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Submitters, send your News Bytes items in PLAIN TEXT format. Other formats may be rejected without reading. You have been warned! A one- or two-paragraph summary plus URL gets you a better announcement than an entire press release.
September 2001 Linux Journal
The September issue of Linux Journal is on newsstands now. This issue focuses on Security. Click here to view the table of contents, or here to subscribe.
All articles through December 1999 are available for
public reading at
http://www.linuxjournal.com/lj-issues/mags.html.
Recent articles are available on-line for subscribers only at
http://interactive.linuxjournal.com/.
September/October 2001 Interactive Linux Journal
Click
here
to view the table of contents. US residents can subscribe to ELJ for free; just
click here.
Paid subscriptions outside the US are also available; click on the above link
for more information.
Distro News
Debian
The Debian Project has announced the
new
Debian Multimedia Distribution
The German "Lebensmittelzeitung" has reported that Globus, a German supermarket chain, converted about 480 computers in their cash desk system to Debian GNU/Linux. The entire system is designed so that two cashiers can share one computer (a 486/25MHz is used most of the time). The story is available in German.
More news available from Debian Weekly News
SuSE
SuSE Linux has
announced
that it is the first provider to deliver a Linux operating system
for
IBM
eServer iSeries, IBM's high-performance, integrated
business server for small to mid-sized enterprises.
In "SuSE Linux Developer Edition for IBM eServer iSeries", SuSE
now offers system administrators and application developers the
possibility to make use of SuSE Linux right from the outset - as
an operating system basis and development platform for e-business
applications across the enterprise.
IBM ships the new eServer iSeries with Version 5 Release 1 of its
OS/400 operating system, which now enables the use of several
operating systems at the same time.
News in General
Upcoming conferences and events
Listings courtesy Linux Journal. See LJ's Events page for the latest goings-on.
Sklyarov, DMCA, FTAA update
As LG went to press, several events unfolded in the Sklyarov/DMCA case:
- A US grand jury indicted Dmitry Sklyarov for creating and selling an
"encryption circumvention" device, illegal under the Digital Millenium
Copyright Act of 1998. Fair-use advocates were wondering whether
the Justice Department would drop the charge now that the original complaintant,
Adobe Systems, Inc, has withdrawn its complaint. But the grand jury surprised
advocates further by expanding the charge to also indict Dmitry's employer,
Elcomsoft, with "conspiracy". Even though Elcomsoft is located in
Russia and the product is legal there, the Justice Department claims US
jurisdiction because Elcomsoft used a US web payment organization to accept
orders. Also the extent of the charge is surprising: Dmitry could face a
prison term of 25 years and a US$2,250,000 fine. Elcomsoft could face a
US$2,500,000 fine.
- Dmitry pled not guilty to the charges. The next step is a court trial,
which will likely take several months. In the meantime, Dmitry is free on
US$50,000 bail but may not leave northern California.
- The US Copyright Office issued a report saying:
- it's too early to tell whether the DMCA is a success
- the Office sees insufficient reeason to amend the law at this time regarding the "first sale doctrine" (which allows the purchaser of a book/CD/videotape to resell it, lend it or give it away as a used item). Librarians want to extend this doctrine to digital media; publishers do not.
- the Office thinks the law should be amended to allow users to make backup copies of software and content they've purchased.
The Copyright Office report (3 files in PDF format covering the report itself, public comments and a public hearing).
A Washington Post article. - Protests continue in Moscow (Russia), London (England), Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Reno, and Black Rock City, Nevada. In Seattle, activists have started an education campaign at public libraries, which consists of passing out flyers, inviting people to sign a petition, and talking to the librarians and staff.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is speaking out against industry attempts to get controversial provisions from the US Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) put into the Free Trade of the Americas (FTAA) agreement. (The FTAA is a still-unfinished treaty that would create a free-trade zone covering North and South America.) "The FTAA organization is considering treaty language that mandates nations pass anti-circumvention provisions similar to the DMCA, except the FTAA treaty grants even greater control to publishers than the DMCA." If you feel strongly about this, the EFF invites you to try to change the situation and provides suggestions for the sort of letters you could write.
