After a $1.5 million
angel round, Desktone,
which was started in 2006
by Eric Pulier, who also
started SOA Software, US
Interactive and IVT,
picked up $17 million in
first-round funding about
a year ago from Highland
Capital Partners,
SoftBank Capital, Citrix
Systems and the
China-based Tangee
International. SoftBank
as well as Deutsche
Telekom could become
service providers. Ruda
says the brains behind
the technology is Paul
Gaffney, the former CIO
of Staples. The company
has maybe 40 people, more
than half of them in
Shanghai doing
development, which
explains Tangee's
involvement.
In order to describe
itself as an 'open
source' company, need a
company merely be 'a
company that will help
you make the switch to
open source in your
company' - or does it
have to be one that lets
users feely download,
compile, and use the
software in question?
Where is the dividing
line? How open is 'open'?
At Enterprise Open Source
Magazine we contacted a
range of FOSS luminaries
for their take on the
issue.
John C Dvorak's PC
Magazine article called
'How to Kill Linux,'
introduced the world to
what he called 'the
lopped-off head approach'
- the head being that of
Linux, and the beheader
being Microsoft.
This year it looks
certain that a new
participation record will
be set, more than 16,000
votes have already been
recorded, as more than
20,000 SYS-CON Media
readers are estimated to
cast their votes in this
year's Readers' Choice
Awards.
Mandriva, formerly known
as Mandrakesoft, the
publisher of the popular
Mandriva Linux
distribution, has
announced an agreement to
purchase several assets
from Lycoris, a major
North American Linux
distribution for home
users.
EnterpriseDB, based in
Edison, New Jersey, has
announced what it calls
an 'enterprise class'
open-source database
strategy that leverages
PostgreSQL with Oracle
compatibility. In an
exclusive SYS-CON.TV
interview, Andy Astor,
co-founder and CEO said
the company will offer
'enterprise class'
functionality and
capability with its
EnterpriseDB (EDB)
software, which is
available immediately for
download.
The Cuban government
daily 'Juventud Rebelde'
is reporting that Cuba,
which already has 1500
computers using Linux, is
working on a legal
framework that would
allow the replacement of
the Windows system
throughout the Cuban
government.
'Commit reporting has
been done before,' Micah
Dowty tells LinuxWorld
Magazine's founding
editor Alan Williamson in
this exclusive interview
at the recent Open Source
Business Conference in
San Francisco, 'but one
of the things that makes
CIA really unique is that
it brings projects
together into a larger
community.' There are
several large projects
that are making use of
CIA and showing their
support by linking to the
web interface, Dowty
says. Gaim, AnhkSVN,
Enlightenment, Gentoo,
Adium, and Beagle are
just a few of the larger
projects that use CIA and
link to it prominently on
their web sites.
Yakov Fain reaches Lesson
11 in his popular 'Java
basics' series. This time
he deals with how and why
Java programmers working
on large projects that
have lots of classes
usually organize them in
different packages; and
explores the new element
introduced in Java 5.0
called static imports.
When I was a kid, all I
wanted to be was a rock
star. I wanted to play
guitar, get up on stage,
and have everyone scream
while I cranked out some
hard rockin' tune. I
wanted to see lighters
held up in the crowd as I
finished my last set -
dripping with sweat,
completely tired, and no
energy left. Leave it all
on the stage - that's
what I wanted. My friends
all felt the same - we
talked about it all the
time.
At the Open Source
Business Conference
taking place today in San
Francisco, Sun's
President and COO,
Jonathan Schwartz
emphasized that 'free'
equates not to 'no
revenue' but instead to
'more opportunity to
create revenue.'
Now that Yahoo! Mail has
matched the Gmail offer
of 1GB storage to its
free e-mail customers,
Google is doing the
obvious thing and pulling
ahead again, reopening
'the one-gig gap' between
its Gmail service and
all-comers.
The emergence of
commodity supercomputing
has driven clusters based
on the Linux operating
system into engineering
and scientific research
organizations that
couldn't afford their own
supercomputing resources
before. But Linux
clusters have the
potential to become a hot
topic in traditional
information technology
circles as well. The
coming year may well be
the technology tipping
point when Linux cluster
technology escapes its
current home in research
organizations and
inhabits the traditional
data center.
The Alexis de Toqueville
Institution (ADTI), which
becamse infamous last
year for spuriously
claiming that Linus
Torvalds wasn't the true
father of the Linux
Kernel, is back with a
report certain to raise
hackles: it will argue
that open-source software
is on an inevitable
collision course with
standard intellectual
property law.
