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SCO May Not Own UNIX but May Sue Torvalds

By Timothy R. Butler | May 28, 2003 at 8:47 PM

In a number of stories that broke today, the SCO-IBM conflict continued to grow to include Novell Corp., the company that SCO's (formerly Caldera) founders came from, and perhaps even Linux creator Linus Torvalds himself. Links and further information within.

The Linux End Run

By Timothy R. Butler | May 28, 2003 at 12:43 AM

If you have been paying as close attention as I have been to the current and near future of Microsoft, the Windows operating system, and Microsoft's most recent purchases, then you are likely to come to the following conclusion. If you haven't, then read on.

Debian on Steroids II: The Libranet Workout

By Staff Staff | May 16, 2003 at 4:09 PM

Libranet is a commercial Debian distribution. If you hold the belief that Debian Linux is genuine only if it doesn't cost anything, then read no further. Commercial Debian distributions do, indeed, exist. Some, such as Storm, Progeny and Corel Linux, have come and gone, whether for good reasons or bad, but Libranet and Xandros (as well as the Xandros derivative Lindows) are still around. How long they exist depends, of course, on whether Linux users feel such distributions are worth paying for.

Announcing GinGin64

By Staff Staff | May 03, 2003 at 3:19 PM

Red Hat is pleased to announce the availability of our AMD64
technology preview. This preview is for those who are interested in
early access to a Red Hat distribution for the AMD64 platform.

Excuse Me, Mr. McBride...

By Staff Staff | May 03, 2003 at 3:10 PM

There is a line from the movie Star Trek V, The Final Frontier that I think is very parallel to the situation between SCO, IBM, and the development of the Linux kernel. In an otherwise medicore movie, there's this one scene where Capt. Kirk cuts to the heart of all of the philosophical debate about this being called God the officers of the Enterprise have just met.

It's Official: SCO Declares IP Jihad on Linux

By Timothy R. Butler | May 02, 2003 at 6:53 PM

Well, it seems to be official. After more rumblings, denials of rumblings, rumblings about the denials of rumblings, SCO is now playing hardball (or is that harderball?). The beleagured Linux company formerly known as Caldera is now claiming that some UNIX code is hidden in the Linux kernel, but will not release the information Free Software developers need to try to fix the problem. Instead, SCO CEO Darl McBride refuses to release that information out of fear the community would “launder the evidence.”

SCO: Unix code copied into Linux

By Staff Staff | May 02, 2003 at 6:00 PM

Lines from Unix's source code have been copied into the heart of Linux, sometimes exactly and sometimes in a modified form designed to disguise their origin, SCO Group Chief Executive Darl McBride said Thursday. McBride's accusation cuts to the heart of the open-source movement's legal and philosophical underpinnings.

PRESS RELEASE: Canon Annouces Linux/UNIX Printer Support.

By Staff Staff | Apr 23, 2003 at 3:07 PM

LAKE SUCCESS, NY and CULVER CITY, CA - April 21, 2003 — Canon U.S.A., Inc., a subsidiary of Canon Inc. (NYSE: CAJ), and industry leader in networked imaging solutions, and Codehost Inc., a leading provider of software solutions for manufacturers within the printing and imaging markets, today announced the availability of Codehost's BrightQâ„¢ suite of Linux and Unix-based printing tools for use with specific models of Canon's imageRUNNER line of multi-function devices, CLC Color Laser Copier/Printers, and wide format printers.

ATI To Support XFree86 4.3 Soon

By Timothy R. Butler | Apr 21, 2003 at 3:20 PM

Over the last year, ATI has shocked observers by not only taking the video card performance crown from nVidia, but also keeping it. This trend appears bound to continue for the foreseeable future with the recently released Radeon 9800 that has taken much of the spotlight away from nVidia's card intended to surpass the 9700.

PRESS RELEASE: Major price cut of commercial High Availability cluster product o

By Staff Staff | Apr 12, 2003 at 3:53 PM

Amsterdam, Netherlands - April 2nd, 2003



High-Availability.Com (HAC), a leading provider of easy and affordable high availability (HA) clustering solutions for Unix environments, today announced that it has released an aggressively-priced “all-in” RSF-1 solutions package to provide High Availability for Linux systems.

You are viewing page 96 of 118.