News
Windows 7 an Opportunity for Linux
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 02 April 2009 08:00
Verizon
Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth
Source: Canonical

Microsoft might be betting big on Windows 7, the next version of its flagship operating system, but to Ubuntu Linux founder Mark Shuttleworth, the upcoming release is really an opportunity for Linux to shine.

Granted, Linux on the desktop has not made as much of a dent against Windows as it has in the datacenter. But Shuttleworth, who is also CEO of Ubuntu's commercial backer Canonical, figures the desktop itself and the applications that people are using are changing in ways that make the coming desktop battle different than it has ever been before.

"The principals of diversity in the desktop space are well established," Shuttleworth told InternetNews.com. "The benefits to consumers and industry of having an alternative are very substantial. Any change in the status quo is an opportunity."

(read more ...)

 
Linux gets a S$5.45 million training boost in Singapore
Written by Administrator   
Friday, 20 March 2009 08:00
IT students and professionals looking for training on Linux will be getting a boost with the announcement from Republic Polytechnic (RP), Red Hat and IBM to offer Linux training for RP students and industry professionals. The first-ever educational institution in ASEAN to embrace the Red Hat Academy and IBM System z Academic Initiative program jointly, RP said that they expect to train up to 150 students and 75 industry professionals over the next three years. The program was made possible through a combined investment, over three years, of S5.45m to cover hardware, software licenses, services and maintenance support. (read more ...)
 
Why the evil capitalists don't like your Linux email server
Written by Freddie Fedora   
Wednesday, 11 February 2009 17:12

Lately, I've been asked by a number of people the difference between IMAP and POP. After using IMAP for a good decade, it's easy to forget that everybody else only knows what the vendors push on them, and doesn't really enjoy getting to know and enjoy the various mail protocols as closely as most of the folks I hang out with (re: aren’t total geeks). So here’s a quick discussion of why IMAP will save the world.

  • Push - IMAP4 supports a wonderful command called IDLE. The IDLE command allows your IMAP client to tell the IMAP server that it’s hanging around, waiting for new messages. It basically says “I’ll just hang here, you let me know when I get new mail.” This makes a lot of sense. This functionality is the reason lots of folks are addicted to their Blackberries. It allows instant notification with less network bandwidth, more power saved, all around better in every way. If your mail server doesn’t support this, get one that does.
  • Same everywhere - The main advantage of IMAP is that you can access your mail from anywhere and it’s the same. I use Nokia Mail my Nokia E71 and I have access to all of my work and personal messages.  I can chose which mailboxes I want to store local copies of (so I can work on them when I’m out of network coverage — when I get back into range, all my changes get sync’ed right up), and the rest I can access when I need to.  Nokia has amazing IMAP support, better than almost any desktop mail client I’ve ever seen.  any folks think that IMAP means you never download your messages or delete them from the server.  While many of the advantages certainly are more useful if you don’t delete messages from the server but leave them there for other clients, its certainly not a requirement.  You can certainly use IMAP more like POP and download/delete messages off the server should you so desire.  It just doesn’t make sense in many situations to do that.
  • Server-Side-Filtering - One of Outlooks niftier features when it first came out was the mailbox sorting. It was easy to develop rules to allow mail to be automatically responded in certain ways, deleted, forwarded to other accounts, or filed into specific folders. That’s great, but the downside is that it all occured in the mail client. You had to download all of your mail locally first, then make your changes.  None of those changes were sync’ed on the server necessarily then because they occured locally.  IMAP supports the ability to do all this on the server. So, for example, I could have my IMAP server filter all messages from that one guy at work who likes forwarding large joke email attachments to a specific folder that I only read with my desktop client, but my Nokia ignores by default.
  • IMAP on a diet - Speaking of large files, here’s another great feature of IMAP.  You can configure your IMAP client to only download what it needs to.  On my Nokia, for example, it’s configured to only download the first 5000bytes of every message.  That’s enough to get the text of all but the longest rants, and plenty enough to know whether I’m going to delete the email, forward it, file it in a folder, or wait until I’m back at a real keyboard to respond.  Same thing with any attachments.  I can download them if I want, but by default, they stay on the server.  I can still delete the message, move it to a folder, all without actually getting the entire message on my palm.  This saves tremendously load on the network, on the device, and just plain makes sense.
  • Server searches - Not only can IMAP filters be set up to filter incoming email, but live searches of folders can be done on the server as well.  So if I wanted to find an email form a particular person between a particular date range that was stored in a particular mailbox, I could initiate an on-the-fly search on the server for that particular message.  The server does all the heavy listing, and if it’s a common search, I could leave that mailbox on the server to be accessed from any of my clients.  How amazing is this stuff?

