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NQL releases Java version of Network Query Language

Author: JT Smith

PRNewswire: In the first step to extend its
market reach beyond Microsoft Windows environments, NQL Inc.
today announced beta availability of a Java version of its Network Query
Language that has been qualified for the Linux operating system.

Unix down under

Author: JT Smith

The demand for Unix in Melbourne, Australia is on the move upwards, reports Enterprise Linux Today, over the last 12 months the
market has started to witness a distinct growth in the need for Unix across the board, with Linux and
FreeBSD featuring heavily, according to Gottleibsen Research.

Category:

  • Unix

Corel backs Linux despite Microsoft deal

Author: JT Smith

According to vnunet News,, desktop applications software vendor Corel said its
commitment to Linux remains strong despite last week’s
$135m investment by Microsoft, the Linux community’s
biggest competitor.

Category:

  • Linux

An interview with Chris Evans

Author: JT Smith

SecurityPortal interviews Chris Evans concerning format string attacks.

Category:

  • Linux

Sen. Edwards intro’s “Spyware Control Act”

Author: JT Smith


Computer User Daily News reports
,
Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., introduced legislation on Friday that would force
software manufacturers to notify consumers when their products include
“spyware,” bits of code that surreptitiously transmit information about the user’s
Web surfing habits back to the software company.

Category:

  • Linux

Bangalore IT.COM 2000

Author: JT Smith

The Linux Community of India is pleased to announce that (just like last
year) it is participating the one of the largest IT events in Asia – Bangalore
IT.COM 2000, from Linux PR,.

Learning the ways of Mozilla

Author: JT Smith

Like a young actor who dreams of appearing on a Broadway stage, David Boswell remembers the time
he and his co-workers at the Web development troupe Alphanumerica decided they should try their luck
in the great Mozilla metropolis.From Upside Todat.

Opera for Linux: Good enough to pay for?

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross
Managing Editor

With the beta release of their browser for Linux, the folks at Opera Software hope to get input from the Open Source community, and ultimately, hope Opera will hook Linux users enough that they’re willing to pay for it.

The Linux version of Opera, a browser which has won over some Windows users with its speed and small size, was released as beta last week, and is available for download at the Opera site. In addition to multiple bug reports on the Opera for Linux discussion list, the browser has also been getting some positive reviews. One user wrote: “It was worth waiting for; I love it! Great work, folks! I’ve decided that I will *definitely* be purchasing the commercial version when it is released.”

Opera Software CEO Jon S. von Tetzchner , in a phone conversation from Opera’s headquarters in Norway, said the company plans to charge $39 (U.S.) per copy of Opera for Linux — the same as other versions of the browser — once the commercial version is ready sometime around Christmas. But users can test the browser to see if they like it before paying, and von Tetzchner hopes to get a trial version of Opera into as many Linux distributions as possible.

Although he recognizes that some people in the Linux community want software to be free, von Tetzchner said he’s confident enough Linux users will want to pay for more browser options to make the project worthwhile.

“I think it’s really a question of what people want,” he said. “If they like our browser, they’ll be willing to pay for it. That’s the case in Windows, and I think that’ll be the case in Linux.”

Opera, which is not an Open Source company, decided to work on a browser for Linux because of internal supporters of the operating system, von Tetzchner said. “We also think Linux has a great future, and we want to be there when it happens,” he said. “We think Linux has a great future in the embedded market, but we’re also rooting for Linux in the desktop market.”

Opera advantages

The company also feels a kinship with those in the Open Source community who advocate following sets of standards to develop software, he said. Opera has worked hard to stick to the HTML standard, which eliminates the problem for Web site developers of making pages “best viewed” with one of the popular browsers.

“Using Opera, you know exactly that your pages are best viewed with any browser,” says the Opera features page. “You will soon use Opera as your standard reference browser to make sure that your pages are open to all, and not just to those with a specific browser. And above all, it saves you valuable time when developing your pages.”

Opera for Linux features 128-bit encryption, and it works with XML, HTML 4.0 and JavaScript 1.3. You can use it to zoom in on pages with tiny type, and the company says you can open multiple windows without running out of memory. In fact, the Opera download is only about one megabyte, and von Tetzchner said the company has successfully run the Windows version of Opera on machines with eight megs of RAM. Thirty-two megs of RAM is recommended.

“I would expect that you find Opera is significantly faster in downloading pages,” von Tetzchner added. “Our aim is to make Opera for Linux a very stable browser. People shouldn’t be expecting their browser to be crashing all the time.”

Some users lukewarm

While some Linux users are impressed with Opera, others are lukewarm. “I think if the user is a fan of MDI interfaces (a la most of Microsoft’s applications where you have one window for the application
and other windows within it) then Opera’s organizational model will be appealing,” said Isaiah Weiner, a Linux tech support specialist from Raleigh, N.C. “Otherwise, Mozilla is certainly a wonderful alternative.”

From a licensing perspective, Weiner has this to say about Opera: “Mozilla certainly offers more freedom for the user, having the source available. Opera keeps control in the hands of the author, and is not consistent with what Linux traditionally offers.”

Ray Hartman, a Web researcher from Spokane, Wash., supports the Opera project; in fact, he sent Opera a check for its Windows version a couple of days ago. Hartman prefers Netscape for most browsing; although Opera is “blazing” fast, it’s not robust enough to deal with some “Web crap,” he says.

“But Opera’s persistence in producing a Linux Web browser is worth
plenty,” he says. “Linux cannot survive as an independent OS without an independent Web browser! I see my support of Opera as part (like using Mozilla) of my Linux support. It’s worthy of my support, my practice time and
my dollars. I can only hope it will earn my trust as well.”

Category:

  • News

Chipzilla and Transmeta in big ole FUD fight

Author: JT Smith

Without naming any names, Intel has countered claims from
Transmeta that Intel’s processors ran hotter and consumed more
power than Transmeta’s own Intel compatible products. From The Register.

Category:

  • Unix

New Linux e-mall will launch, vendor neutral

Author: JT Smith

Using TheLinuxStore.com’s e-commerce engine and order fulfillment
system, the mall will be specifically designed for UserFriendly.org’s audience
of IT professionals. From LinuxPR.com.