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326
Living Room / Tech News Weekly: Edition 18-09
« Last post by Ehtyar on May 03, 2009, 06:56 AM »
The Weekly Tech News
TNWeekly01.gifHi all.
Be sure to check out The Hunt for Gollum, probably available by the time you read this ;)
As usual, you can find last week's news here.


1. Apple Sued Over Legal Threats to Wiki Operator
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/04/apple-sued-over-legal-threats-to-wiki-operator.ars
Apple are being sued by BluWiki with the help of the EFF in response to legal threats from Apple over content BluWiki hosted showing iPod owners how to use iTunes alternatives.

The operator of a public wiki site has filed a lawsuit against Apple in an attempt to defend its rights to publish information under the First Amendment. OdioWorks LLC, which runs BluWiki, filed the lawsuit in a US District Court in the northern district of California today with the help of the Electronic Frontier Foundation in order to seek a declaratory judgment that would protect the company from continued attacks by Apple's legal team.

BluWiki, like most wiki platforms, is open to the public for the sole purposes of sharing information. The site is noncommercial and doesn't run ads, and depends on its users to edit and publish articles on a wide variety of topics. Up until about six months ago, some of those topics included information on how to use an iPod or iPhone with third-party software—something that is not possible under Apple's normal product restrictions.


2. Windows 7 Will Feature "XP Mode"
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2009/04/windows-7-will-feature-xp-mode.ars
In the interest of easing the backward compatibility problems that tend to plague new Windows releases, Windows 7 will include a virtualized versions of Windows XP that will permit users to run applications that no longer work on Windows Vista/7.

Redmond is taking a page from the early days of Mac OS X with Windows 7. Similar to Classic—Mac OS X's emulation-based support for Mac OS 9 (and earlier) apps—the newly confirmed "XP Mode" that will appear in Windows 7 will use a VM for backwards compatibility with a previous-generation OS.

Win7's XP Mode uses VirtualPC to run some XP apps. In a blog post (via CNET), the Win7 team says, "All you need to do is to install suitable applications directly in Windows XP Mode which is a virtual Windows XP environment running under Windows Virtual PC. The applications will be published to the Windows 7 desktop and then you can run them directly from Windows 7."


3. RapidShare Hands Over User Info in Germany, Users Panic
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/04/rapidshare-hands-over-user-info-in-germany-users-panic.ars
Popular file sharing site Rapidshare has reportedly handed over user logs to the record industry, resulting in at least one raid in Germany.

The popular Germany-based file hosting service RapidShare has allegedly begun handing over user information to record labels looking to pursue illegal file-sharers. The labels appear to be making use of paragraph 101 of German copyright law, which allows content owners to seek a court order to force ISPs to identify users behind specific IP addresses. Though RapidShare does not make IP information public, the company appears to have given the information to at least one label, which took it to an ISP to have the user identified.

The issue came to light after a user claimed that his house was raided by law enforcement thanks to RapidShare, as reported by German-language news outlet Gulli (hat tip). This user had uploaded a copy of Metallica's new album "Death Magnetic" to his RapidShare account a day before its worldwide release, causing Metallica's label to work itself into a tizzy and request the user's personal details (if there's anything record labels hate, it's leaks of prerelease albums). It then supposedly asked RapidShare for the user's IP address, and then asked Deutsche Telekom to identify the user behind the IP before sending law enforcement his way.


4. EU Extends Musical Copyrights by 20 Years, Eyes Movies Next
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/04/eu-extends-musical-copyrights-by-20-years-eyes-movies-next.ars
The European Union has extended musical copyright to 70 years up from 50.

The European Parliament late last week agreed to extend musical copyrights from their current 50-year term to 70 years. So all that early rock 'n roll about to pass into the public domain? Don't count on using it in your documentary for another two decades—and there's nothing to say that the term won't be extended again.

