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New DDoS attacks target chat servers and linux boxen

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet cautions of a recently discovered DDoS attack in “the wild”, a term to mean that it’s on the loose on the internet, which targets irc networks, and linux boxen.

Category:

  • Linux

Report: Sun needs to warm up to Linux

Author: JT Smith

Sun Microsystems Inc.’s decision not to embrace Linux with the same fervor as competitors IBM Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. has sparked concern from at least one analyst firm that believes the company is making a mistake, reports TechWeb.

Category:

  • Linux

Web-controlled robot powered by Linux

Author: JT Smith

From a PR Newswire story about the iRobot Corporation multi-purpose domestic robot, which can be controlled through a web browser from anywhere in the world: The iRobot-LE is powered by iRobot Aware Robot Control Software running on a Pentium II class processor with an Apache-SSL web server and Linux Operating System. Priced about the same as a high-end notebook computer, the iRobot-LE is a fully functional mobile computer.

Market roundup: Intel hurts tech stocks, but VA up

Author: JT Smith

From a story about Monday’s tech stock action: VA Linux continued its momentous climb, up 1 9/16 to 61 1/4. (Disclosure: VA Linux owns NewsForge.)

Category:

  • Open Source

IBM to roll with Crusoe TM5400 ThinkPad

Author: JT Smith

IBM has demoed a Transmeta-based notebook, but officially the company isn’t committed to shipping it as a product. Naturally nobody actually believes this, and a blab today from Taiwanese notebook manufacturer Quanta Computer confirms that Big Blue will be rolling out quantities of the beasts, under the ThinkPad 240 X-series banner, by the end of the year, according to a story at The Register. More from Bloomberg.

Category:

  • Unix

Germany considers copyright fee

Author: JT Smith

According to a story from The Associated Press: Manufacturers of computer and telecommunications equipment could soon be required to pay fees to benefit authors and other copyright holders under a draft law being considered by the German government.

Universal seeks $450 million in MP3.com suit

Author: JT Smith

Universal Music Group, the world’s largest record company, asked a judge today to award it up to $450 million in damages because MP3.com infringed its copyrights, an amount the Internet music company said would put it out of business. The story is from The Associated Press.

Why run Linux?

Author: JT Smith

Why use Linux? It’s a valid and frequently asked question. Unfortunately there are no good answers. The Linux gurus preach the features as if they were benefits, the zealots preach Linux (or, heaven forbid, BSD) as if it were a religion. But everyone is preaching and no one is providing a useful answer. There obviously is no one single perfect operating system. All the rhetoric about Linux can be confusing since the word “free” comes up a lot. The column is at MaximumLinux.

Category:

  • Linux

GNOME vs. KDE: It’s the apps, stupid

Author: JT Smith

“Trying to pick a winner between GNOME and KDE is a futile distraction.”
That’s from a column at ZDNet.

Category:

  • Linux

Company helps Linux sysadmins with the ‘what ifs’

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross
Managing Editor

Imagine you’re a systems administrator whose job is to keep track of dozens of machines running several versions of Linux. You spend hours each week making sure each machine is running at its best, more time scouring the Web for updates, and more time yet making sure those updates don’t conflict with other software.

WhatifLinux wants to make your job easier.

The goal of the Web-based service, launched by Acrylis Inc. this spring, is to help Linux administrators monitor and manage their Open Source software assets. The service includes:

  • A knowledge base including all the latest Open Source software alerts, releases and other information;
  • An “Intelligent Agent,” a Java-based application with the ability to profile subscribers’ servers, proactively delivering information the system administrator can use. The agents use system-specific policies to determine when set thresholds are crossed, and diagnostic action is needed;
  • “What if” decision support, giving the administrator analysis about what happens if he or she tweaks a piece of software or installs something new. “If I’m going to install package A, we tell you what the impact will be on packages B, C and G,” says Reg Broughton, president and CEO of Acrylis. “We help make sure installing and uninstalling are done right. We’re kind of an insurance policy.”

    The selling point for WhatifLinux, Broughton says, is that it’s both comprehensive and up to date. “We hope to save a lot of system administrator time, because of lot of their job is spent looking around the Web for alerts,” he adds. “If Linux continues to grow, there will be more and more issues for the system administrator to take care of.”

    David Winchell, CTO of Acrylis customer and potential partner Mission Critical Linux, says he appreciates the real-time information WhatifLinux.com provides. “If an alert is posted to some obscure Web site, the sysadmins don’t have to be constantly looking for it,” he says. “If there’s a hole, it can be fixed right away.”

    With the product tied to your whole network, you can also make updates en masse, Broughton says. “Imagine you have 50 machines to update,” he adds. “You can have 50 people do it themselves, or you can give a system administrator some central authority to do it.”

    The subscription-based WhatifLinux.com, launched in April, has a graphic-based console sysadmins can use, or they can elect to have alerts emailed. Corporate pricing starts at $100 per server per month with volume discounts available, and the North Chelmsford, Mass.,-based Acrylis plans to soon announce a pricing level for individual users.

  • Category:

    • Linux