/09/2007 08:30:41

    Also about what the future holds for Ruby on Rails.
    David Heinemeier Hansson was a 23-year-old student at Copenhagen Business School when he began work on Ruby on Rails a little over four years ago. His goal was to write a simple Web application framework that would free developers from the misery of repetitive coding that he sees as inherent in widely used platforms like Java and .Net.
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    Meeting the Swedish bank hacker 29/01/2007 11:10:45

    For US$3,000 our reporter was offered his personal bank Trojan by a hacker whose victims have also included Australian banks
    Computer Sweden reporter Linus Larsson interviewed the hacker behind the recent Internet frauds perpetrated against Sweden's Nordea bank. The hacker claims responsibility for many more intrusions. "Ninety-nine percent of all bank intrusions are kept secret," he insists.
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    Rasterman on the path to Enlightenment 10/01/2007 12:00:05

    Enlightenment developer Carsten Haitzler on open source OS ideals
    Carsten Haitzler, who is perhaps better known by his alias, Rasterman, has been the lead developer for the open source desktop shell Enlightenment for the past 10 years. Since attaining a Bachelor of Computer Science from the University of New South Wales in 1997, Haitzler has built a career around his interest in graphics software, and has worked as a core developer at Red Hat and an engineer at VA Linux Systems in the U.S. and Japan.
Opinions
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    Firefox 3 First Look 19/05/2008 12:21:20

    Features are all well and good but is the browser back to being a stable, reliable partner and has it stopped snatching up memory?
    I've loved Firefox since version 0.93. It was so much better than Internet Explorer and the other alternatives that I couldn't imagine using anything else. But, then Firefox's memory leaks went from annoying me to ticking me off; I started having real stability problems with it on both Windows and Linux; and security holes started appearing far more often. I was about to switch to Safari on Windows and MacOS and Konqueror on Linux, when Mozilla got serious about not just fixing, but rebuilding Firefox. Now, Firefox 3 release candidate 1 was released early. Based on my quick look at it, I may end up sticking with Firefox after all.
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    Money-saving tips for SMBs 07/12/2007 10:30:26

    Get more bang for your technology buck.
    On the response sheets I get from those who attend the speeches I make at the ITEC conferences, "Reducing hardware and software costs" always ranks in the top third of important issues. One of my goals is to help SMBs maximize the value of technology in their business. Sometimes that means spending less, sometimes it means spending more. Let's talk about spending less today.
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    Should security modules be dynamically loadable? 01/11/2007 08:25:48

    Security modules watch the rest of the Linux system for intruders, but if they're dynamically loadable, qui custodiet ipsos custodes?
    The ever-contentious Linux Security Modules (LSM) API is being debated once again on linux-kernel, not its removal, which Linus Torvalds came down firmly against, but whether it should allow security modules to be loaded dynamically. As part of 2.6.24, Torvalds merged a patch to convert LSM into a static interface, but has indicated a willingness to revert it. The key sticking point is whether there are real security modules that require the ability to be runtime-loaded.
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    Google clause gives pause 14/09/2007 08:22:15

    Google Docs and Spreadsheets comes under fire
    For a company whose motto is "Do no evil," it's interesting how often Google's customers suspect them of it.
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    Best of open source in software development 11/09/2007 08:18:35

    InfoWorld editors and reviewers award the Best Open Source Software for the enterprise, here's what they say about software developement
    The wealth of open source software development goodies is heaven for the developer community, but it's hell on an awards committee. Considering IDEs, debuggers, defect trackers, code coverage tools, unit testers, load testers, and so on, we could have come up with more awards here than the rest of the Bossies combined. Then there were paths that could only lead to trouble. Could we really choose a best language? Or a best development platform? Could we pick Python over Perl, or Rails over Mono?
Reviews
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    First look: OpenOffice.org 3.0 developer build for Windows 29/05/2008 16:03:06

    A free office suite that’s a breeze to get going
    Open source observers can argue until the end of time over the validity of developing and enhancing free software for Windows, but the fact remains OpenOffice.org is thoroughly committed to the platform and continues to produce a top-notch, cross-platform office productivity suite that work perfectly well on Windows. In this article, we take a look at getting the latest OpenOffice.org 3.0 developer build up-and-running for Windows XP.
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    Novell hits a home run with SLED 10 16/06/2006 11:02:27

    SLED 10 gives business users new reason to consider Linux for enterprise desktops
    For the forthcoming SLED (Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop) 10, Novell went back to the drawing board to rethink what makes a good desktop. The result is extremely impressive.
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    An all-in-one method for SMBs 05/08/2005 09:47:03

    Small businesses looking to set up ship with e-mail, file and printer sharing, and a Web presence have options such as Microsoft's Small Business Server, or even Linux distributions that come with all the software you need (although setup and configuration isn't for the faint of heart).
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    An all-in-one method for SMBs 15/07/2005 11:15:43

    Small businesses looking to set up ship with e-mail, file and printer sharing, and a Web presence have options such as Microsoft's Small Business Server, or even Linux distributions that come with all the software you need (although setup and configuration isn't for the faint of heart).
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    Back up Microsoft SQL machines to Linux-based tape-controller servers 28/01/2005 10:58:17

    Users who have to support Microsoft SQL database servers, but prefer to run Linux as a data back-up/storage platform, may be interested in a new software plug-in from Arkeia.
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