Saturday | 10 January, 2009
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Opinions

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    Countdown to IPv6 - it’s time to plan for migration 15/12/2008 10:30:00

    While it offers many benefits, there are a few issues to note when planning for IPv6
    Questions surrounding Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) have been debated for the past decade, beginning with when and why to deploy. The network address space problem on the Internet, which IPv6 is expected to solve, also has been disquieting for organisations planning ahead for their future network growth.
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    Fedora turns 10 09/12/2008 08:29:00

    Red Hat's open source standard bearer and mineshaft canary is still everything to every Linux power user
    There comes a point in the life of any hard-core Linux user when the idea of digging about to find yet another obscure piece of software, compiling the code, and integrating it into your daily routine just seems annoying, not compelling. This is where Fedora comes through. Because more of the popular and necessary packages "just work" with Fedora, less time is burned spinning wheels and more time is available for productive tasks.
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    Open source is dying -- or maybe it isn't 05/12/2008 11:42:00

    The open source model is broken. Fighting Microsoft was a big mistake. And, yes, open source is the key to a better future.
    Put three geeks in a room and it won't take long to start an argument. Well, analyst Dennis Byron, veteran open source exec Stuart Cohen, and ex-Microsoft developer Keith Curtis weren't exactly in the same room, but all three have provocative opinions about the future of software in general and of open source in particular.
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    Microsoft's secret weapon against Google 28/10/2008 08:39:00

    If Microsoft wants to eat into Google's share of the search market, there's only one thing it can do: Build better search.
    With the first public alpha release of Windows 7 due Monday at the Microsoft PDC2008 conference, the outline of the new operating system is taking shape. What you won't see when that alpha comes out is the way that Microsoft will try to use Windows 7 as a Trojan horse in its war against Google.
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    Nokia goes after Google with open-source Symbian 24/10/2008 12:51:00

    The competition to gain our hearts and money in exchange for a mobile phone just got hotter
    Nokia has announced its Symbian mobile operating system will join the likes of Android and will become an open source operating system. The announcement was made Tuesday at the Smartphone Show in London and is seen as a bid to maintain and possibly grow its developer base. This move comes at the same time Google makes its Android source code available to developers. The Nokia news contradicts previous reports on Nokia adopting Android OS.
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    High-performance nonsense 14/10/2008 09:05:00

    For the fastest and most reliable high-end computing for your enterprise, will your operating system be 1) Linux, 2) Solaris, 3) OpenVMS or 4) Windows?
    Quiz time. Get out your No. 2 computers and answer the following question: For the fastest and most reliable high-end computing for your enterprise, will your operating system be 1) Linux, 2) Solaris, 3) OpenVMS or 4) Windows?
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    Partially disclosing vulnerabilities does no one any good 30/09/2008 12:00:00

    Partially disclosing vulnerabilities and building up hype before disclosing full details appears to be on the increase. Only problem is that it isn't doing anyone any good.
    What if I was to tell you that I have a secret that could end the Internet as you know it? What if I was only going to tell you at a fee-based conference once speculation had gone on for a month or more? How would you respond to that?
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    Google has gone and redefined 'beta' 30/09/2008 10:56:00

    22 out of Google's 49 products are in beta, including such established stalwarts as Gmail, Google Docs and Google Finance.
    The question of why so many Google products are classified "beta" -- and classified thusly for so long -- has knocked around the tech press for some time. However, no one really seemed to know the answer, at least no one outside of Google.
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    5 reasons why the Android phone isn't game-changing 24/09/2008 09:54:00

    An impressive open-source base phone, but won't become game-changing until another carrier starts to support the device
    T-Mobile, HTC and Google launched the "world's first Android-powered mobile phone" today and proudly announced that this phone was going to be "game-changing". But after reading details on the phone, the service and some of the new applications, I'm left wondering where the game is actually changing.
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    The benefits of an open-source SOA 11/09/2008 11:27:00

    Service-oriented architectures are helping companies do everything from automate business processes to increase agility, but implementing the technology is not necessarily forthright.
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    Was MythBuster's RFID tale only a myth? 05/09/2008 10:07:00

    Was it industry pressure, protection of advertising revenue, or a simple storyline change that saw the RFID segment pulled from Mythbuster's schedule?
    It all started when Adam Savage of MythBusters fame told a convention audience that legal bullies from the credit card industry had cowed Discovery Channel into scotching an episode of the show that was to have taken on RFID.
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    Zoho adds Google Docs-like file management 05/09/2008 08:39:00

    Zoho finally adds a central document management page similar to Google Docs start page.
    Zoho has finally added a central document management page called Zoho Docs to tie together its many useful online apps. The clean-looking, functional page looks much like the Google Docs start page, with a folder view on the left and all files - spreadsheets, documents, presentations, etc. - listed on the right.
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    Wider implications of the Red Hat breach 29/08/2008 09:11:00

    Red Hat's recent server breach isn't the first time that a Linux distribution has been targeted by attackers, but it could be one of the most important attacks in terms of the recovery and mitigation processes.
    Reports of data losses and system breaches are almost becoming passe but from time to time events happen that take on a life of their own and have effects far beyond what the initial breach would normally represent.
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    Grokking SCO's demise 18/08/2007 16:02:00

    Groklaw key to SCO's demise.
    The SCO Group 's US$5 billion threat against Linux is effectively finished. On Friday, Aug. 10, U.S. District Judge Dale Kimball ruled that SCO doesn't actually own the copyrights that it was using to threaten -- and in some cases, sue -- Linux users.
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    Why FOSS is still so unusable 13/08/2008 10:48:03

    Randall Kennedy examines why the FOSS community doesn't seem to care whether you find any value in its projects
    I love lampooning the FOSS community. These self-righteous cyber-hippies are almost always good for a blog entry or two per month. And because many of them can't resist airing their own community's dirty laundry, I have no shortage of story ideas to choose from.
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