Because LG is a monthly publication, we cannot adequately address all the developments in the DMCA controversy. We refer you instead to the Linux Weekly News editorials, the EFF home page, and the various activist sites such as nodmca.org and freesklyarov.org.
LWN's August 30 editorial raises the irony of Dmitry possibly getting a longer prison sentance than "mere armed robbers, rapists and child molesters". It states, "One way or another, we are now seeing the degree of repression that the US is willing to apply to ensure that certain kinds of software are not written.... It takes very little imagination to picture a future where the general-purpose computer has been replaced by a 'trusted computing platform', and systems which do not 'seal data within domains' are treated as 'circumvention devices'. At what point, exactly, does Linux become an illegal device under the DMCA? In a world where programmers face 25-year sentences for code that was legal where they wrote it, this vision should not be seen as overly paranoid."
An older LWN editorial discusses attempts in Canada to insert DMCA-like provisions into its copyright law.
Meanwhile, Slashdot reports on an
NPR article
saying that many US radio stations are pulling the plug on their webcasting
"due to concerns about advertising, royalties and the DMCA". Slashdot then
reports on a
CNN article
about a study saying "people don't and won't purchase heavily restricted music
online at higher prices for a less useful item." Slashdot then adds,
"This is apparently a revelation to the music industry."
Total Impact and Terra Soft Solutions Partner to Offer
PowerPC Linux Products
Total Impact, manufacturer of
G3/G4 computers, and
Terra Soft Solutions, a developer of
PowerPC Linux technologies, have announced a partnership for the tight
integration and sales of Total Impact's
briQ with Terra Soft's
Yellow Dog
and
Black Lab Linux operating systems.
Total Impact is now bundling the full Yellow Dog Linux 2.0 package with each
unit sale of the briQ, enhanced with the installation of Black Lab Linux
upon request. Terra Soft offers the briQ as a stand-alone Yellow Dog Linux
computational node or integrated into a 4 and 8 node cluster with Black Lab
Linux installed and configured.
Total Impact has also just announced availability of its new Centricity line of Render Engines beta tests are "creating anticipation that Centricity systems will revolutionize high performance computing with their small size, high processing speeds, low power requirements and ease of use".
New I/O Module
MEN Micro's new PC-MIP mezzanine card featuring a 48-bit TTL I/O interface, may allow embedded system designers to quickly implement basic digital I/O without an involved development process. For simple digital I/O, such as a control switch or an actuator, the new PC· MIP card can be easily added to a single-board-computer (SBC) or a PC· MIP carrier card, assuring a rapid completion of the system's development. Through the MEN Driver Interface System (MDIS), the P13 is supported by drivers for a wide range of operating systems, including VxWorks, OS-9, WindowsNT and Linux.
New Keyspan USB Products at Linux World
Keyspan has announced new versions of its USB PDA Adapter and its High Speed USB Serial Adapter. In addition to "off-the shelf" support for Linux 2.4, Keyspan's Serial-to-USB Adapters also support Windows 98, Windows Me and Windows 2000, as well as Mac OS 8.6 or higher. Beta drivers for Mac OS X are also available.
Alabanza Gets Smarts!
Alabanza Corporation,
the leading provider of automated Web hosting software,
announced that it is using
SMARTS
InCharge Service Assurance Solutions to sustain service levels and
improve the user experience for Alabanza's 500 worldwide customers and
their quarter-million Web sites. Alabanza, has been an early adopter of,
and is 100 percent dedicated to the Linux operating system. Alabanza said
it agreed to partner with SMARTS in order to immediately identify and fix
problems before they affect service delivery. Alabanza's entirely
Linux-based Automated Web Hosting Software Suite is used by hundreds of Web
designers and developers, systems integrators, ISPs and telecommunications
carriers.
