Saturday | 30 August, 2008
Computerworld

Open Source: Features

Features
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    Open source: What you should learn from the French 29/08/2008 09:57:00

    With open source embraced at all levels, the real benefits of a passionate community arrive
    A decade ago, European countries leapt out of the gate to take the lead in the radical open source movement -- none more so than France -- and left US developers in the proverbial dust. Through policies and high-profile projects, the French Republic for years has been advocating for all open source all the time, in government and education.
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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.
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    10 Firefox add-ons for better browsing 27/08/2008 09:50:00

    If you love Firefox, you'll love these extensions!
    If you love Firefox, you'll love these extensions!
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    Kernel space: udev rules, but whose? 21/08/2008 12:04:00

    Jonathan Corbet on the /dev directory mess.
    Once upon a time, a Linux distribution would be installed with a /dev directory fully populated with device files. Most of them represented hardware which would never be present on the installed system, but they needed to be there just in case. Toward the end of this era, it was not uncommon to find systems with around 20,000 special files in /dev, and the number continued to grow. This scheme was unwieldy at best, and the growing number of hotpluggable devices (and devices in general) threatened to make the whole structure collapse under its own weight. Something, clearly, needed to be done.
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    Torvalds: Fed up with the 'security circus' 15/08/2008 10:25:00

    Creator of the Linux kernel explains why he finds security people to be so anathema
    Linus Torvalds, creator of the Linux kernel, says he's fed up with what he sees as a "security circus" surrounding software vulnerabilities and how they're hyped by security people.
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    CIO Reality Check: Linux Security 14/08/2008 11:37:00

    The open source community might be abuzz with security discussions, but what do the CIOs of real-world companies have to say?
    In our conversations, we spoke to Sam Lamonica, CIO of Rudolph and Sletten Construction, a general building contractor; Philipp Huber, CTO/COO of the UK based XCalibre Communications, a hosting firm; Clyde Williams, Infrastructure Systems Manager for Southeast Alabama Medical Center; and Walt Cornelison, Director of Information Technology for Tropitone Furniture, a manufacturer of high-end outdoor furniture. Here's how our conversation went:
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    Kernel space: Virus scanning API spawns security debate 14/08/2008 11:22:00

    Should Linux include a virus scanning layer?
    The TALPA malware scanning API was covered in LWN in December, 2007. Several months later, TALPA is back - in the form of a patch set posted by a Red Hat employee. The resulting discussion has certainly not been what the TALPA developers would have hoped for; it is, instead, a good example of how a potentially useful idea can be set back by poor execution and presentation to the kernel community.
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    Google's unhappy Android developers 13/08/2008 07:30:29

    Controversy around its SDK, rumors of a Symbian tie-up, and the iPhone's star power call the mobile OS into question
    For a long time, Google has led a largely blissful existence, fostering a widespread perception -- sometimes in direct contradiction to the facts -- that it can do no wrong. Yet the company's controversial Android mobile platform venture threatens to seriously dent this notion, at least with some of the people it needs most.
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    Another way of monitoring 13/08/2008 11:18:45

    Open source network monitoring software can be a viable alternative to packaged apps, says IDC
    Running a network without monitoring it is like playing with fire: Sooner or later you're bound to get burned.
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    LinuxWorld's Garage 13/08/2008 10:21:37

    From Lego robots to hammers and nails, Linux gets embedded
    From Lego robots to hammers and nails, Linux gets embedded
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    12 great apps for bridging Windows, Linux and Macs 12/08/2008 09:39:06

    Windows, Mac, and Linux -- make peace, not war.
    Blogger Ron Barrett has scoured the IT world to bring you this list of affordably priced business productivity tools that run on any desktop (many are even free). Also check out Barrett's full review of each tool in his A Better Windows World blog.
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