Few presentations at conferences in the coming years will manage to combine the intellectual depth and delivery skills shown by Eben Moglen in this penetrating analysis of privacy and technology. Moglen poses an important question; namely, what will be the most successful intelligence organizations of the 21st century?
Read more »Freedom businesses protect privacy
Category: Philosophy Tags:
Screenshot Tour of KDE 4.4
Earlier, the KDE team had announced the availability of version 4.4 of the popular desktop environment, KDE. I’d been running the RC2 version of KDE 4.4 since it was made available. And today I’ve upgraded to the release version. Here are some screenshots:
Read more »Category: End User Tags:
- Login to post comments
Shuttleworth: “If Windows API Becomes the Default on Linux Then What is the Point of Linux?”
Mr. Shuttleworth is a very clever guy. So why does he keep the Windows API (Mono) inside Ubuntu GNU/Linux?
Read more »Category: Opposition Tags:
- Login to post comments
Attacking GNU/Linux Using “Donations”
Microsoft - like Bill Gates - is giving presents with no physical value in order to suppress and reduce competition in different areas
Read more »Category: Opposition Tags:
- Login to post comments
FSF Smears
Mac blogger Ronald Carlson and IDG write about the FSF and the former (at the least) associates the messenger rather than the message with controversial neighbourhood
Read more »Category: Opposition Tags:
- Login to post comments
Ars Technica Guide to Virtualization: Part I
Fast-forward to 2008, and virtualization has gone from a solution in search of a problem, to an explosive market with an array of real implementations on offer, to a word that's often mentioned in the same sentence with terms like "shakeout" and "consolidation." But whatever the state of "virtualization" as a buzzword, virtualization as a technology is definitely here to stay.
Read more »Category: High End Tags:
- Login to post comments
Mnesia: A Distributed DBMS Rooted in Concurrency
The story of how Mnesia got its name is probably apocryphal, but legend has it that the original name was Amnesia until an Ericsson executive declared that a database couldn't be called something associated with forgetting.
Read more »Category: High End Tags:
- Login to post comments
OpenOffice BACK In Ubuntu NE After User Outcry
The community outcry over the removal of OpenOffice from Ubuntu Netbook Edition has seen developers reaching for a rethink over the controversial decision.
Read more »Category: End User Tags:
- Login to post comments
The Bizarre Cathedral - 67
Latest from the Bizarre Cathedral comic strip by merc & crimperman
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Firefogg: Transcoding videos to open web standards with Mozilla Firefox
GNU/Linux has never been short of audio and video players, but they live in a world of multiple codecs, chief culprit amongst them being MP3, AAC, WMA and (Adobe) Flash. I say "culprits" because they are not free and open codecs. They are encumbered by patents; most websites with embedded audio/video use them and most of the people who view them are also using other patented software: Windows.
Read more »OpenOffice.org 3.2.0 officially released today
At the start of its tenth anniversary year, and with over three hundred million downloads recorded in total, the OpenOffice.org Community today announced the release of the latest version of its personal productivity suite, OpenOffice.org 3.2.
Read more »Category: End User Tags:
- Login to post comments
Linux Mint 8 Fluxbox Community Edition is out!
I’ve been following the development of this for some time, being a longtime Fluxbox enthusiast, and a relatively recent Linux Mint convert. This combines two of my favorite things in the Linux world, Fluxbox and Mint!
According to the official announcement:
Read more »What Matters to Open Source: Licensing or Community?
"I have come to believe that a license alone is neither a secret to success nor an absolution of sin." Michael Tiemann President of the Open Source Initiative
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Fully Free GNU/Linux Presentation
As planned, I did my talk about the thriving fully free GNU/Linux distribution movement at yesterday’s FSFE Berlin Fellowship meeting. I started with the basics of the Free Software ideal, moved on to the problematic issues concerning mainstream GNU/Linux distributions such as Ubuntu and Debian and then discussed the solutions to these problems.
Read more »Introducing Shaman, a new universal package management frontend
yes, you can shiver at the title: we have (are still, actually) done a new package management frontend. Why? Because KDE missed a great one.
Read more »Category: End User Tags:
- Login to post comments
Read contents from Free Software Magazine
Anybody up to writing good directory software?
Tue, 2007-02-20 11:17 — David JonathanFrom the very start, directories have served a very useful purpose on the Internet. (One I find useful for example is Free Web Directory). News sites can also be considered directories: they index and categorize news stories! What about categorizing software? In the open source world you get Savannah, SourceForge, Freshmeat; there are still, believe it or not, shareware and freeware directories like FileBuzz, PCWin Download Center and Freeware Downloads (although you need to be careful, as they are not like their free-as-in-freedom counterparts).
Is better education the key to finding better software?
Sat, 2007-03-03 03:25 — Edward RusselAbout Jonathon's article Anybody Up To Writing Good Directory Software?, it's clear that the topic of software directories is very hot. Most of what you find on Google, however, are not pointing to free and open soruce software -- or worse, they mix the two. Examples of such sites are Freeware Downloads and Shareware Download, which simply don't focus on "free as in freedom", and still can be used as good free software directories.





