News
Red Hat Linux to power global telemedicine network
Red Hat announced that the Medical Center of Boston International will leverage Red Hat Linux as the operating system backbone for the first Internet-based global telemedicine infrastructure on Linux.
IBM to release LVM Technology to Linux community
IBM will release the Logical Volume Management System to the Linux community. The system completely integrates all disk and volume management into a single, highly extensible, easy to use entity.
Microsoft Word, do we really need it?
One of the biggest drawbacks for wide acceptance of Linux, according to industry watchers, is that it does not have applications like Microsoft Word. But do the vast majority of users need it?
Somebody, quick! Give Linux a fork!
Tommy believes that a fork is unavoidable, but it will help Linux's chance at being a mainstream OS.
Linux, live in your living room
First it was Linux games. Then it was embedded Linux running on consumer devices. Now Intel is pushing Linux for your home network.
TVs learn from PCs
TiVo's digital video recorder allows on-demand viewing of previously aired TV shows and actually runs its own version of the Linux operating system.
Internet startup in a wide-open world
When Alex Edelstein recently launched Viralon, which makes software to help businesses manage customer acquisitions over the Internet, there wasn't a Microsoft program in sight. The company started out by writing software that's based on open Internet standards, including Linux operating system software.
Linux for Macintosh
Getting Linux to work on Macintosh computers is always a hard job, especially for Mac users accustomed to user-friendly software. Connectix Virtual PC with Red Hat Linux can save headaches and stress.
64-bit Chinese Linux is here
China's Institute of Software, unveiled the world's first 64-bit Chinese Linux operating system. The release of this native server software, represents a major advance in Linux, combining the advantage of open-source computing and unlimited 64-bit processing power with native Chinese language capability.
Cirrus Logic's super integrated Linux SOC
Cirrus Logic unveiled the first public details of a new family of very high integration system-on-chip devices. This speck of silicon with 5.7 million internal transistors is intended to use embedded Linux.
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