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Linux Notebooks, When Netbooks Won't Do

I like hardware. When I say this, I don't mean gadgets (although I don't turn those away either), I mean hardware. I like to build desktops, from chassis to power supply to motherboard to peripheral cards. I like desktops because I feel I have control over what goes in them, as well as what I run on them. They're easy to upgrade -- and they seem far more durable than their lap-sized peers. I understand this is in no small part due to desktops not being portable.

I made a vow a few years back I would never use a laptop as my primary machine. This was before the advent of solid state disks and netbooks. But because portability has its appeal, Linux is my operating system of choice, and because it fit both the hardware and gadget criteria, I picked up an EeePC a year ago. It works well as a quick way to get online and do basic tasks. Who needs a full-sized notebook?

I do. I've found I need to break my vow, even, and use it as my primary work machine. It needs to run Linux, and what's more -- it needs to be pre-installed. Fortunately, I have options.



Moblin V2 Core Alpha for Netbooks Available

One of the most appealing aspects of open source software is its ability to be almost everything to everyone. Fine, it's hyperbole, but flexibility and access to the source code means a wide array of needs can be met for diverse groups of people -- and the shared efforts benefit developers as much as those who've never written (or seen) a line of code. I've been enamored of the Moblin Project for some time, simply because it so clearly demonstrates that open source can be as hands-on (or off) as you'd like.

On Monday, the Moblin team announced its Moblin V2 Core alpha release was available for testing. Tariq Shureih, Moblin Linux Engineering Manager, says that this alpha release is the first chance the wider community has to really kick the tires on a number of new features, including package and core interactions, the Fastboot feature, new user interface development and connectivity tools, and a new iteration of the Moblin Image Creator.



Jaspersoft and Hyperic Beef Up Open Source Business Intelligence

Open source business intelligence (BI) company Jaspersoft and application performance monitoring software vendor Hyperic announced today a deepening of their ongoing relationship. JasperServer Professional Edition will be embedded in the new Hyperic Operations IQ to give IT teams an in-depth look at metrics and service levels.

Before dismissing the news as just another corporate partnership, consider that these kinds of match-ups are the very thing software vendors are likely to begin offering as companies get more serious about monitoring the bottom line.



Educational Institutions Doing Homework on Open Source Software

ExtraKetchup's CC licensed photo of GHCA Gentoo computer lab

Maybe it's personal bias, but a few of us here at OStatic have wondered why using open source software isn't a foregone conclusion in education.

The BBC has posted an insightful piece on open source software in schools that not only touches on the strengths of the software, but also the complexities of deploying it in these environments.



Test Pilot Makes Firefox an Open, Private Usability Lab

By way of PCWorld comes word that Mozilla Labs will release its Test Pilot project in the next few weeks.

Test Pilot's ultimate goal is to collect data on how people use Firefox (or any Mozilla based code, extension, or add-on). While word-of-mouth and formal usability testing are effective in developing and improving features, they rely heavily on getting the word out, getting feedback in return, and tend to attract the same demographic (power-users, or early adopters, for instance). Test Pilot aims to make usability testing private, open, and easy -- with participation and the type of information shared remaining completely optional and up to the user's discretion.



Building an Open Source Community? Help Is on the Way

Bugs, system conflicts, and errant bits of code add unique challenges to the technical area of open source development. They also affect a project's community -- and as any community manager can tell you, developing a healthy community is often more difficult (and has higher stakes) than rogue code.

Management is tough all round, but managing open source projects is different still. Most developers are giving their time because the project interests them, and non-developers join because they find the project useful, and they want to share their enthusiasm. But a community not being any one remotely homogenous group means that passions sometimes run high, and it's not always easy to keep a project's community -- it's life -- moving forward.

It may have just gotten easier. Ubuntu's Community Manager, Jono Bacon, announced his upcoming book, The Art of Community will be available later this year.



Marketcetera's Open Trading Platform Taking FOSS and Finance Further

The Marketcetera team is as aware as the rest of us that economic changes are coming fast and furious, and that open source software can have an impact on a company's -- or individual's -- financial future. Honestly, one could say Marketcetera is twice as aware of open source software's financial potential.

Today, Marketcetera released the first full production release of its open source automated trading platform. Aimed at hedge fund managers, traders, brokers and dealers, the system is standardized, open, scalable and modular. This, says Marketcetera CEO Graham Miller, offers users faster deployments, better integration, and the ability to customize everything from the public APIs to data models.



Tor: Anonymous, and Now Apparently Bug-Free

By way of Heise Online comes word that Tor, the internet anonymization system, has hit a milestone of nearly mythical proportions -- there are currently no known bugs in the Tor code.

Tor began scanning its development releases in September using Coverity, a bug detection application developed by Stanford University in collaboration with the US Department of Homeland Security. In September, Coverity revealed 171 issues in Tor's code base, ranging from annoying yet not critical sloppiness to bugs capable of causing crashes that would prove challenging to debug. By December, Tor had lowered this number to 15, and last week, Coverity testing revealed that the project had successfully eliminated the last known issues.



Canonical and Microsoft: Is Sustaining a Business Better than Turning a Profit Right Now?

The New York Times ran a piece this Sunday featuring Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth. Though a majority of the piece was biographical, and the rest wasn't exactly the picture of accuracy in its portrayal of Ubuntu (or Linux in general), there were a few interesting figures.

It gives pause to wonder how, in this economy, and in an ever-changing industry, profit still gets much better press than growth.



A Weekend With Arch

Within a few months of beginning with Linux, it became obvious that I was one of those who have severe difficulties settling on a distribution. This situation presents some unique challenges, but generally, I've found there are more benefits than drawbacks. While I may have favorites, or be more familiar with some distributions than others, they all offer a little something different.

A few months ago, I wrote about Gentoo. It's been one of my favorites, as it's a learning experience and exceedingly stable when it's been successfully configured. A few commenters suggested Arch Linux as an alternative.

This weekend, I finally got a chance to take Arch for a spin. A basic installation isn't a huge time investment, and while it isn't quite as under the hood as Gentoo is, it's a clear canvas for those needing specific tasks and control on their system.



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