Sourceforge.net estimated that there are 230,000 open source projects on its site till Feb last year. Some of the projects are outdated, some of them do no not provide any support and others are in development phase. So, it is hard to find the right one for your need.
Read more »Cisco offers to open source telepresence code
Cisco has announced it has completed its acquisition of Norwegian video systems maker Tandberg and is launching a compulsory bid for the outstanding 8.9% shares it does not yet own.
Read more »Ubuntu: How to Measure Canonical’s Business Progress
No doubt, it's sometimes difficult to measure Ubuntu's business success. Canonical says Ubuntu now has about 12 million Linux users - up from an estimated 8 million users in 2007. That sounds impressive, but what does that really mean in terms of Ubuntu's market penetration, Canonical's march to profitability and Ubuntu's progress as a Linux distribution?
Read more »- Login to post comments
Alfresco Community 3.3 adds new content services
Alfresco has released version 3.3 of its open source enterprise content management system, adding a range of content services for developers, such as support for IBM Lotus Social and a preview of Google Docs integration
Read more »- Login to post comments
Talend: New funds, new version
The data integration specialist has updated its data management software to version 4.0. In a further financing round, funds of $8 million have been injected into the company
Read more »- Login to post comments
London Stock Exchange readies Turquoise for big-bang Linux migration
Turquoise, the London Stock Exchange's large volume 'dark pool' trading platform, will go live on a new Linux-based platform in August or September.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Open source in a new light
So you've got to cut costs, but you're not a manager. You're a software developer, or a power user, or just someone who needs to keep the bottom line healthy enough to support your salary. These are ideal situations for introducing open source software solutions into your environment.
Read more »Red Hat announces beta of Enterprise Linux 6
LEADING US LINUX VENDOR Red Hat has given the public a first look at the next version of its Enterprise Linux distribution.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Novell and IBM team up on software appliances
IBM is to use Novell SUSE powered software appliances to deliver some of its range of applications to customers
Read more »- Login to post comments
Open source training more attractive
Schools are heeding the call from organizations seeking IT personnel skilled in open source, but such efforts must involve broader industry participation and greater integration across the curriculum, according to an analyst.
Read more »- Login to post comments
IBM Appliances, Powered By Novell
When we hear the word "appliances", we tend to think of things in the kitchen — blenders, mixers, juicers, espresso machines. When IBM thinks of appliances, however, they think of something else: Quick and easy software stacks, ready to run right out of the box.
Read more »Inside Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0 Beta
New features in the distro's latest version will make it possible to run heavy I/O servers, such as database servers, in a virtual machine under Linux, company says.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Four Considerations When Using Open Source in Production
IT staff and developers often overlook non-technical considerations that are critical when running open source on a production system.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Red Hat announces Enterprise Linux 6 Beta Availability
Red Hat touts version 6 as introducing "as many features as possible to reduce reliance on physical hardware." Enterprise Linux is supported for seven years after release, so this will be the dominant version for the next 10 years. Support for RHEL5 ends in March 2014.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Oracle starts to monetize Free Software, is it wrong?
According to a recent tweet, Oracle (the company which recently acquired Sun Microsystems) has started to charge a license fee for its popular open office compatibility plug-in for Microsoft Office. Is this a signal for other open source and free software vendors to start charging for commercially valuable applications?
Read more »- Login to post comments


