4 Results for Camp KDE

OStatic Buffer Overflow.....

Citrix, Intel developing open source Xen desktop hypervisor.....

Mozilla plays a risky game with Theora codec endorsement.....

Sexy Android phone, General Mobile DSTL 1 seen here.....

Linux dead at hands of Windows 7? Horse puckey!.....

Deutsche Telekom spawns open source cloud vendor Zimory...and more on open source cloud resources.....

Torvalds, KDE 4, and the media circus.....



OStatic Buffer Overflow.....

Mozilla solicits user feedback with Test Pilot.....

Linus Torvalds on regression, laziness and having his code rejected.....

Sun's open source Java move gets mixed reviews.....

Linux KDE 4.2 RC1, in photos.....

What's new in Firefox 3.1 beta 2?.....

San Francisco's OSBC conference slated for March.....



A Newbie Switches to Ubuntu: What Worked and What Didn't?

I got a kick out of reading AshPringle's series about his New Year's resolution to switch from Windows and the Mac to Linux for a week. (You can find the daily entries at the bottom of this first entry.) Remember how, when you first took the SAT, people told you to go with your first answer--it's probably correct? This series is by no means written by a Linux expert, but several of the off-the-cuff impressions about using Ubuntu, add-ons and more are interesting precisely because they are off-the-cuff. Here were a few of the good takeaways that I spotted in the conclusion post of the series.


OSCA Foundation, Nepomuk, and the Importance of Semantics

Last month's Technology Review featured a piece on semantic computing. Semantic technology -- whether it's applied on the web or the desktop -- seems almost impossibly complex, as it tries to bring some very human traits of relating and connecting information to a machine environment. The artificial intelligence field, relatively speaking, is in its infancy, and since the human brain is largely an indistinguishable mix of biology and culture, it would seem semantic technology would be confined to psychology departments and computer science labs.

That isn't the case, of course. And when you consider that semantic technology deals with computers and people, and that any technology or study ultimately benefits from larger participant pools, it's little wonder that the Nepomuk project is open source and now even comes integrated with the KDE desktop.