15 Results for Cisco

OStatic Interviews Cisco Developer Contest Finalists: Team Enhancers

While Cisco prepares to reveal the winners in its Developer Contest next week, I got the chance to speak with Team Enhancers about its contest entry.

The Local Advertising Mesh Network, an advertising platform for local ad management, is Rajesh Kotagiri's response to the challenge Cisco put forth in the Developer Contest guidelines -- to use the network as a platform approach and develop an application using Cisco's Linux-based AXP (Application Extension Platform), a service module on its ISR (Integrated Services Routers).



OStatic Interviews Cisco Developer Contest Finalists: Team RSDevs

While the ten hopeful finalists in the Cisco Think Inside the Box developer competition await the judges' decision, OStatic has been fortunate enough to speak with a few teams about their submissions. The global contest centered on the network as a platform approach to develop applications using Cisco's Linux-based AXP (Application Extension Platform), a service module on its ISR (Integrated Services Routers).

Today, Roman Skvirsky of Team RSDevs has graciously taken the time to tell OStatic readers a little bit more about his Flash Gateway to Videoconferences application. The Flash Gateway to Videoconferences allows users to connect and join conferences and audio calls to H.323 and SIP phones through a web browser -- requiring no additional software installation beyond the Flash plugin.



Cisco Developer Contest Finalists: Team CampUser

In June, Cisco announced the ten finalists in its Think Inside the Box developer competition. The global contest centered on the network as a platform philosophy, and asked applicants to develop applications using Cisco's Linux-based AXP (Application Extension Platform), a module on its ISR (Integrated Services Routers).

The contest drew nearly 900 hopeful development teams from 75 countries. After many long hours of deliberation, the 110 qualifying teams were whittled down to 10 finalists.

OStatic has been fortunate enough to talk to a few of these finalist teams -- including Toshiyuki Sakata, from Team CampUser. CampUser, based in Brazil, developed its Locker for IP Telephony application to help network administrators maximize their organization's operational efficiency and billing policy administration through call authorization profiles and call management processing.



Red Hat: Right On the Radar of Cisco, HP, Dell, IBM and Microsoft

We've written before about how, among large commercial open source companies, Red Hat's model of offering support and services for free software has proven to be a big winner. The company delivers quarter after quarter of outstanding earnings, and is building quite a large mountain of cash. At the upcoming Red Hat Summit, September 1st through 4th in Chicago, Cisco will be a major sponsor, and Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Dell will be on hand. As The Var Guy notes, for at least a few days ? at its own conference ? Red Hat will be seated at the center of the server universe. Meanwhile, Microsoft isn't ignoring the company, either.


Cisco Announces 10 Finalists in its Linux App Contest

I'm always a big fan of contests seeking top open source and crowdsourced applications, especially ones with cash prizes. Why shouldn't innovative developers be paid for their work, even if they're creating open tools? For several months now, Cisco has been running a contest seeking Linux-based applications for its AXP (Application Extension Platform) and ISR (Integrated Services Routers). The contest drew proposals from developers all over the world, 900 entries in all, and Cisco has announced the 10 finalists here, including a video worth watching. The ultimate winner gets $100,000 in the contest. Here are details on some of the applications the winning teams came up with.


Cisco and Free Software Foundation Settle License Dispute

In December, the Free Software Foundation (FSF) filed suit against Cisco, after several years of urging the company to comply with the licensing terms used on its Linksys routers. Several Linksys routers used firmware licensed under the GPL/LGPL, but Cisco failed to make the source code available per the terms of the licenses.

It's not terribly easy to make the FSF resort to legal action, but after five years of relative unresponsiveness, FSF licensing compliance engineer Brett Smith said the organization had to take stronger measures to get the problem resolved.

The case against Cisco has been settled, with Cisco agreeing to appoint a Free Software Director who will ensure Linksys complies with the terms of the free licenses it uses, and report back to the FSF on its progress.



OStatic Buffer Overflow

Cisco declares war, embraces open source. It has a new Unified Computing initiative, and although the technology is proprietary, open source software plays a role.

Intellectual property and open source. Read an excerpt from the award-winning book of the same name.

Apache's ongoing licensing bout with Sun. The recently updated Java Specification Requests (JSRs) show that a battle continues.

15 interesting facts about the Linux kernel. Only two percent was written by Linus Torvalds.

Could Cloudera become the open source Asia? Its talent pool runs deep.



Sun's McNealy Tapped for Government Open Source Ideas

If you've been following President Obama's search for a CTO for the country, you may have seen BusinessWeek's report that the choice he will make has narrowed down to two candidates, both born in India. They are, according to the report, Padmasree Warrior, the chief technology officer of Cisco Systems, and Vivek Kundra, who holds the same title in the government of Washington, D.C. Previously, Google's Eric Schmidt and Sun's Jonathan Schwartz had been rumored to be candidates. Now, ex-Sun CEO Scott McNealy has revealed that he has been asked to prepare a paper for the Obama administration on how open source technologies are the key to a more secure, more efficient government.


Push Comes to Shove Comes to Whack-A-Mole: FSF Suit Against Cisco

On previous occasions it's been mentioned that it takes very specific behaviors for the Free Software Foundation to file suit against a company for violating the GNU GPL license.

Today, the FSF let Cisco Systems know in no uncertain terms that line had been crossed. The complaint centers on the Linksys brand routers, and the firmware used on those products.



OStatic Buffer Overflow.....

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Whose mobile open source community will deliver?.....

The power of open spectrum.....

Cisco is open sourcing its new messaging protocol, Etch.....

Software margins, the cloud, and open source.....

The New York Times recaps Mozilla's history.....



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