While the vote is a big victory for the music labels who can continue to market major artists like The Beatles (let's face it, the obscure stuff from the 1950s isn't selling in measurable quantities anymore, and it's not playing on the radio), the movie industry looks set to cash in soon, too. In passing the term extension, Parliament also asked the European Commission "to launch an impact assessment of the situation in the European audiovisual sector by January 2010, with a view to deciding whether a similar copyright extension would benefit the audiovisual world."


5. "Pirate Google" Sets Sail to Show Copyright Hypocrisy
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/04/pirate-google-sets-sail-to-show-copyright-hypocrisy.ars
In defense of The Pirate Bay owners, an anonymous individual has established thepirategoogle.com, which uses Google directly to locate torrent files.

The Pirate Bay trial saw the defendants trot out "the Google defense" on multiple occasions: Google indexes .torrent files, so what's wrong with our doing it? That point didn't sway the judge, who saw a world of difference between what the two sites did, but it did resonate with at least one Internet coder, who last week rolled out The Pirate Google.

The site serves as little more than a gateway to a Google custom search (it simply limits all queries to .torrent files, something that any searcher can do on their own by adding "filetype:torrent" to searches). It exists not so much to provide useful functionality, but to make the same point that The Pirate Bay admins made at their trial: Google indexes all of this stuff as well.


6. UK.gov to Spend £2bn On ISP Tracking
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/04/27/imp_consultation/
The UK Goverment has ruled out storing internet user data on government run servers, and has instead opted to spend £2 billion to assist ISPs in storing it due to..."privacy concerns"... Seriously, I didn't know snorting crack could cause that much drain bamage....

The government plans to spend £2bn for ISPs to intercept details of their customers' emails, VoIP calls, instant messaging and social networking.

Under the proposals, mobile and fixed line operators will be required to process and link the data together to build complete profiles of every UK internet user's online activity. Police and the intelligence services would then access the profiles, which will be stored for 12 months, on a case-by-case basis.


7. Optical Disc Offers 500GB Storage
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8021012.stm
With DVDs already disastrously insufficient in size for data storage, and BluRay only barely keeping pace, a new 500GB optical storage medium has been announced. I wonder will it suck just as hard as existing optical media? Seems we'll have to wait a few years to find out...

The micro-holographic disc, which is the same size as existing DVD discs, is aimed at the archive industry.

But the company believes it can eventually be used in the consumer market place and home players.

Blu-ray discs, which are used to store high definition movies and games, can currently hold between 25GB and 50GB.


8. Fordham Law Class Collects Personal Info About Scalia; Supreme Ct. Justice Is Steamed
Spoiler
http://www.abajournal.com/weekly/fordham_law_class_collects_scalia_info_justice_is_steamed
A quick funny. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia recently made a public comment questioning the need for tighter protection of private information on the internet, only for Fordham University law professor Joel Reidenberg to assign his class the task of digging up info on the judge himself. After being presented with pictures of his grandchildren and a listing of his food and movie preferences, the judge "isn't happy".

Last year, when law professor Joel Reidenberg wanted to show his Fordham University class how readily private information is available on the Internet, he assigned a group project. It was collecting personal information from the Web about himself.

This year, after U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia made public comments that seemingly may have questioned the need for more protection of private information, Reidenberg assigned the same project. Except this time Scalia was the subject, the prof explains to the ABA Journal in a telephone interview.


9. NASA's Swift Orbiting Observatory Spots Oldest Supernova Yet
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2009/04/nasas-swift-orbiting-observatory-spots-oldest-supernova-yet.ars
NASAs Swift observatory has copped a lens full of a 13 billion year old super nova. The super nova, termed GRB 090423, is believed to have taken place just 600 million years after the birth of the universe.

As attention is focused on the impending mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope, one of NASA's other orbiting observatories gave us a great reminder that visible astronomy isn't the only game in town (where "town" equals "near earth orbit"). One of NASA's other great success stories, the Swift observatory (we've mentioned it in so many stories, I'll just link to a Google search for it) has recently spotted an unusual gamma-ray burst, caused by a supernova, that didn't appear to arise from an object that could be detected at visible wavelengths. Follow-up observations have now confirmed that this is the most distant event of the sort ever imaged, having occurred over 13 billion years ago.

