9 Results for Zimbra

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Google has Chrome Frame plug-in for Firefox up its sleeve, says Mozilla. Source code is present for a possible 'browser-in-a-browser' plug-in for Firefox and Opera.

Waiting for Chrome OS. In China, there's a story of early devices running alpha Chrome OS and some Linux fans have made their own version.

Zimbra notches 100 percent growth. Its collaboration suite offering now sports more than 50 million paid mailboxes.

Garmin takes a new tack with Linux-based Nav phone. Is there a market for a $300 proprietary Linux-based navigation device?



Open Source Channel Alliance Gives Resellers All-in-One Access to Open Source Apps

While frugality isn't by any means the only reason a business should consider open source software, it would be foolish to think that the current economic situation isn't making it more attractive to companies. There is often, however, an imposing barrier standing in the way of all-out adoption. The mythical learning curve involved in moving to open source isn't half so steep or intimidating as that first step -- where do we go, what applications are best for us, and how do we put it all together and make it all work?

This week, Red Hat and IT services distribution provider, SYNNEX, announced the formation of the Open Source Channel Alliance. The Alliance's aim is to help value-added resellers and solutions providers deliver all the benefits of open source applications to their customers.



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This is the money being made today in open source.....

Zimbra Collaboration Server Open Source Edition is a promising low-end package.....

10 Linux desktops you shouldnメt overlook.....

Why wouldn't we think about open source? asks Ray Ozzie.....

Mac OS X 10.5 vs. Ubuntu 8.10 benchmarks.....

 




Open Source Heads Off to School

Today brings a couple of new announcements on how open source software tools are pushing forward in the online education and educational collaboration markets. Fresh on the heels of news of its hookup with Dimdim, a maker of open source conferencing software, Zimbra has announced a new hosted set of services focused on schools. In other news, Wimba, which makes collaboration tools for education, is in a partnership involving the popular open source e-learning platform Moodle. Here are the details.


Dimdim/Zimbra Connection Shows Promise

Dimdim is an outstanding open source online conferencing application that we've written about before. It has a number of great features not found in other free online meeting applications, including the ability to record meetings so that the recordings can be shared with others. Earlier this week, Satish Dharmaraj, the co-founder and CEO of Yahoo's open source division Zimbra personally invested in Dimdim, and joined its advisory board.


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Google releases open source Mac updater software.....

Free Software Foundation creator and GNU founder Richard Stallman rails against cloud computing.....

Zarafa: Open source e-mail gets competitive.....

realXtend open source virtual reality system expands its ecosystem.....

Zimbra's ubiquity play with ISPs.....



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Yahoo's Zimbra releases version 3 of its open source e-mail client.....

Open source leadership lessons from Mark Shuttleworth and others.....

Why Facebook Connect matters and why it will win.....

Open source mash-up: Zimbra + SugarCRM, Loopfuse + Acquia.....

How OStatic's own Mike Gunderloy dumped Microsoft to embrace open source.....



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SCO chief testifies: Linux is a copy of Unix.....Who is the open source big dog--Red Hat or Sun?.....A new report says more orginizations are jumping on open source, but price is not the only driver.....Are IP liabilities a hidden trap when deploying open source software?.....Should you consider Zimbra for your open source mail server?.....



MicroHoo: Welcome to Open Source, Microsoft

Original Post authored by Samuel Dean on 02/02/08 on WebWorkerDaily

While nearly all of the analysis of Microsoft's offer to acquire Yahoo! for close to $45 billion has centered on the Redmond giant's intent to compete with Google for online advertising dollars, swallowing Yahoo! would also plant Microsoft squarely in the middle of the open source software arena. Yahoo! is so firmly entrenched in open source software-from the server farms that its own site runs on, to its Zimbra division delivering open source apps, to the APIs that it offers to application developers-that Microsoft, as corporate parent, would have no choice but to shed much of its long-standing antipathy toward open source.