Votes by Dr. Doo-lots

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Can Ubuntu save the electronic medical record ?
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Fred Trotter On Preventing An Anti-FOSS Policy In Health IT
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50 Successful Open Source Projects That Are Changing Medicine
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Science and KDE: rkward
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Getting Electronic Health Record Standards Right
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Windows in hospitals... a bad combination Made popular 3 years 17 weeks ago
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In Over My Head: Blinux
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A first look at Fedora 10
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Will open source work for nanotechnology?
1
Interoperability
3
Open-Source Thinking Revolutionizes Prosthetic Limbs
5
We didn’t land on Plymouth Rock, Plymouth Rock landed on us.
4
Getting notified when Debian repository updates
4
Torvalds: Fed up with the 'security circus'
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Open source good for security
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Top 4 Alternatives to Ubuntu Linux
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Zenwalk 5.2 GNOME Edition (beta)
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Google Gadgets for Linux
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Why do GNOME people always play the man? Made popular 3 years 43 weeks ago

Read contents from Free Software Magazine

Anybody up to writing good directory software?

Tue, 2007-02-20 11:17 — David Jonathan

Since the very beginning, directories (of any kind) have had a very central role in the internet. (I have recently grown fond of Free Web Directory. Even Slashdot can be considered a directory: a collection of great news and invaluable user-generated comments. As far as software is concerned, doing a quick search on Google about software directories will return the free (as in freedom) software directories like Savannah, SourceForge, Freshmeat and so on, followed by shareware and freeware sites such as FileBuzz, PCWin Download Center and All Freeware (great if you're looking for shareware and freeware, but definitely less comprehensive than their free-as-in-freedom counterparts).

Is better education the key to finding better software?

Sat, 2007-03-03 03:25 — Edward Russel

I read David Jonathon's article Anybody Up To Writing Good Directory Software? the other day, which got me thinking about software directories in general. As David mentioned, many of the software directories one finds when doing a quick google search are free as in beer, not as in freedom. But what interests me is the software directories that already exist, providing a combination of both free as in beer software, and open source software. Sites such as Freeware Downloads and Shareware Download don't advertise themselves as providing free as in liberty software, but each of them have a good selection of open source software available... if you know where to look.

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