The Swift was designed to solve a long-standing problem for astronomy. Given something as big as the universe, high-energy events are happening all the time, but we could only observe them if we happened to have an instrument pointing in the right direction at the time. The Swift was designed to detect the direction of high-energy photons, and could swing its instruments to pinpoint the source rapidly. At that point, it could continue observations at gamma-ray and X-ray wavelengths on its own, while the location was relayed to telescopes that could obtain data at other wavelengths. It's worked exactly as intended, which is why the Swift graces the science news so often.


10. The Hunt For Gollum
Spoiler
http://www.thehuntforgollum.com/
The Hunt For Gollum, a 40 minute fan-made prequel to the Lord of the Rings trilogy, will become available as a free online download at 16:00 today.

onion.png



Ehtyar.
327
Living Room / Re: The Hunt For Gollum - 40 Min. Fan-Made Movie
« Last post by Ehtyar on May 03, 2009, 06:05 AM »
Huh?

It's a prequel to LOTR, following The Hobbit near as I can tell. It's not a spoof, which I think is what you're asking.

Ehtyar.
328
Living Room / The Hunt For Gollum - 40 Min. Fan-Made Movie
« Last post by Ehtyar on May 02, 2009, 05:25 PM »
The Hunt For Gollum, a 40 minute Lord of the Rings inspired, fan-made film will be publicly released online for free tomorrow (3rd May) for the enjoyment of fans. I have to say the trailers (see below) look utterly riveting, I hope it's out before I go to bed tonight!!

The story follows the Heir of Isildur; the "greatest huntsman and traveller in Middle Earth" as he sets out to find the creature Gollum. The creature must be found to discover the truth about the Ring, and to protect the future Ringbearer.

onion.png

Ehtyar.
329
Your choices are Universal Extractor, or install and copy from another machine.

Ehtyar.

[edit]
Eeep, didn't fully read the post *headdesk*. I've installed xemacs before, but I made it a portable installation before I ran it first time, so I'm not quite sure I can help you here urlwolf. Sorry for the pointless post.
[/edit]
330
Living Room / Re: Opera is 15
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 30, 2009, 03:43 PM »
15 eh? Sounds like a good time to die...or be community-developed.

Ehtyar.
331
Living Room / Re: Six Months With a Hackintosh Netbook: It Ain't Pretty
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 29, 2009, 05:51 PM »
To be clear, our issues weren't usability issues, they were stability/compatibility issues.

Ehtyar.
332
Living Room / Re: Six Months With a Hackintosh Netbook: It Ain't Pretty
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 29, 2009, 03:41 PM »
Mmm. We've done it twice at work (in an attempt to test sites on Safari) and it's an absolute nightmare. Eventually we just dragged an old G4 out of storage, installed 10.1.4 on it (came with it) and let it update for a year :P

Ehtyar.
333
Living Room / Re: The Worm Within: Disgusting and You Can't Stop Reading
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 29, 2009, 01:49 AM »
OH MY GOD!! I DON'T WANNA TAPEWORM!!!

Ehtyar.
334
Living Room / Re: Tech News Weekly: Edition 17-09
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 29, 2009, 01:24 AM »
Yw Deo :)

What's the deal with HTTPS around here lately? Far too much security-laxness around here...

Ehtyar.
335
@nosh
The "view a friend's history" thing is some social engineering/sleight of hand. They don't offer to let you peek into other people's browsers. They offer to let you send YOUR OWN browser history to a friend. When you do this, you are giving your browser permission to send the information it has collected to startpanic.com, which seems to me further evidence that they are not collecting this info behind the scenes.

BUT - once you send your browser history off somewhere - THROUGH THEM - they then have access to the information you provided them. They can then store it and show it to your friends, should they request it. If they can trick your friends into sending them this info as well, then they can store it and show it to you.