Sair Linux and GNU Newsletter #9
SAIR Linux and GNU Certification's quarterly newsletter, SAIR Linux and GNews issue 9, is available for you to view online.
IBM
IBM has announced the new IBM "Start Now" Solutions for e-business, a family of offerings to help small and medium businesses (SMB) rapidly implement powerful, cost-effective, e-business solutions. The eight Start Now Solutions, including three Linux-based solutions, "fulfill the requirements of e-business--from initial Internet access, through e-mail, research and information, Web site management, simple and complex e-commerce, business intelligence, integrated activities and new business opportunities". For more information on IBM Start Now solutions, visit http://www.ibm.com/software/smb.
IBM has also announced the availability of a free Software Evaluation Kit for Linux. This kit will help developers create new applications for the explosive Linux market. With the number of Linux-based applications growing over 40 percent this year, this evaluation kit will help drive new applications for a variety of industries, including finance, retail, and education. More information from www.ibm.com/linux/software and www.ibm.com/linux/.
Book "Advanced Linux 3D Graphics Programming" available
The book "Advanced Linux 3D Graphics Programming" is now available for purchase. It is the follow-up volume to the first book "Linux 3D Graphics Programming". This second volume provides programmers who are experienced in both Linux and fundamental 3D graphics concepts with a well-rounded perspective on 3D theory and practice within the context of programming larger interactive 3D applications such as games. It covers such topics as texture and light mapping, creating compatible morph targets in Blender, creating and importing IK animations into a 3D engine, BSP trees (node and leaf based), portals, level editing, particle systems, collision detection, digital sound, content creation systems, and more. A table of contents is viewable online and if you like what you see, purchase online.
unixboulevard.com
UnixBoulevard.com is a free and upcoming site designed to be a choice web location for those individuals and organizations that use, manage Unix based servers or Networks. The site provides product and technical support information as well as a forum for UNIX community members to interact.
CDW is offering free VXA media for Linux
CDW a direct solutions
provider of complete, customized technology solutions, is offering 5 free
33/66GB VXA V17 tapes for data storage and backup with the purchase of a
VXA
RakPak or VXA AutoPak. The promotion offers up to 660GB of free media at a
value of more than $350 and runs through the end of September.
The offer is available by visiting CDW at
http://www.cdw.com and entering
"VXA with free media" in the SmartSearch box on the upper right hand corner
of the page.
GX Technology Uses Linux NetworX Cluster System
in Oil and Gas Exploration
Linux NetworX, a provider of powerful and easy-to-manage cluster computing solutions, announced today that seismic imaging solutions company GX Technology has purchased an 84-processor Evolocity computer cluster to be used in its oil and gas exploration efforts. This is the third cluster computer system provided to GX Technology by Linux NetworX.
Linux NetworX optimized the Evolocity cluster to work with GX Technology's seismic imaging applications to perform processes such as wave equation and Kirchhoff pre-stack depth migration and prestack time migration. The 42-node Evolocity system includes 84 1.2 GHz AMD Athlon MP processors, with each node containing 1.5 GB of memory, and two 10/100 Ethernet networks for redundancy. GX Technology also utilizes the Linux NetworX ClusterWorX management software tools, and signed an on-going service agreement to ensure system stability.
Linux Links
The Duke of URL:
Linux project in Mexican schools (Red Escolar) fails, largely due to "winmodem" issues it seems. More positively, Linux seems to be finding a role in a Colorado school district. News courtesy Slashdot.
CanadaComputes.com have a round up of the Linux web browsers currently available.
Linux Journal web articles:
- Vi IMproved--Vim and Happy Hacking Keyboard Lite 2, a book and keyboard review by Don Marti.
- You Can Get There from Here, Marcel's latest series. part 1
Suite101.com have added a new Linux site aimed at explaining to Windows users what it might be like if they changed to Linux.