Richard Stallman,
President of the Free
Software Foundation,
contends that the FSF's
views have been
misrepresented elsewhere
by Maureen O'Gara and
hastens to set the record
straight: 'The idea that
the GNU General Public
License would never stand
up in court is sheer
fantasy,' he writes. 'The
GNU GPL stood up in
court,' he adds - citing
a case involving Harald
Welte, developer of
netfilter.
Google yesterday launched
Code.google.com, a site
for external developers
interested in
Google-related
development. 'It's where
we'll publish free source
code and lists of our API
services,' Google said as
it unveiled the site,
adding: 'We really care
about free and open
source software (F/OSS)
at Google, and this site
is one aspect of that
affection.'
Sun is creating three new
licenses for Java.
Henceforth there will be
a Java Research Licence,
a Java Distribution
License, and a Java
Internal Use License.
'Web services is what
enabled eBay to become
what it is today,' said
Matt Ackley, as he opened
Web Services Edge 2005 -
International Conference
& Expo with a
tremendously well
attended keynote devoted
to the role of Web
services in e-commerce
called 'Enabling the
Level Playing Field.'
View the keynote in full
on SYS-CON.TV
(http://sys-con.tv).
'We do plan to ease the
commercial use
restrictions on the Java
source code, but I will
not comment any further
on that,' said Sun's Matt
Thompson last week, in a
Technical Exchange panel
discussion called
'Empowering Software R&D
with Open Communities'
held in the Hyatt Regency
Harbor Room at the
EclipseCon 2005
conference.
'Linus has this bad habit
of fixing security holes
quietly,' admitted kernel
maintainer Alan Cox
during a talk given in
Brussels last week during
this year's FOSDEM (Free
& Open Source Software
Developer's European
Meeting).
Saying that its support
of the open source
scripting language PHP
does not reflect any
dissatisfaction with
Java, IBM is partnering
with Zend Technologies to
create Zend Core, a
bundling of IBM's
Cloudscape database based
on Apache Software
Foundation Derby and
Zend's open source PHP
environment.
Have you ever needed to
set up a firewall in a
network without anyone
knowing it was there or
so that it wouldn't
require you to change
your network? Welcome to
the world of stealth
firewalling. We dedicated
one chapter in our book,
Troubleshooting Linux
Firewalls, to it but
honestly the topic has so
many uses, to do it
justice it really needs
its own book (or books!).
Starting yesterday, stock
of The SCO Group has
started trading under the
symbol SCOXE instead of
SCOX - the extra 'E'
being a flag to the world
that Nasdaq has served
notice on SCO that it is
not in compliance with
the exchange's listing
requirements having
failed to file its annual
report with the SEC.
This year it looks
certain that a new
participation record will
be set, as more than
4,000 votes have already
been recorded in just the
first seven days of
voting, as more than
50,000 SYS-CON Media
readers are estimated to
cast their votes in this
year's Readers' Choice
Awards. Highlights after
just one week's voting
are as follows.
Was Carly Fiorina fired
today because she was a
bad CEO or because she
was a woman? Should HP
have hired someone from
the inside? How about
that Compaq merger? Who
should the new CEO be?
Take the opportunity to
participate in Roger
Strukhoff's 'instant
survey' that asks these
questions after Fiorina's
6-year reign was brought
to an abrupt end this
morning.
Service Oriented
Architecture (SOA) has
quickly taken centre
stage as the primary
development style of the
next decade and beyond.
Businesses of all types
are preparing for the SOA
revolution that promises
consistency of process,
reduction in duplicate
work, ease of
maintenance, service
reusability and broad
interoperability.
If you have ever met
Robin Miller or 'Roblimo'
as he prefers to be
called, you immediately
realize that he's one of
the endearing
'characters' that make
Linux colorful. Roblimo
is editor-in-chief for
the Open Source
Technology Group, which
includes Linux.com,
slashdot.org, and
SourceForge.net, and is
the author of the Online
Rules of Successful
Companies (FT Prentice
Hall).
Macromedia (Nasdaq: MACR)
today announced the
immediate availability of
Macromedia ColdFusion MX
7, previously code-named
'Blackstone,' the
fastest, easiest way to
build and deploy powerful
Internet applications.