But there's still nothing technically sneaky going on here. Your browser collected some information, then offered to let you send that information on to a third party. If you do this, the third party (startpanic.com) is collecting information with your permission, since you had to actively do something to send it to them.

Once they have your browser history, you might claim that they shouldn't store it and show it to other people, but they did kind of tell you that's what they were going to do, although not in so many words.
See here. It would not be legal for them to keep the data they obtained from your machine without some sort of agreement on your part, but rest assured they did see it regardless of your choice to "view a friends history" or not, whether or not they keep it.

@everyone: A web server knows your IP address as soon as you successfully open a connection to it. An HTTP request is not necessary.

+1 for BetterPrivacy. For those of you interested in the technical aspects, BetterPrivacy cleans out your Local Shared Object (LSO) cache, which contains data, similar to cookies, saved by Adobe Flash on your machine. Note: LSOs are saved independently of cookies, and are typically not removed when your cookies are erased.

Ehtyar.
336
Living Room / Tech News Weekly: Edition 17-09
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 26, 2009, 06:10 AM »
The Weekly Tech News
TNWeekly01.gifHi all.
Be sure to check out #10 if you haven't seen it, really great laugh  :-*
As usual, you can find last week's news here.


1. Study: Pirates Biggest Music Buyers. Labels: Yeah, Right
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/media/news/2009/04/study-pirates-buy-tons-more-music-than-average-folks.ars
A widely publicized study has shown that music pirates over the age of 15 are more likely to purchase music, online or otherwise, than their non-pirate brethren. It will come as no surprise to most that the recording industry disagrees.

Those who download illegal copies of music over P2P networks are the biggest consumers of legal music options, according to a new study by the BI Norwegian School of Management. Researchers examined the music downloading habits of more than 1,900 Internet users over the age of 15, and found that illegal music connoisseurs are significantly more likely to purchase music than the average, non-P2P-loving user.

Unsurprisingly, BI found that those between 15 and 20 are more likely to buy music via paid download than on a physical CD, though most still purchased at least one CD in the last six months. However, when it comes to P2P, it seems that those who wave the pirate flag are the most click-happy on services like the iTunes Store and Amazon MP3. BI said that those who said they download illegal music for "free" bought ten times as much legal music as those who never download music illegally. "The most surprising is that the proportion of paid download is so high," the Google-translated Audun Molde from the Norwegian School of Management told Aftenposten.


2. Google Boffins Unveil 'What's Up?' CAPTCHA
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/04/20/new_google_captcha/
http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2009/04/google-research-explores-using-image-orientation-for-captcha.ars
Google has unveiled a new form of CAPTCHA that makes use of images that rotated to a random degree. To pass, a user must select the image that is right-side-up.

Attempting to take the upper hand in the battle against bots, researchers from Google have devised a new CAPTCHA system that uses a series of randomly rotated images to distinguish between human visitors and automated scripts.

The technique, detailed in a paper titled What's Up CAPTCHA?, presents people signing up for site accounts or performing other website tasks with several pictures that are identical except for one attribute: some of them are upside-down or sideways. To gain permission to create the account or post a comment, a user must successfully click on the image that is right-side up.


3. Bluetooth "high Speed" Technology Becomes Official With 3.0 Spec
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/hardware/news/2009/04/bluetooth-high-speed-technology-becomes-official-with-30-spec.ars
Bluetooth 3.0 has been standardized, with higher speeds made possible by establishing an ad-hoc wireless network to transfer data.

The Bluetooth SIG today officially announced its new Bluetooth 3.0+HS specification, otherwise known as Bluetooth High Speed Technology. The spec has been in development for some time, and astute readers know that today's announcement was expected.

The new spec adds the ability to switch over to an 802.11 radio for fast data transfer speeds. It is completely backwards compatible with older Bluetooth devices, and still uses the same protocols for establishing connections. But if two devices support the 3.0+HS spec and have an 802.11 capable radio, then it will be utilized for large data transfers.