There’s a number of other reasons why IMAP is nice, but I think that sums it up for me.  I do have this to say — IMAP is so nice that once I switched I never looked back.  Same goes for pretty much everyone else I know.  So if IMAP is so great, how come Microsoft/Blackberry/Lotus don't want you using it?  Well, for one thing, if you compare POP3 with their offerings, there's still a reason for you to spend some money on their products.  With IMAP, pretty much all their much vaunted differentiation go away.  Admittedly the administrative interface for IMAP servers is not nearly as friendly, but with a little perserverance (or outsourcing - in Singapore, IBM and Lightspeed both offer on-demand and classic implementations), you'll get everything you want out of an email system at a fraction of the cost of a big-name software package with an even larger price tag.

 
Russian Postal Service Wears Red Hat
Written by Jeffrey Goh   
Tuesday, 01 April 2008 00:00

russian postoffice logo Linux might be adopted on a large scale by the Russian Post, as the institution has started testing Linux, with the intent of rolling it out in post offices throughout the country. The main reason for moving to Linux is to reduce the costs. Although not officially stated, it is likely that the Russian Post will use Red Hat as the basis of it's Linux efforts, in view of the recent signing of "protocol of intention to develop information systems on the basis of the free software" between Red Hat and the Russian Post.

Opensource software is to be implemented in the coming year. Presently the developers of custom programs used by Russian Post have been tasked to adapt them to run under the Linux operating system. Counter staff at the post offices should not face any user interface changes, facilitating widespread adoption. Russian Post’s IT-specialists will undergo special training.

The Russian Post has  over 40,000 post offices nationwide, and at various points in history, operated branches as far flung as Crete, China and even the Ottoman Empire. (more...)

 
StarOffice, Linux fly high on Singapore Airlines
Written by Chris Preimesberger   
Tuesday, 29 May 2007 08:00

Singapore Airlines is offering access to Sun's StarOffice 8 office productivity suite free of charge to passengers on its new Boeing 777-300ER aircraft. StarOffice, Sun's proprietary version of OpenOffice.org, runs on the aircraft's Linux server and is accessed via a seat-back terminal at each passenger's seat, according to Sun.

Thanks to new USB ports embedded in the armrest of each chair (near the headphone jack), passengers now can use a USB key (aka thumb drive) -- or other portable drive -- to access their documents, spreadsheets, and presentation files from software running on the plane's Linux server.

StarOffice 8 supports both Open Document Format and Microsoft Office formats, and can export files to PDF format. Thus, passengers won't need to use their laptops if they are doing work on Word documents, spreadsheets, and presentation-type files -- all they need to do is carry the documents with them on a USB key or other USB storage device, such as an MP3 player.

"With heightened security, access to laptops during flights can sometimes be restricted," said Wong Heng Chew, managing director at Sun's Singapore division. "The availability of StarOffice ... offers Singapore Airlines' customers the opportunity to work on and access their information in an open, secure and freely available fashion independent of any vendor or file formats during their flights."

The first of the new Boeing 777-300ER aircraft was delivered last November and entered commercial services on the Singapore-Paris route in early December 2006, a Sun spokesperson said. Singapore Airlines currently deploys the 777-300ER aircraft to destinations such as Paris, Zurich, Seoul, San Francisco, Milan, Barcelona, and Hong Kong.

According to Sun, StarOffice software is a complete, feature-rich office productivity product that includes powerful word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, database, graphics, drawing, photo editing and web publishing applications. Fully compatible with MS Office, it includes a built-in PDF export and supports XML, Flash, and HTML.




 
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