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Archive for August, 2008

LXer Weekly Roundup for 31-Aug-2008

by The Uni-Hacker on Aug.31, 2008, under Misc

LXer Feature: 31-Aug-2008

Happy Labor Day, hopefully you have an extra day off this weekend to relax and catch up on things, thus I present this week’s LXer Roundup for your reading pleasure. This week we have 5 unpopular desktop environments, 25 killer Linux applications, 10 must have cheat sheets for those of you who are low on mental “RAM” (I know, its a groaner, but its all mine), in a new twist to the Apple-Psystar saga, Psystar claims they are going to counter sue Apple claiming anticompetitive business practices. A computer on the International Space Station gets infected with a ‘worm’ (guess what OS it was running?), Carla Schroder asks the question “Does attracting hordes of Windows users to your FOSS project benefit your project, or help the advancement of FOSS?” and to wrap things up I have a couple pieces of FUD I came across.

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How To Get The Younger Generation Into Linux

by The Uni-Hacker on Aug.31, 2008, under Misc

A while ago, Apple sold heavily discounted Macs to schools, hoping to get students to choose the Mac. Obviously, the same technique will not work for Linux, but it is important to get students interested in Linux.

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Running gOS 3 Beta from USB stick

by The Uni-Hacker on Aug.31, 2008, under Misc

The new distribution gOS 3 Gadgets BETA is based on Ubuntu 8.04.1 and is able to interact with Google Documents, Calendar and Mail. The newest release of WINE 1.0 is included to now support thousands of Windows software. The new operation system will also be loaded with Lightweight X Desktop Environment (LXDE) and other Google software for Linux to improve the user experience. This workshop describes how to install and run the new software from an USB stick.

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What if copyright didn’t apply to binary executables?

by The Uni-Hacker on Aug.31, 2008, under Misc

By rights, copyright really shouldn’t apply to binary executables, because they are purely “functional” (not “expressive”) works. The decision to extend copyright to binaries was an economically-motivated anomaly, and that choice has some counter-intuitive and detrimental side-effects. What would things in the free software world look like if the courts had decided otherwise? For one thing, the implementation of copyleft would have to be completely different. Hypothetical? Academic? Not if you’re a hardware developer! Because this is exactly what the law does look like for designs for physical hardware (where the product is not protected by copyright).

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Linux Space Cube ready for blast-off

by The Uni-Hacker on Aug.31, 2008, under Misc

Japanese manufacturer Shimafuji is readying a two-inch cubed computer that runs Red Hat Linux on 1GB of flash. The Space Cube is equipped with a MIPS-based NEC VR5701 processor, 64MB RAM, and numerous I/O connections, including a Firewire-like "SpaceWire" port designed for spaceflight.

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Charity Fundraising: Going Virtual

by The Uni-Hacker on Aug.31, 2008, under Misc

Fayandria Foley helped reel in big bucks in July with one of the year’s most curious fundraisers. She helped pull together an American Cancer Society Relay for Life, which is typically a walkathon locally. More than 2,000 showed up — or didn’t, actually. Everyone at Foley’s relay stayed home to participate.

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