The Register have reported that several Red Hat 6.2 systems with default installation were cracked in 72 hours during a security research project that intentionally left them online for intruders to find.
Evaluation of Windows XP beta compared to Linux Mandrake 8.0 from the point of view of usability and aesthetics. The review says Windows is getting better than it used to be; Microsoft is learning some of Linux's tricks.
RPM Search page on the User Friendly site.
Slashdot had a recent Slashdot talkback thread on which is the best Linux distribution for a newbie.
The State of Corporate IT: A case for Linux.
"By many accounts, the largest cost of ownership increases that
corporations have faced have been licensing related. As NT has become a
mainstay, licensing terms have become more specific and more expensive."
This story traces a 7,000-employee company that switched from Unix/Novell
to NT for "ease of administration and a lower cost of ownership, but years
into the transition, administering and licensing costs soared....
While the previous Unix and Novell platforms had handled file, print and mail
servers on a single server, NT now needed one machine for each service plus a
dedicated backup for each.....
Red Hat brought a single Pentium class system for a site visit and thanks to
the early legwork their engineers had done, were able to integrate the box into
the network and take over all file and print server requests for one busy
segment within four hours. The system ran for the next 10 business days without
any downtime, something NT machines had not been able to do very often....
Red Hat had proven to be a helpful ally. Instead of trying to push a
whole-scale replacement of the infrastructure, they had worked to supplement
it.... Some months later, with the market still soft and the bottom line
increasingly important to shareholders, the team feels they made the right
decision."
Courtesy Slashdot.
The Los Angeles Times have a science fiction story about a future world in which Windows is everywhere, causing worldwide catastrophe. Courtesy Slashdot.
Software Announcements
Loki
TimeGate Studios, Inc. and Loki Software are excited to announce that the demo for Kohan: Immortal Sovereigns on the Linux platform is now available for free download at http://www.lokigames.com/products/demos.php3 For more information, please visit the official game site. Pre-orders can be placed from the Loki webstore.
No Starch Press and Loki Software have announced the launch of the complete and authoritative guide to developing games for Linux. PROGRAMMING LINUX GAMES: LEARN TO WRITE THE GAMES LINUX PEOPLE PLAY (August 2001, 1-886411-49-2, $39.95, paperback, 432 pp., http://www.nostarch.com/?plg) guides readers through important Linux development tools and gaming APIs, with a special focus on Simple DirectMedia Layer (SDL). Written by the gaming masters at Loki Software, this book is the ultimate resource for Linux game developers. Available in bookstores, from Loki Software (http://www.lokigames.com/orders), or from No Starch Press (1-800-420-7240, http://www.nostarch.com).
eVe Visual Search Toolkit for Linux
eVision is excited to announce the release of version 2.1 public beta of the eVe visual search Java-based SDK for Linux. The toolkit lets Linux developers create search applications that use images and visual similarity rather than keywords and text. The user selects a sample query image or partial image, then the search engine finds and ranks other images that are visually similar with respect to the objects in the image and attributes such as color, texture, shape and 3D shading. This technology can be applied to image content, video content, audio content and any other digital pattern. You can sign up to download a free 500 image limited version of the SDK at http://www.evisionglobal.com/developers/sdk/
Great Bridge WebSuite for Developers
Great Bridge, a provider of commercial service and support for the open source database PostgreSQL, has announced this morning an open source application development platform that uses the world's most advanced open source tools. Great Bridge WebSuite is an integrated open source platform that combines the PostgreSQL database, PHP scripting language and Apache Web server for building high-performance Web-based applications.
Free APStripFiles Utility
Appligent, Inc. is offering a new utility free of charge. APStripFiles is a command line application that removes attached or embedded files from PDF documents. It enables you to protect your systems from malicious unwanted PDF file attachments.
APStripFiles for AIX, HP-UX, Sun Solaris and Red Hat Linux can be downloaded free from,, http://www.appligent.com/newpages/freeSoftware_Unix.html
