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OEone's Peter Bojanic on HomeBase, Mozilla

By Staff Staff | Aug 13, 2002 at 12:55 PM

Peter Bojanic is Vice President, Software Development of OEone Corp., a Hull, Québec company that
develops the extremely easy to use HomeBase DESKTOP and SUITE software (see our new mini-review of HomeBase SUITE 1.5 here).
Mr. Bojanic also serves as an associate staff member of the Mozilla.org project, creators of the Mozilla/Gecko
engine that runs Netscape 6, Galeon, and OEone HomeBase DESKTOP.

gobeProductive Joins OpenOffice as Free Software

By Staff Staff | Aug 12, 2002 at 1:06 AM

In an interview at OSNews, it has come out that the new owners of the gobeProductive office suite for Windows and Linux, plan to place the package under the GPL license. “FreeRadicalSoftware's business plan requires them to GPL the popular office suite, allowing everyone to access gobeProductive's source for Windows, Linux and even BeOS. The official announcement is expected next week. FreeRadicalSoftware was created recently by the ex-boss of Gobe Software, Bruce Hammond, and some other ex-Gobe and non-Gobe people. Read more for our exclusive interview with Bruce regarding the open sourcing of GP3 under the GPL.

The Desktop Dilemma

By Timothy R. Butler | Aug 10, 2002 at 4:55 PM

As the economic downturn has taken its toll on GNU/Linux companies, many surviving companies have decided to move away from the desktop market, and focus on the server instead. This escalated to an alarming pace after the death of Eazel, a startup that created the Nautilus file manager, and while the focus-on-server mania has calmed down lately, it is still very much alive. Yet, it seems to me, that focusing on the server will in the end cause these companies to lose not only the desktop, but the server as well.

Open Source and non-profits: A match made in heaven

By Staff Staff | Aug 06, 2002 at 8:48 PM

Grant Gross of NewsForge writes about Linux's appeal to churches and other non-profit groups. “We've long talked about how government agencies almost owe it to taxpayers to explore low-cost Open Source alternatives to Microsoft and other high-cost vendors, but it seems that non-profit organizations such as churches are also starting to get the Open Source religion.”

Qt vs. MFC

By Timothy R. Butler | Aug 02, 2002 at 6:03 PM

Philippe Fremy has written a nice piece describing the benefits of the Qt toolkit over Microsoft Foundation Classes (MFC). For those of you not familar with Qt, it is the toolkit used by the KDE desktop as well as the Qtopia environment featured on the Sharp Zaurus PDA. Qt - unlike MFC - works on Windows, Linux, UNIX, and Mac OS X (Aqua).

Linux in the enterprise

By Staff Staff | Jul 30, 2002 at 8:35 PM

In an article for fellow LDN-member site LinuxandMain.com, Anthony Awtrey comments on GNU/Linux's tremendous growth in the server market. ” I have searched for market information and corporate strategy documents that outline where we are today and give some idea where we are headed. At first glance I can tell you that plans to deploy Linux and other Open Source software are evident everywhere. Independent software vendors, especially those writing software for niches like computer aided design, law offices and medical practices, are porting their applications from Windows and commercial Unix to Linux to take advantage of customer interest.”

RedHat to KDE: ''Do as I say, not as I do.''

By Timothy R. Butler | Jul 29, 2002 at 11:44 PM

It started seemingly innocuously enough; a letter was received by one member of the KDE development team asking the KDE Project to use RedHat Linux on machines at LWCE and to display RedHat's shadow man logo on those machines. In exchange, the letter from RedHat explained, KDE would “benefit from many valuable marketing benefits in our booth, on our website, and in our newsletter.”

UPDATE (7/30/2002 15:21 and 16:04 EDT): New information from RedHat is available at the bottom of this article.

OfB Open Choice Awards 2002

By Timothy R. Butler | Jul 26, 2002 at 2:06 AM
Picking the best applications and solutions out of all the wonderful options that have become available for Linux is no small task. However in this first annual OfB Open Choice Awards, we attempt to do our best at just that. While some of our choices might prove somewhat controversial, we feel that all of the picks are uniquely situated as the best choice for deployment in the enterprise.

Debian Hits 3-Oh with Woody

By Timothy R. Butler | Jul 22, 2002 at 6:16 PM

In an announcement late last week, the Debian Project released its much anticipated Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 distribution. Debian is well known for its high level of stability, as well as powerful package (software) management tools.

Rumors of TurboLinux's Demise Surface

By Staff Staff | Jul 19, 2002 at 12:54 AM

In a story published today, LinuxGram reported that Linux distributor TurboLinux may have collapsed. The report is not entirely surprising, TurboLinux has been struggling for some time, and outside its strong hold in Asia, the distribution had dismal results at best.

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