Developers are already
embracing the latest
version of the ColdFusion
application server, and
are now solving
development challenges
with new printable web
content, rich forms, more
flexible deployment
options, and integrated,
structured business
reporting. ColdFusion MX
7 also provides new
cost-effective and
powerful innovations to
interact with mobile
phones using short
message service (SMS)
text messaging, which
allows developers to
create a new class of
Internet applications for
the mobile world.
On February 16th at Web
Services Edge 2005 in
Boston, Mass., Mr.
Farquharson will present
the topic: 'B2B Policy
Enforcement: The Third
Rail of SOA
Implementation.' In this
presentation he will
discuss XML Virtual
Private Networks (XML
VPNs) and their potential
to mitigate security
policy enforcement issues
in B2B SOA.
SYS-CON Media, the
world's leading
i-technology media
company, announced that
its 2005 Readers' Choice
Awards polls opened
today, February 1, 2005,
and will remain open for
six months, until July
31, 2005. More than
50,000 readers are
expected to cast their
votes to select the best
software products and
services of the year for
Java, Linux, Web
Services, XML, Microsoft
.NET, ColdFusion and
Macromedia MX.
What happens when you
turn a perfectly good
Apple PowerBook into a
tri-boot system with Mac
OS X, Yellow Dog Linux,
and Ubuntu Linux? Read on
to find out.
What does Apple have in
common with Google, Ikea,
Starbucks, and Al
Jazeera? Answer: it has
been rated one of the
'most influential brands
of 2004' in a survey of
about 2,000 advertising
executives, brand
managers and academics,
conducted by the online
magazine, Brandchannel.
In fact, Apple came in at
No. 1 - edging out
Google, that took the top
slot in the same survey
one year ago.
The Public Patent
Foundation (PUBPAT)
yesterday sent Sun
Microsystems Chairman and
CEO, Scott McNealy, an
open letter about the
announcement earlier this
week that Sun was
granting the open source
software community access
to more than 1,600
patents. PUBPAT's
letter, written by
Executive Director, Dan
Ravicher, told McNealy
that in its view there
are serious questions
about what Sun really
means to do with its
patent grant and that
'free and open source
software developers need
clarification in order to
get a handle on when Sun
can and cannot come after
them for patent
infringement.'
An 'Internet advertising
agency' last November
successfully registered
the domain name
OpenJava.org, leading to
speculation that Sun has
no immediate plans to
follow up on its
OpenSolaris.org strategy
with a similar
open-sourcing of Java.
Open source certainly now
is 'good enough' for the
needs of most end users
who merely use their
computers for simple
office productivity work,
Webbing, and e-mailing.
As any Tux-lover can tell
you, a good case can be
made that open source
desktop offerings can
handle those basic jobs
better than the products
of the desktop market
leader. So it would
appear that world
domination is right
around the corner.
SYS-CON Media
(www.sys-con.com), the
world's leading
i-technology media
company, announced today
that SYS-CON.TV
(www.sys-con.tv), the
first streaming live
i-technology television
is scheduled to debut on
February 15, 2005 to
coincide with the first
day of the upcoming Web
Services Edge 2005 East -
International Web
Services Conference Expo.
Sun Microsystems will be
in Boston on February
14-17 at the LinuxWorld
Conference & Expo 2005,
and the Web Services Edge
Conference 2005 East at
the Hynes Convention
Center. You'll have the
opportunity to learn more
about Sun's work in the
Linux and open source
communities and meet with
key executives.
'If Solaris is from
Venus, and Linux is from
Mars,' wrote HP's Linux
VP in his blog, adding -
in a barb at Sun
Microsystems: 'Venus is
way too close to the
Sun.' It drew a heated
reply on behalf of the
Solaris open source
community. With the CDDL
release of Solaris now a
reality, we revisit the
discussion.
I took the advice of a
friend of mine and
steered clear of the
'normal' movie theaters
and went a little out of
the way to go to a DLP
movie theater. The
experience
Canonical CEO Mark
Shuttleworth has been
telling Reuters that Sun
is in the process of
certifying Ubuntu on some
of its low-end and
mid-size hardware. The
code it's
Because AJAX moves so
much application logic
from the server to the
client, it forces many
developers to master a
wider range of web
technologies than ever
before. T
I installed Ubuntu on the
Toshiba laptop. Ubuntu
installed in 15 minutes -
49 for Windows XP and 125
for Windows Vista.
Ubuntu's desktop came
right up. I opened the
Zend has decided, and I
think this is a great
idea, to join in with the
Eclipse community that
was founded in large part
by IBM a number of years
ago. The values tha