4. Chinese Spies Breach US Joint Strike Fighter Project, Wall Street Journal Reports
Spoiler
http://www.news.com.au/technology/story/0,28348,25368321-5014239,00.html
http://www.kimatv.com/news/tech/43394432.html
http://arstechnica.com/security/news/2009/04/chinese-hackers-nick-joint-strike-fighter-plans.ars
The Wall Street Journal has reported that Chinese hackers breached computer systems containing information regarding Lockheed Martin's F-35 Lightning II program and stole terabytes of information. Defense officials claim nothing classified was stolen.

COMPUTER spies have reportedly hacked into the United States' most costly weapons program, raising the prospect of adversaries gaining access to top-secret security data.

Citing current and former government officials, The Wall Street Journal said cyber-intruders were able to copy several terabytes of data on the $US300 billion ($430 billion) Joint Strike Fighter project, which may make it easier to defend against the aircraft, also known as the F-35 Lightning II.


5. Google Joins Effort for 3D Web Standard With New Plugin, API
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/software/news/2009/04/google-releases-3d-graphics-plugin-for-browsers.ars
Google have released a new open source, cross platform browser plugin capable of rendering hardware accelerated 3D graphics in-browser with javascript.

Google has released an experimental browser plugin that will make it possible to display rich 3D graphics in Web content. Google hopes that the plugin will stimulate discussion within the Web development community and contribute to a nascent effort headed by the Khronos group to bring 3D graphics to the Web.

The plugin provides an implementation of O3D, a new API conceived by Google that facilitates the development of interactive 3D Web applications. It can be used to programmatically create and manipulate 3D graphics with the JavaScript programming language. It's far more sophisticated and ambitious than some of Google's previous experiments with 3D Web content, such as the ill-fated Lively service. The source code of the plugin is distributed under the open source BSD license, which broadly permits third-party developers to study, modify, and redistribute the plugin software.


6. Geocities to Close After 15 Years of Aesthetic "awesomeness"
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/web/news/2009/04/geocities-to-close-after-15-years-of-aesthetic-awesomeness.ars
Iconic web service Geocities will be closed by owner Yahoo due to lack of profit. Geocities has been around since 1994 and has housed some of the most popular user-generated content on the web.

Believe it or not, the webpage service Geocities is still alive—but not for long. Fifteen years after its original creation, Yahoo has announced that it will shut down the service later this year. An exact date is not specified, but Yahoo is warning current users to consider moving to other options, such as Yahoo's own Web Hosting service.

Started in 1994, Geocities was like the Facebook to Angelfire's MySpace—competing webpage services that allowed over-enthused HTML newbies to create artfully horrific webpages to represent themselves in the early days of the Internet. (I was a diehard Angelfire fan, myself.) Geocities was acquired by Yahoo in 1999 with the intent of extending Yahoo's reach with its Internet advertising and services.


7. Big Boost for Aussie Firewall
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/04/23/aussie_firewall_boost/
Australia's second biggest ISP, Optusnet (the slimy bastards), have come onboard with the trial of the Great Aussie Firewall, significantly boosting the project's credibility.

The controversial Great Aussie Firewall got a big boost yesterday when Australia's second largest ISP Optus agreed to join the pilot.

The testing of filtering technology has suffered credibility problems since the refusal of iiNet to take part, after it was unable to reconcile the trial with its opposition to censorship. iiNet said the proposed blacklist of unwanted material was much wider than just child sex abuse images.


8. Pirate Bay Lawyers Demand Retrial
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8014626.stm
It has been revealed that Judge Tomas Norstrom, who presided over the Pirate Bay case, is involed with several pro-copyright organisations. This has been used by The Pirate Bay gang to demand a retrial.

Judge Tomas Norstrom is a member of the Swedish Copyright Association and sits on the board of Swedish Association for the Protection of Industrial Property.

But the judge has told Swedish Radio: "These activities do not constitute a conflict of interest."

Sweden's Court of Appeal would rule on a possible retrial, the lawyers said.


