Half of the disappointment concerns a popular FOSS news site, and the other is an individual who believes that Microsoft bashing needs to come to a halt and that anyone who essentially disagrees will be seen as nothing more than a conspiracy theorist. So, who is up first?
Read more »Opinion: FOSS Supporters Need to Think for Themselves.
Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Should open source cheer Gates’ swan song?
The Elvis of PC software has left the building. Bill Gates’ announcement he will no longer do CES keynotes overshadowed anything else he said, and for good reason.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Signposts of GNU/Linux Growth in 2007, Part 2
In Part One of this article we looked at the growth of GNU/Linux in several areas, including high-performance computing (supercomputers), mobile phones, desktops, miniature laptops, consoles, and set-top boxes. There is a great deal of overlap between some of these areas, but they are certainly separable.
In this concluding article we look at the growth of GNU/Linux in still more tech sectors. This ought to demonstrate the tremendous presence that GNU/Linux quietly gained throughout the year 2007.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Free software, free speech
Regular visitors of my blog know that nothing outrages me more than people who apply these guerrilla tactics. Whether it is Ian Ferguson who said that "the flaming Linux bigots should take a backseat", Mohit Joshi, who equaled GNU to communism or the more recently Bruce Byfield, who obviously couldn't take the heat anymore and decided to proclaim unilaterally that all bloggers who don't agree with him are automatically "conspiracy theorists".
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
A little respect, please!
It is quite commonplace to talk about "the" FOSS community, but like I've stated so many times, there is no such thing as "the" FOSS community. As a matter of fact, there are many communities.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
GNU Hurd, From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"GNU Hurd (usually referred to as the Hurd) is a free software computer operating system kernel, released under the GNU General Public License. It has been under development since 1990 by the GNU Project of the Free Software Foundation. It consists of a set of servers (or daemons, in Unix terminology) that work on top of a microkernel; together they form the kernel of GNU. The Hurd aims to surpass Unix kernels in functionality, security, and stability, while remaining largely compatible with them..."
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Riding the open source Storm
Open source guru Stormy Peters talks about the global initiative to count how much open source software is used by enterprise, and her upcoming keynote at Melbourne’s Linux Conference
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
OLPC: Won't miss Intel's 'half-hearted' laptop effort
Intel's resignation from the One Laptop Per Child Project's board of directors will have "no impact" on the group's operations, since the chip maker contributed little to the project since joining last year, OLPC President Walter Bender said in an interview.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
68 Linux Related Free E-books
I have decide to make a comprehensive list of Free Linux related e-books.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
A fantastic result for Inkscape with Launchpad
Mark Shuttleworth: "...A lot of my personal interest in free software is motivated by the idea that we can be more efficient if we collaborate better. If we want free software to be the norm for personal computing software, then we have to show, among other things, that the open, free software approach taps into the global talent pool in a healthier, more dynamic way than the old proprietary approach to building software does..."
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Free as in Freedom
"Joomla! is free software. Anyone can use it, modify it, add to it, study it, extend it, or patch it. Anyone can share or sell what they have done with Joomla! so long as what they distribute is also free in these same ways..."
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Conspiracy theorists and free software
No one can be involved in the free software community to any extent without stumbling across conspiracy theorists. Like the mad wife in the attic, they’re an embarrassment to the community, clinging to attitudes appropriate to the days when free software was new and vulnerable, and providing an easy means for outsiders to discredit the rest of the community.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
2007: That Was a Very Good (Linux) Year
This once I wish I could attach an audio clip to the headline, so that you could hear William Shatner singing "It Was a Very Good Year", just to get into the proper mood.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Chatting with Adrian Holovaty
"As I promised after the Avi Bryant interview, here’s a great conversation with Adrian Holovaty, well known creator of the Django web framework written in Python..."
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
On the way to Liberty
This web log entry notes the ongoing software liberation process of Scott Carpenter. Scott is still currently dependant upon some non-free programs but is learning of the ways of living in liberty.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments