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15th Oct 2006
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Linux and Open Source News for 14th October 2006

Pretoria Linux Distributors

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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: AliXe Size: 252.21 MB Status: 1 seeders and no leecher Added: 2006-10-14 23:46:40


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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: NetBSD Size: 207.72 MB Status: 1 seeders and no leecher Added: 2006-10-14 17:41:48


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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: Linux Live CDs Size: 389.86 MB Status: 1 seeders and 1 leechers Added: 2006-10-14 13:43:30


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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: FreeSBIE Size: 547.99 MB Status: 24 seeders and 9 leechers Added: 2006-10-14 08:55:34


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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: Underground Size: 645.20 MB Status: 44 seeders and 30 leechers Added: 2006-10-14 08:36:52


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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: Linux Software Size: 33.62 MB Status: 8 seeders and 4 leechers Added: 2006-10-14 06:33:10


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Source: LinuxTracker.org

Category: Linux Software Size: 21.35 MB Status: 2 seeders and no leecher Added: 2006-10-14 06:32:01



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Source: Linux Today

This may come as a shock to some, but mobile Linux is not really a mobile operating system


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Source: Linux Today

I don't understand why people keep assigning blame on ReiserFS when they lose data because of faulty hardware


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Source: Linux Today

Shares of Red Hat Inc., the largest distributor of the Linux operating system, tumbled more than 7 percent Friday after a Wall Street analyst suggested that Oracle Corp. may soon introduce its own Linux products


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Source: Linux Today

GOSCON: "The first day's agenda covered a full range of topics, from the philosophical bedrock of the open source movement down to the hard realities of government procurement "


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Source: Linux Today

Now, with the impending arrival of the Firefox 2.0 browser, you can expect Firefox to gain even more share and make it even more difficult for Microsoft to call the shots, technology-wise, on the Web


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Source: Linux Today

I recently read an article in the 'mainstream' media that gave me pause. The author made an assertion that the current trend towards Open Source might just be a passing fad


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Source: Linux Today

What will happen AFTER the year of Linux on the desktop ?



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Source: Slashdot: Linux

Several readers wrote to alert us to the inclusion of real-time features in the mainline Linux kernel starting with version 2.6.18. (Linus Torvalds had announced 2.6.18 on September 19.) Basic real-time support is now mainline. This will ease the job of developers of embedded Linux applications, who for years have been maintaining real-time patch sets outside of the mainline kernel. The announcement was made by TimeSys Corp., a provider of developer services. Much of the work was done by Thomas Gleixner at TimeSys and Ingo Molnar at Red Hat.


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Source: Slashdot: Linux

An anonymous reader writes "Looks like the next version of the venerable Linux 'ext' filesystem is just around the corner. Andrew Morton has added an early version of ext4 to his 2.6.19-rc1-mm1 tree, enabling Linux to support storage volumes up to 1020 petabytes in size, and to write files in 'extents,' or contiguous, reserved areas. According to an article at Linux-Watch, ext4 will be ready for production use within six to nine months, if all goes well. On the downside, the new ext4 filesystem will offer only limited backward compatibility with ext3-aware Linux kernels."


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Source: Slashdot: Linux

bigsmoke writes "My buddy Halfgaar finally got sick of all the helpful users on forums and mailing lists who keep suggesting backup methods and strategies to others which simply don't, won't and can't work. According to him, this indicates that most of the backups made by *nix users simply won't help you recover, while you'd think that disaster recovery is the whole point of doing backups. So, now he explains to the world once and for all what's involved in backing up *nix systems."


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Source: Slashdot: Linux

engtech writes, "There's been some hype about the Debian fork of FireFox called IceWeasel. Politics aside, this is a bad idea because it fragments the user base, divides the focus, and opens the path for Microsoft and Internet Explorer 7 to regain marketshare."


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Source: Slashdot: Linux

lisah writes "Just two months after its last update, KDE has released a new maintenance and bugfix update. KDE 3.5.5 boasts over 1,200 changes including speed improvements to KHTML, an update of Kopete 0.12.3, support for Adium themes, and improved support for Yahoo! and Jabber IM protocols. KDE 3.5.5 also now offers extensive support for over 65 languages. Just a day after the release of 3.5.5, developers say they are already looking toward the release of KDE4, which will include improvements in multimedia, hardware integration, and more." (Linux.com and Slashdot are both part of OSTG.)


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Source: Slashdot: Linux

lisah writes "With the announcement of Hans Reiser's arrest this week, many people have been wondering what this will mean for his company, Namesys, and the future of his filesystem work. According to a report at Linux.com, employees at Namesys are circling their wagons and plan to continue working on the project 'in the short term.' One employee admits, 'we are rather shaken and stressed at the moment, although I cannot say we didn't see it coming.'"


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Source: Slashdot: Linux

An anonymous reader writes "Today OSDL and freedesktop.org announced the release of Portland 1.0, a set of common interfaces for GNOME and KDE. From the article: 'Specifically, these tools make installing and uninstalling menus, icons, and icon-resources easier for developers. They also can obtain the system's settings on how to handle different file types, and program access to email, the root account, preferred applications, and the screensaver. There's nothing new in this kind of functionality. What is new is that developers can use these regardless of which desktop environment -- KDE or GNOME -- they're targeting.'"



Updated: Sun Oct 15 23:55:03 2006


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