3 Results for social networking

All Likewise Software is Saying is "Give Platform Peace a Chance"

It's been a long, drawn out, brutal battle on the IT frontlines. Skirmishes can happen anywhere, at random -- in the server room, the board room, the cafeteria, or even, tragically, in civilian populated areas like pubs, restaurants, homes and big box electronics stores. The Mac and Windows battlefront consumes the resources of many foot soldiers, but the biggest, bloodiest conflicts involve the elite, highly trained IT commandos, who must be diplomats as well as fighters, and integrate a number of platforms across a single network.

Overly dramatic? Perhaps, but depending on your work environment and how quirky your mixed network is to configure, maybe not by much. There are several utilities available to promote diplomacy and peaceful interaction between machines in a mixed network. Likewise Software offers its open source Likewise integration applications to keep the peace -- and preserve platform equality and rights -- in a mixed network setting.

The OS Wars are frustrating and costly, but can be resolved with less heartache and far fewer casualties than other conflicts. This is why Likewise is promoting platform peace through t-shirt sales, with the proceeds going to charities supporting the civilian and military casualties of real wars.



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.



Likely Cause of Intel e1000e Bug Discovered

Intel logoThis week, the Linux kernel and Intel developer teams announced they had discovered the probable cause of the e1000e bug. This bug was particularly destructive, as it would corrupt the EEPROM/NVM of some Intel ethernet adapter chipsets, completely disabling them. Though this issue was patched to prevent damage to these components prior to the 2.6.27 kernel's final release, the actual reason for the corruption was unclear.