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Sun Microsystems Was Shopped Around to Potential Buyers for Months

There are quite a few juicy tidbits, updates, and high-profile opinions starting to emerge about the probable IBM acquisition of Sun Microsystems. It turns out that Sun was seeking a buyer and being actively shopped around to tech companies for months before the IBM news, as Intel CEO Paul Otellini has reportedly confirmed. I can tell you that Sun was shopped around the valley and around the world in the last few months, he said, during a Q&A session that was revealed in a regulatory filing, according to TheStreet.com. A lot of companies got calls or visits on buying some or all the assets of the company. Meanwhile, it looks like any news of the acquisition may extend into next week.?


Canonical to Offer Virtual (and Physical) Classes on Ubuntu Server

Though much of the fanfare in the Ubuntu camp seems to center on the desktop version, its Server Edition has been steadily attracting interest -- and new users. Thanks to the requests of these users and Ubuntu partners, Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, has announced it is offering its first official training course dedicated solely to the Ubuntu Server Edition.

There's another new twist, however. While this course will be offered at various partner training centers in June, it will also be offered through a virtual classroom.



OStatic Buffer Overflow

Boxee adds Pandora Radio and hints at the future. The open source media center application's Pandora feature is brilliant, and there's more in a new alpha.

Awesome Tweet: Peter Rojas says Flash coming to Android. The development house BSQUARE has been hired to port Flash to the Android platform.

Shifty answers from Microsoft at OSBC? Some of the company's answers to open source questions sounded like mumbo-jumbo.

Gone but not forgotten: 10 operating systems the world left behind. Some people miss OS/2.

Launching a Linux startup: no funny business. Hackett and Bankwell is a series of cartoon manuals that teaches readers how to get started with Linux.

?Sun crams the Internet in a box. Three petabytes of archived web pages.?



Next Week's Firefox 3.0.8 Release Termed "High-Priority Firedrill"

There are many reasons to love the open source approach. The events chronicled in an article on NetworkWorld surrounding an exploit affecting Firefox outlines, quite elegantly, how open code outwardly appears risky, and -- well, wide open -- and how that same quality generates faster fixes and stronger applications.

A security researcher discovered that Firefox is vulnerable to remote memory corruption, enabling attackers to execute malicious (or at least very much unauthorized) code within the context of the browser. While security researchers spend countless hours searching out bugs and vulnerabilities, it's not usually the case that the offending attack finds its way into the public eye. Yesterday, however, this little exploit was published on several security sites. The vulnerability affects Firefox versions 3.0 through 3.0.7, on all platforms. In less than 24 hours, developers issued a patch for the vulnerability, to be included in next week's 3.0.8 release.



Monitor IT Resources With BaconMap

Learn about BaconMap

I admit that BaconMap initially caught my eye because of the name (who doesn't like bacon?), but I gave it a second look once I saw what it was about. BaconMap is an nifty open source Web-based tracking tool designed to help IT departments better monitor their resources.

The idea for BaconMap was conceived by New Mexico State University's IT manager, Abel Sanchez, when he realized there had to be a better way to keep track of the department's servers, programs, databases, and service contact information than the giant whiteboard they were using at the time. He and his team decided to put together an application that would manage their deluge of cumulative information and calculate the relationships between the department's existing resources along the way.



Red Hat Had a Profitable Fourth Quarter, But Earnings Were Down

Red Hat reported its fourth quarter earnings today, and the news was mixed. Its earnings fell 27 percent compared to the previous year's fourth quarter, from $22 million to $16 million. However, full-year sales were $652.6 million, up 25 percent from $523 million over the previous full year. There were several other bright spots, and the company beat analyst's estimates. Overall, Red Hat continues to defy the economic gloom with stronger results than many other companies are reporting.


Mozilla and Khronos Hook Up in 3D Graphics Initiative

Mozilla and graphics consortium the Khronos Group have announced a far-reaching new initiative to bring accelerated 3D graphics to the web. With many? representatives from Khronos on hand at this week's Game Developer's Conference in San Francisco, the joint initiative is being discussed there. As BBC News notes, it could lead to widespread browser-based gaming as well as creating 3D environments in social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace.


Results Are In for Future of Open Source Survey

In conjunction with the recent series of posts we did on the future of open source, we also asked OStatic readers to participate in Northbridge Venture Partners' 2009 Future of Open Source survey. At this week's Open Source Business Conference in San Francisco, the results of the survey were released, and you can watch an interesting slideshow on the results here. Over 435 people responded to the survey, including many open source developers. Here are some thoughts on the findings.


Psyb0t Evolves, Targets Unprotected Linux Mipsel Routers

Early this year, Terry Baume encountered something highly unusual -- a Netcomm NB5 DSL modem router infected by a botnet. The embedded device, powered by a MIPS processor running in little-endian mode (mipsel), was running a bit of malicious code known as PSYB0T 2.5L.

The botnet was originally thought to be a test, an experiment to see how this technology worked. It was shut down quickly by the botnet operator once its existence became public knowledge.

It now appears to have returned, and evolved into a new beast, PSYB0T 2.9L, and it affects more than Netcomm NB5 devices. Approximately 30 Linksys devices, 10 Netgear models, and 15 other models and brands of DSL modems and routers are at risk, including those running custom firmware, such as OpenWRT and DD-WRT.

That's the bad news. The good news is removing it, and ensuring it doesn't return, is fairly simple. In fact, DroneBL, the organization that scans for botnets and vulnerable machines, says that 90% of the routers involved are afflicted only because of user error.



Flat World Knowledge Offers Open Source-Style College Textbooks

Flat World

Part of the high cost of attending a college or university is due to the exorbitant fees for textbooks. It's an $8 billion dollar market and schools often pass on the high cost of textbook purchases to their students. Once a school selects course books, it's up to professors to mold their curriculum accordingly, rather than offer reading material that suits their teaching style and course content.

In an effort to make curriculum content more accessible to both students and teachers, New York-based startup Flat World Knowledge is going after the textbook industry by offering expertly-written books that educational institutions are free to modify to meet their needs.



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