Practical Technology

for practical people.

August 4, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

Ballmer makes McCain look bright when it comes to technology

It’s the fashion in some circles these days to make fun of John McCain because he can barely use the Internet. While he hasn’t described it as a bunch of “tubes,” that honor belongs to Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, McCain is an analog kind of guy in a digital world. Still, no one really expects McCain to be a techno geek. On the other hand, we do expect Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s CEO, to at least have a clue about technology. Whoops. Turns out we were wrong.

Back in February, Ballmer was answering questions at Microsoft’s annual Minority Student Day in Redmond. One brave student, emboldened perhaps because he was asking his question remotely from Charlotte, NC, asked, “In the future, does Microsoft plan to do an open-source version of Windows?”

Well, we all know the answer to that one. Ballmer said, “No.”

But then, bless his little heart, he decided to expand on his answer. Fortunately, Todd Bishop, ace Microsoft reporter, was on the scene to report what the Ballmer said.

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August 1, 2008
by sjvn01
1 Comment

New Linux Foundation Meeting for End-Users

The Linux Foundation has had several public meetings before, but they were really only for Linux developers and their best friends. Now, the Foundation is holding one for end-users: the Linux Foundation End User Collaboration Summit.

The meeting will be held on October 13 and 14th at the Desmond Tutu Center in New York City. The idea is to get end users and community developers together to try to co-ordinate what users want and what developers plan on delivering.

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August 1, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

Microsoft has serious plans to do away with Windows

It’s one thing to have a skunkworks operating system project, Midori, that could conceivably replace Windows. It’s another to actually have plans on how to switch users from Windows to Midori. Guess what? Microsoft actually does have such plans.

According to David Worthington, Microsoft isn’t only building a Windows replacement operating system, its “carefully conceptualizing a way to move millions of users away from the existing Windows codebase and onto Midori, a legacy-free operating system.”

The plans, which are far from being finalized, indicate the Microsoft is really running scared of Mac OS and Linux on the desktop. “Midori’s legacy-free objective [is] a preemptive strike against non-Microsoft operating systems, enabling the company to compete head-on by enticing customers to replace Windows with Midori instead of a non-Microsoft OS,” wrote Worthington.

I know many of you still have trouble with the idea that the Mac or the Linux desktop could possibly challenge Windows. Microsoft disagrees. Look at the numbers.

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July 30, 2008
by sjvn01
3 Comments

Linux User Here

Color me surprised. Dana Blankenhorn, a well-known writer about Linux and open source recently asked for someone—anyone–to send him a loaner Linux laptop to replace his now dead Windows laptop. What, he didn’t already have one?

Now, you can write about stuff that you don’t actually do yourself. After all, how many sports writers could even stand in against, never mind hit, a Jonathan Papelbon 96MPH fastball? But, I just assumed he was already running Linux on a daily basis. After all, that’s what I do.

I should also mention that Blankenhorn is a journalist who came to Linux, while I’m a techie who came to journalism. It’s a very different journey.

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July 30, 2008
by sjvn01
1 Comment

Is Microsoft getting ready to kill Windows?

No, I’m not talking about killing Vista. Microsoft is already burying that living dead operating system as fast it can. I’m talking about killing Windows itself. That’s the conclusion I’ve drawn from David Worthington’s story about Microsoft’s plans for Midori, a next generation operating system.

According to Worthington, who managed to get his hands on Microsoft’s internal documents, “Midori is an offshoot of Microsoft Research’s Singularity [a limited open-source] operating system, the tools and libraries of which are completely managed code. Midori is designed to run directly on native hardware (x86, x64 and ARM), be hosted on the Windows Hyper-V hypervisor, or even be hosted by a Windows process.”

Microsoft’s objective for Midori, writes Worthington, is no less than replacing Windows. “Microsoft is carefully mapping out migration strategies to move customers from Windows to Midori, its planned legacy-free operating environment, virtualization, and a composite application model that permits applications to be hosted by both OSes, are key to the strategy.”

It’s about time!

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July 29, 2008
by sjvn01
0 comments

Integrating Linux into Active Directory keeps getting easier

Likewise Software has released a new, open-source version of its eponymous AD (Active Directory) program for integrating Linux, Unix and Mac systems into AD.

Likewise Fall includes two main features. The most important, LWIS (Likewise Identity Services) enables you to use Active Directory Authentication for your Linux, Unix and Mac PCs. Likewise states that LWIS includes a full implementation of the DCE/RPC framework with support for Kerberos, NTLM and SPNEGO security protocols. The company also claims that LWIS will run on 118+ non-Windows platforms..

With just playing with Likewise Fall, I can say that the basic functionality is there. Using it I was able to join my openSUSE 11 desktop to my Windows Server 2008 AD.

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