|
|
Developer Linux News for Sep 30, 2004
-
Akkerman: Free Software Developer in Fatal Crash (Sep 30, 2004, 15:27)
According to Dutch media, an auto accident in France today
killed ne2000 developer Hans Bakker and injured developers Edwin
Hermans and Sebastian S. The car had just dropped off Richard
Stallman from the SANE Conference.
-
Linus Torvalds: Linux 2.6.9-rc3 (Sep 30, 2004, 11:31)
Changelog, links within.
-
dot.KDE: Interview with Scribus Team (Sep 30, 2004, 11:30)
"Curious about the Scribus team? We have an interview for you
originally conducted by the kind people of Golem.de just before the
Scribus 1.2 release..."
-
SitePoint: Run Your Own Spider (Sep 30, 2004, 10:00)
"Carlos had a great list of open source web crawlers that
included JSpider, a tool I have used for error checking on web
sites..."
-
NewsForge: XML-based Print Publishing with DSSSL and OpenJade (Sep 30, 2004, 08:30)
"XML publishing has been thrown around as a catchphrase in the
industry quite a bit. What does it really mean...?"
-
KernelTrap: Running On Xbox (Sep 30, 2004, 08:30)
"Ed Schouten posted a small patch against 2.6.9-rc2, hoping to
merge support for Linux on Xbox into the mainline kernel..."
-
Release Digest: KDE, September 29, 2004 (Sep 30, 2004, 04:45)
Today's KDE apps: KLinkStatus 0.2.0; BasKet 0.4.0c &
0.5.0-beta1; and KMusicManager 1.0.2.
-
Release Digest: GNOME, September 29, 2004 (Sep 30, 2004, 04:45)
Today's GNOME apps: Evolution 2.0.1, New Screen Ruler for Gnome,
and Nautilus-Sendto 0.2-1.
-
DistroWatch: Distributions, September 29, 2004 (Sep 30, 2004, 04:45)
Today's distributions: CRUX 2.0 (PPC Edition), Gnoppix 0.8.1
Beta 4, SAM Mini Live Linux 1.0 Test, and Santa Fe Linux 1.0
CTR3.
-
NewsForge: Closing the Legal Briefcase on Mambo vs. Furthermore Copyright Dispute (Sep 30, 2004, 01:45)
"Now it is time for the facts, and NewsForge can definitively
say that Connolly's legal claims against the Mambo community are
baseless..."
-
LinuxInsider: Accepting Open Source: A Challenge for Developers (Sep 30, 2004, 01:45)
"Open source technology promises cheaper software for users.
Yet, at the supply side, things might not be as promising..."
-
eWeek: Support Linux Standard Base (Sep 30, 2004, 01:00)
"LSB 2.0 represents the best chance to prevent Linux
fragmentation..."
|