The VAX Files: Learn More About OpenVMS
Old-ish articles over at TheHaus, but a good read for the weekend. The VAX Files, Part 1: The Beginning, The VAX Files, Part 2: Getting the Hardware and Software, The VAX Files, Part 3: Installing OpenVMS. OSNews hosted an article about VMS as well, a few years ago.
Debian on Steroids: Libranet 2.7
A plethora of applications, streamlined installation and increased performance make putting Debian on your desktop easier than ever. LinuxJournal introduces Libranet 2.7.
My Red Hat Linux 8.0 Frustrations
I'm a long-time, frustrated Windows user. I have tried various Linux distributions in the past, but I haven't been satisfied with any of them. Today, I went out and bought Red Hat Linux 8.0 from Office Depot for $40. I am a dial-up internet user and I consider myself computer literate, although I don't have much experience using Linux on the desktop. I do however, have some experience using Linux and FreeBSD as a server (no GUI).
SGI Stops Free IRIX Updates
With the upcoming release of IRIX 6.5.18, SGI will stop offering the maintenance stream updates for free. SGI will require special contracts for downloading new patches. OSNews recently featured an introduction to IRIX.
Lindows: Victim of the Old, “New Economy” Way of Doing Business?
"My point is that Lindows as been the target of a lot of criticism over the past year, include a fair amount from NewsForge and Linux.com. And most of that criticism comes from Robertson promising fantastic new breakthroughs and then not delivering. Lindows has been a victim of its own hype. So why do I feel sorry for the company? Because Robertson has been following an extremely effective practice, especially in the tech business last five years or so: over-hype, under-deliver." Read the editorial.
SCO Abandons Linux Desktop–for Countertop
The SCO Group, which recently changed its name from Caldera in a move which many saw as a desertion of the Linux operating system, is continuing development of Linux--but for the countertop rather than the desktop.
GNU C library 2.3 Released
Glibc 2.3 is out and prelinking support was added for ELF targets, startup times are significantly reduced (C++ and Qt/KDE applications will be most benefited from this - with this support on glibc there is no reason to revert to manual prelinking KDE which reportedly created stability issues). Read-only stdio streams now use mmap to speed up operation. The malloc functions were completely rewritten. The runtime now can handle the ELF thread-local storage (TLS) ABI on some platforms. This release has been ported to PowerPC64/Linux. Download it in a bz2 (13 MB) or gunzip (17.5 MB) tarball formats.
The Linux Distribution that’s Always in the Black
Many of today's new Linux users wouldn't have a clue as to who Patrick Volkerding is. For the brigade whose main arguments are over the merits of this GUI and that, the word Slackware wouldn't ring a bell either. But for many others who jumped on the Linux bandwagon when it was exclusively for geeks, Volkerding is a hero. In early 1993, he started the distribution called Slackware which was basically an attempt to address many of the problems people faced with SoftLanding System Linux, the first and only commercial Linux at the time. Read the interview at TheAge.
Review: Lindows 2.0 Dissected
Despite his earlier doubts about Lindows, Jim Lynch waxes rhapsodic in a review of Version 2.0: "... We finally had a chance to sit down with it and surprise, surprise; here at ExtremeTech we were impressed," Jim Lynch writes. "Lindows is a very slick, highly useable OS. In fact, I liked it so much I'm actually writing this review in it - using Abiword on Lindows OS." Also, the retail giant Wal-Mart and its partners hit a new price point while introducing customers to Lindows with a new sup-$200 PC.
Jordan Hubbard Talks About Apple and Motorola
Jordan Hubbard, formerly head of FreeBSD development, and now of Apple MacOS X/Darwin fame, talks frankly about UNIX, Apple's MacOS X, BSD, and the business of competing in the consumer computer world in this MacCentral article. In it, we see some of his impressions on the present and future of MacOS X, opinions on Motorola's CPU's in Apple products, and what it takes to get ISV support.
Graphical User Interfaces: It’s Time for an Overhaul
"Apple released Mac OS X last year. Having used computers for almost twenty years, I can say that this new operating system is undoubtedly the best ever. Yet, there is an undercurrent of disappointment. There is something wrong with this OS. It’s not the MACH microkernel, the UNIX core or the fluid motions of the new GUI. Well, actually it is the GUI. It’s not a bad interface, it’s probably the best yet, but isn’t it about time we stopped pointing and clicking?" Read the editorial at MetaMute.
One-Third of Slashdot Readers Find the Mac ‘Very Tempting’
When it comes to using computers, it used to be (and still rings true today) that most people find the Mac platform to be either loathsome or lovable with few spectators taking middle ground on the issue.
IBM Pencils October 8 for AIX 5.2
IBM Corp is getting ready to take the wraps off the next release of its AIX 5L operating system for its pSeries servers. Sources familiar with IBM's plans say that the company is expected to make the announcement on October 8, Timothy Prickett Morgan writes. Read the article at TheRegister.
Sun to Ship non-SMP x86 Solaris 9 for $99 USD
Sun on Friday will announce plans to release an unbundled version of the Solaris 9 operating environment for non-Sun x86 hardware for $99 for a single CPU system. After months of indecision, Sun will now ship Solaris 9 x86, unbundled, supporting both the Sun hardware platform, for both current and future products, as well as the same list of all hardware supported for Solaris 8, according to Sun officials in Palo Alto, Calif. Early access to the Solaris 9 bits will come in the next four to eight weeks, and the final product will ship in the January time-frame, they said.
Microsoft Refreshes the .NET Downloads
Microsoft released new beta versions of their programming .NET tools, including the .NET Framework and SDK 1.1 Beta and Visual J# Redistributable Package 1.1 Beta.
Red Hat 8 For Joe & Jane User?
Well, here on OSNews, there has been plenty of discussion about Red Hat 8, what it is, what it isn't, the Bluecurve look and many other features and issues. I ordered Red Hat 8 Personal Edition and decided to see how close Red Hat 8 may be to a distribution that Joe and Jane User could install and use.
The Future of Linux on IA-64
David Mosberger, developer of the initial GCC port to IA-64 and lead kernel architect for Linux on IA-64, tells us why you should care about Intel's new 64-bit chip.
NetBSD-Current Now Supports SMP on x86
From Slashdot: "NetBSD-current for the i386 architecture now has SMP. (It used to be that only FreeBSD had this feature among the free BSDs.) See the announcement
on the current-users list."
Why Microsoft Needs .NET
" I think you can see where I'm going with this - by moving software to .NET, Microsoft frees themselves from the x86 pit. They need to compile the .NET framework for each platform they want to support, and they need to write the final compiler stage that converts the IL to machine code, and bingo your code runs on the new platform!" Read the article at Kuro5hin.