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Australia should stem brain drain: Sun CEO

Author: JT Smith

Australian IT reports on Sun CEO Scott McNealy’s comments to the Australian Government about the problem of brain drain.

FCC opens another 50MHz for use by wireless devices

Author: JT Smith

Info World is reporting that the FCC has opened an additional 50MHz of bandwidth to wireless devices, and is considering opening a second set of 50MHz.

VA Linux first to support Debian GNU/Linux

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPR is reporting that VA Linux is preinstalling Debian GNU/Linux on their 2U servers. (Full disclosure: VA Linux owns NewsForge.)

Category:

  • Linux

Federal Judge approves violent-game ban

Author: JT Smith

A Federal court Judge in the US has approved an Indianapolis law that will prevent minors from playing violent or sexually explicit games without parental approval. The story at MSNBC.

Sony launches second generation of robotic pet

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that Sony has launched its second generation of robotic pet, the ERS-210, successor to the Aibo.

Category:

  • Unix

The advent of the Chief Privacy Officer

Author: JT Smith

Copmuter News Daily discusses the advent of the Chief Privacy Officer, a relatively new post in corporations that has been adopted by several companies recently.

Category:

  • Open Source

“Toughest code challenge ever set” solved

Author: JT Smith

A Swedish team has spent 70 years of processing time to solve what had been billed as the toughest code challenge ever set. MSNBC has the story.

Category:

  • Linux

Dell plans to recall laptop battery

Author: JT Smith

Computer manufacturer Dell is preparing to announce a recall of an estimated 27,000 laptop batteries, after one overheated and caught fire. The story at Computer News Daily.

Category:

  • Unix

Linux for women

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPR touches on the issue of Linux’ usage and popularity with women.

Category:

  • Linux

Review: Asus AGP-V7100/2VID multiple monitor video card

Author: JT Smith

Australian IT reports: “The simple way to do multi-monitors is with a single
multi-output video card. One card, more than one
video connector. Multi-output cards suitable for
ordinary PCs have been around for some time, but they always used to use low
quality video chipsets, and be alarmingly expensive. Four years ago, you could drop
$AUD900 for a twin-output card using a pair of S3 Trio 64V+ chipsets, with a mere
1Mb of RAM for each one.”

Category:

  • Unix