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Developer Linux News for Feb 13, 2004
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Editor's Note: Torvalds Clarifies OSDL Relationship (Feb 13, 2004, 23:00)
Linus Torvalds patiently walks this editor through the recent
speculations heard in the community regarding just how much
influence OSDL has on kernel development.
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Release Digest: KDE, February 13, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 23:00)
Today's KDE apps: K3b 0.11.3 and konvert 0.4.
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Release Digest: GNOME, February 13, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 23:00)
Today's GNOME apps: GGV 2.5.4, Gnome CD Master 1.1.8, Devhelp
0.8, and GtkSourceView 0.9.0.
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DistroWatch: Distributions, February 13, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 23:00)
Today's distributions: clusterKNOPPIX 3.3-2004-02-09, Medialinux
2 Beta, and Feather Linux 0.3.5.
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New York Times/CNET: File Sharing's New Face (Feb 13, 2004, 20:00)
"After working for a parade of doomed dot-com startups, a young
programmer named Bram Cohen finally got tired of failure..."
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Linux Journal: On the ALSA Track (Feb 13, 2004, 13:00)
"A look at the history of Linux sound architectures and some of
the benefits of ALSA..."
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ONLamp: Why Should Free Software Have to Earn a Profit? (Feb 13, 2004, 12:00)
"The main complaint I hear about free and open source software
from people in the computer field is that 'You can't earn money
from it...'"
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ONLamp: Open Source, Open Innovation (Feb 13, 2004, 10:00)
"You know, I like Open Source, and I also like free
software..."
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Release Digest: KDE, February 12, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 05:00)
Today's KDE apps: taxipilot 0.9.0 and Archive Search.
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Release Digest: GNU, February 12, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 05:00)
Today's GNU app: GNU GTick 0.3.0.
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Release Digest: GNOME, February 12, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 05:00)
Today's GNOME apps: The GNOME XML toolkit 2.6.6, gnome-mud
0.10.5, meld-0.9.2, Muine 0.4.0, gnocl 0.5.15, Sodipodi 0.34,
gramps 1.0.0, and gnopernicus 0.7.4.
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DistroWatch: Distributions, February 12, 2004 (Feb 13, 2004, 05:00)
Today's distributions: Pingwinek 1.0 RC1 and Bluewall GNU/Linux
1.1.
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The Register: Mono and dotGNU: What's the Point? (Feb 13, 2004, 01:00)
"While providing freedom of choice might be reason enough to
justify a project, practical programmers could be asking:
What’s the point...?"
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LinuxInsider: How the Linux Kernel Gets Built (Feb 13, 2004, 00:00)
"Support for new architectures, such as AMD's Opteron, are
generally born as external projects that contribute code to the
official kernel. In fact, bleeding-edge hardware support is often
available only as a patch to the production kernel..."
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