9. Researchers Find Massive Botnet On Nearly 2 Million PCs
Spoiler
http://www.darkreading.com/security/attacks/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=217000166
An as-yet unnamed botnet being operated out of the Ukraine appears to have infected over 2 millions PCs, most situated in the United States and many attached to government and corporate networks.

Researchers have discovered a major botnet operating out of the Ukraine that has infected 1.9 million machines, including large corporate and government PCs mainly in the U.S.

The botnet, which appears to be larger than the infamous Storm botnet was in its heyday, has infected machines from some 77 government-owned domains -- 51 of which are U.S. government ones, according to Ophir Shalitin, marketing director of Finjan, which recently found the botnet. Shalitin says the botnet is controlled by six individuals and is hosted in Ukraine.


10. Achmed, The Dead Terrorist
Spoiler
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFMl7_SQg00
I'm sure plenty of you have seen this one, but i spent half a day giggling to myself at work after seeing this. Jeff Dunham performs some absolutely terrific comedy with his pupped Achmed, the dead terrorist.

onion.png



Ehtyar.
337
I also use NoScript, but permitted this website to see what all the fuss was about. It did indeed correctly identify roughly 20 websites I had recently visited. It did so over about 2 minutes of full CPU usage and constant web requests.

I have to say I'm a little disappointed with regard to how easily many people dismissed this. Even if this was achieved through JavaScript, did no one notice the constant content requests? Those were actually AJAX requests. startpanic.com saw every URL their javascript found. Here is one such request:

panic.png

Ehtyar.
338
General Software Discussion / Re: What's your preferred File Manager
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 25, 2009, 11:31 PM »
2Ehtyar
For me DC is definitely slower on files listing and coping. There is no thumbnails view, background transfer and QuickView yet. The rest are the things which are small but annoying for me.

To name a few:
- configuration dialog is about 1000x800px but in most of cases even half of it is not used;
- no ellipsis for files names if they are too long;
- many dialogues are wasting the space (i.e. Change button bar);
- in TC mouse's wheel scrolls entire panel, in DC - focused line is changed only;

There is no point in listing all of these. It is a fresh project after all and many things will change. I hope it will get better from UI side because for now it looks immature.
-fenixproductions (April 25, 2009, 09:47 PM)
Two of those are options you haven't found and the bug you mentioned in the beta release configuration panel, is fixed in the snapshots and not present in the stable release. But you are correct there is no elipsis or QuickView.

Ehtyar.
339
General Software Discussion / Re: What's your preferred File Manager
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 25, 2009, 09:30 PM »
I'm very impressed with Double Commander. It has an excellent feature set and user interface for a cross platform app if you're looking for a dual-pane file manager. Out of curiosity, what is it missing that's important to TC/DOpus users?

Ehtyar.
340
Developer's Corner / Re: Socket Handle Leak Issue
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 25, 2009, 05:09 PM »
It would probably be helpful to know which functions you're using and any relevant params/structs that are used with them.

Ehtyar.
341
General Software Discussion / Re: What's your preferred File Manager
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 25, 2009, 03:02 AM »
Just a quick update for Double Commander which has been mentioned a few times in this thread. It actually is under active development, with a 0.4 beta released in February, and nightly development snapshots available here. Double Commander is available for Linux and Windows, and is a relatively faithful TC-like file manager written in Free Pascal with a Qt/Lazarus UI.

Ehtyar.
342
DC Gamer Club / $10 Orange Box on Steam
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 24, 2009, 09:57 PM »
I imagine many already know about this but...

This weekend Steam is cutting the price of the epic Valve collection the Orange Box to only $10. Yes, $10. If you don't own this yet, you know what to do.

Are you a gamer who doesn't yet own the Orange Box for the PC? This weekend should have you covered, as you can pick up the package of six games for only $10. That's right, the whole thing is only $10.

