I grew up with Microsoft operating systems. I’ve been through MS-DOS 5.0, Win 3.1, Windows 95, 98, Millenium Edition, NT 4.0, 2000, and XP. Notice how I stopped there. After over a decade of Windows, I decided to give Ubuntu a try and now have no reason to install Vista. Here are nine reasons why I chose Ubuntu:
Read more »Some Reasons Why I Choose Ubuntu over Windows
Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
In the trenches with...Brent Fox of Red Hat
The Open Road caught up with Brent to discover how support at Red Hat supports its customers, and how its model differs from that of other vendors.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Linux definitely has a place in education
Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Running from Open Source: or how my ’school’ is avoiding Open Office implementation
I have a real open source crisis at my hands. My ’school’ IT department has been pushing for the implementation of Microsoft Office 2007 in our 60 machines. The funny thing is, since our IT head is also our supplier, he too is pushing for this because he probably gets a commission. I’m the only one who has offered an alternative, Open Office, naturally.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
BMC: Will Hurley speaks
I've been talking the last few days with Oracle, Novell, and SAIC about how open source figures into their product plans and, in SAIC's case, how open source affects the company's services strategy.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
A face-to-face conversation with Max Spevack of Fedora
Alolita Sharma and Robert Adkins met up with Max Spevack, chairman of the Fedora project, at the Red Hat Summit in San Diego to talk about all things Fedora and the road ahead.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Dell warns of Vista upgrade challenges
Dell has taken the unusual step--for a PC vendor of its size--of toning down its sales pitch for Microsoft's Vista operating system and warning businesses of the migration challenges that lie ahead for them.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Microsoft's Plot To Kill Linux Busted
Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Will Open Source Developers be Well Paid?
[Dirk Riehle is] the author of The Economic Motivation of Open Source Software, a scholarly article that describes significant shifts in the software business. Datamation spoke with him about how these shifts are shaping the pay levels of open source developers.
Read more »- Login to post comments
Are you the Linux type?
In just about any occupation there are several different types of people. In fact the psychiatrists have them all broken down into nice little boxes. I am no psychiatrist but a student of life and in my studies I have noticed that there appears to be some traits that separate those that chose a particular operating system.
Read more »Ex-HPer Says HP, IBM, Others Susceptible To Open Source
Nora Denzel says open-source software is changing the landscape of an industry led by Hewlett-Packard and IBM.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Peace, Love and Penguins? Well ...
Somehow the Free and Open Source software world acquired this silly image of happy hippies living in perfect harmony, altruistically cranking out awesome code for the betterment of humankind. As if!
Read more »Windows losing ground with US developers
And finally for some good news... :-) "Microsoft's Windows platform is losing traction with application developers in North America, according to a survey by Evans Data."
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Project Gutenberg
Free as in, well, free. At least, that’s what the folks at Project Gutenberg believe. They work hard to make as many literary (in a very broad sense of the term) works as possible available in a variety of formats, languages, and media to as many people as possible.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments
Does Microsoft have nowhere to run?
The more I think about Microsoft, the more I realise that they are, possibly for the first time, seriously cornered (or surrounded, depending on how you want to see it). A little history will clarify why I think so - and why I think that this might really be the beginning of the end for Microsoft.
Read more »Category: Community Tags:
- Login to post comments