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Linux answer to digital divide: protestors

Author: JT Smith

TechWeb is reporting on a small protest outside a conference about the digital divide, saying Linux is the solution.

Category:

  • Linux

Microsoft defectors gain momentum

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet is reporting on a trend of Microsoft engineers defecting to startups, often in competition with the software giant.

Category:

  • Open Source

Free Internet access not profitable: failed ISP

Author: JT Smith

Australian IT tells of Free Net shutting down due to lack of profitability, and the lack of viability of ad-based ISPs.

Success without the degree

Author: JT Smith

Computer News Daily discusses the success of various industry executives after dropping out of University.

Category:

  • Open Source

Why GNU/Linux?

Author: JT Smith

What’s in a name? By:- Richard Stallman. Old Linux… err.. GNU/Linux hands already know all about this, but it’s worth a look for newcomers.

Category:

  • Linux

Tropus: “Napster with Anonymity”

Author: JT Smith

By Tony Granata
News Editor

Last month, NewsForge published a story on the Freenet Project, a peer-to-peer network designed to allow the distribution of information over the Internet in an efficient manner, without fear of censorship. Recently, a Napster-like service called Tropus, being developed under the Freenet project, announced it will be ready for human consumption by Christmas.What’s Freenet?

What makes Freenet unique is that it is completely decentralized, meaning that there is no person, computer, or organization in control of Freenet or essential to its operation. Unlike centralized services like Napster and MP3.com, which have been fighting lawsuits for distributing music files, Freenet allows for anonymous publication and retrieval of information, or in this case music files.

Information is passed between individual nodes, or computers, without identifying their source or destination, thereby protecting authors and readers anonymity and making it virtually impossible to forcibly remove a piece of information from Freenet.

What this means is that a user cannot be linked to the files they are sharing, making it impossible to track down a person who is responsible for the files existence, leaving groups like the Recording Industry Association of America unable to point the finger at whoever is responsible for what has been termed “promoting copyright infringements.”

Tropus’ initial planning stage

Tropus’ homepage announces “The first major goal of the Tropus project is to deliver “Napster with anonymity, by Christmas 2000.” Since Freenet already provides the critical networking and security functions, “Tropus has the potential to be Napster/Gnutella but with far better anonymity and scalability,” states Will Dye, the main programmer behind Tropus “this creates a very real potential for tens of millions of users.”

Tropus will be a client program for the Freenet distributed datastore. It will be designed for sharing digital
music files, though it could probably be used for pretty much any kind of file that’s available on Freenet.

“The first order of business is to hash out some initial thoughts about what features we want to include or exclude,” explains Dye. These features are being totaled through the site’s Preliminary User Survey and discussed at the sites mailing list.

Other concerns, taken from the Tropus mailing list: “Although I like the idea of the project and would wish to help I’m not sure what it would offer that is not provided by Freenet and to what extent the two would interact. I, like many, have looked at the complexity of Freenet, some of my initial thoughts from a developers perspective would be the necessity of code documentation and specifications in fascist mode,” wrote one person.

“Perhaps therefore someone should have the job of documenting ideas and concepts and ensuring code has comments/explanations. In other words, it should be possible for anyone interested to have a single initial point of entry for documentation and links. I hope that would enable people to go away and read, get up to speed and jump in. And also for people to bail out without sinking the project.”

Tropus as a user-interface wrapper

With Freenet’s networking and security functions already in place, the idea is to incorporate a simple user-interface “wrapper” around Freenet. The challenge is making Tropus friendly and stable enough to be used on the same scale as Napster, with tens of millions of users, mandating heavy emphasis on written specs, careful planning, functional prototypes, and automated testing. “One elegant way to solve the problem of
creating ‘Napster with anonymity, by Christmas,'” surmises Dye, “is to simply convince Napster to adopt Freenet as its standard datastore. To a survival-minded organization, the entry of a new and powerful
competitor would be a cause for alarm. To Tropus, this would be called ‘winning without firing a shot'”.

To find out more information, visit the Web site, fill out the preliminary user survey, or join the mailing list.

Category:

  • News

deepLINUX announces Release Candidate 2 of dELT

Author: JT Smith

LWN.net has the press release: DeepLINUX has released the deepLINUX Embedded Toolkit Version 1.0RC2. deepLINUX is extending its
offer for everyone to download, play with, work with, evaluate, and beat
up the second release candidate of the embedded toolkit.

Installing Yellowdog Linux on an iMac DV SE

Author: JT Smith

From LinuxNewbie: “Expect problems. This is still leading- to bleeding-edge technology. In the
course of the installation the keyboard played dead and the computer played
dead: I mean for several minutes no OS would boot, at all–neither from the
hard drive, nor from the CD. I must admit I got close to being rattled by
that. But I unplugged the machine for 3 minutes while I read Alternative
Press magazine and that did the trick. Of course, Alternative Press may not
do it for you.”

Category:

  • Linux

Wireless application servers mushroom

Author: JT Smith

From an InfoWorld story about the growing number of wireless application servers: “Lutris is marketing its Enhydra Wireless 3.5 as an open-source alternative to the wireless and mobile application servers such as WebLogic from BEA Systems, in San Jose, Calif., WebSphere from Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM, and iPlanet from the Sun-Netscape Alliance.”

IRI, Sumitomo announce investment in Miva

Author: JT Smith

Miva Corporation has announced
that Internet Research Institute and Sumitomo Corporation joined
forces to make a multi-million dollar investment in Miva, a leading provider
of open source e-commerce software. As part of the transaction, IRI and
Sumitomo will use their collective marketing resources to assist with Miva’s
expansion into the Japanese market. Check out the press release at Linux PR.