That gets you Half-Life 2, HL2 Episode 1, HL2 Episode 2, HL2 The Lost Coast, Portal, and Team Fortress 2. It's an amazing stack of amazing games, and it's only $10. If you were looking for an excuse to give in and pick the game up, you have it. Bought separately, the games would cost you around $85.
-ArsTechnica

http://arstechnica.c...only-10-on-steam.ars

Ehtyar.
343
Achmed - The Dead Terrorist. Likely old, but I saw it for the first time yesterday. Enjoy :)

Ehtyar.
344
Living Room / Re: Oracle Buys Sun - Your Thoughts?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 22, 2009, 03:36 PM »
Everyone's predictions are meaningless House Man, it's just interesting to get everyone's point of view on this.

Ehtyar.
345
Living Room / Re: Oracle Buys Sun - Your Thoughts?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 21, 2009, 08:45 PM »
:O I forgot about VirtualBox. If VirtualBox goes down the tubes, Oracle will most certainly incur my utterly insignificant and and entirely non-fear-instilling wrath.

Your thoughts on OpenOffice make a lot of sense Lash Man. Even if Oracle decided to drop it, the community would pick it up in a heartbeat.

Your ideas also make a lot of sense Edvard and you express them very well. I think the notion of beefing up OpenSolaris as a server platform, and adding VirtualBox as an enterprise visualization solution sounds like it would add a lot of market value to what Oracle picked up from Sun.

Ehtyar.
346
Living Room / Re: Oracle Buys Sun - Your Thoughts?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 21, 2009, 06:08 PM »
ROFL. Awesome metaphor 40hz.

MySQL is pretty up in the air right now I think. Oracle could do just about anything they wanted with it, some paths making more sense than others.

Databases as several appliances I agree is pretty much a given, and I'd expect Oracle to be looking into other types of appliance to maximize the return on at least the hardware of the Sun buyout.

Not sure what to say about SPARC as a platform, it will be interesting to see what Oracle does with Fujitsu on that front.

Something few people seem to be discussing is OpenOffice. Sun has copped a lot of flack over the years for the way they handled StarOffice/OpenOffice. I suppose OpenOffice, Java, and MySQL all face similar potential fates.

Any thoughts on OpenSolaris anyone?

Ehtyar.
347
Living Room / Re: ZDNET: Have we arrived in the post-Windows era?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 21, 2009, 03:49 PM »
A corporate buyer once told me that (from her perspective) most tech marketing seems to say little more than: "Don't use their crap - use our crap!" -or- "Don't hire those jerks - hire our jerks"

Sometimes I think she's right. ;D
The Mac vs. PC ads are a perfect example, and now MS has stooped to their level and managed to do an even worse job.

*sigh*

Ehtyar.
348
Living Room / Re: ZDNET: Have we arrived in the post-Windows era?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 21, 2009, 01:57 AM »
Most consumers never really "chose" Vista - it was just the OS already pre-installed on their new computers.
Which *SUCKS*!

...

*ahem*

Ehtyar.
349
Living Room / Re: The entitled generation....Are they right?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 21, 2009, 01:15 AM »
Thank you 40hz. As usual, an excellent recommendation :)

Ehtyar.
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Living Room / Oracle Buys Sun - Your Thoughts?
« Last post by Ehtyar on April 20, 2009, 11:20 PM »
Hi all.

Many of you have likely already heard that Oracle's offer to buy Sun Microsystems for US$7.4 billion ($9.50 a share) has been accepted by Sun. IBM was the original contender, but negotiations fell though shortly before Oracle got serious in the race.

Many saw the acquisition of Sun by IBM as a negative, citing IBMs somewhat colorful history with open source projects, speaking specifically to concerns about how IBM might handle Java and MySQL.

Let us know what you think.

http://www.techcrunc...old-on-to-your-hats/
http://www.theinquir...uys-sun-usd7-billion
http://www.databasej...Sun-in-IBMs-Wake.htm
http://developers.sl...?sid=09/04/20/128246
http://www.osnews.co...uys_Sun_Microsystems
http://news.yahoo.co..._on_bi_ge/oracle_sun

Ehtyar.
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