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BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Steve Hamm |
Linux Inc. Linus Torvalds once led a ragtag band of software geeks. Not anymore. Here's an inside look at how the unusual Linux business model increasingly threatens Microsoft. |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 |
Linux ``Has The Potential to Fragment'' Microsoft Group Vice-President Kevin Johnson predicts the upstart operating system will go the way of Unix. |
PC World February 2005 Matthew Newton |
Linux Tips: A Folder View That Even a Gnome Would Love Gnome 2.6's Nautilus file manager gives a new view of your folders... Anyone moving from Windows to Linux will find Xandros Desktop a solid introduction to the operating system... |
InternetNews January 18, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Mandrake Targeting US Linux Market Linux distro is eyeing market it claims is not serviced by Red Hat or Novell. |
InternetNews January 13, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Torvalds Criticizes Security Approaches Linux creator weighs in on how potential security issues are disclosed. |
InternetNews January 13, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Linux Heavies Issue Patches Linux vendors Red Hat, Novell/SUSE, Mandrakesoft, Debian and Gentoo have issued advisories and patches this week for a number of different vulnerabilities that have hit them. |
InternetNews January 10, 2005 Jim Wagner |
OSDL Waves Red Flag in China Officials at the Open Source Development Lab announced one of China's top Linux shops will support their efforts in the burgeoning East. |
Bank Systems & Technology January 7, 2005 Ivan Schneider |
Win, Place or Show? The influence of Linux has created new choices in the marketplace, resulting in an unparalleled opportunity for banks to develop ground-breaking technology architectures, whether or not they eventually adopt the new operating system. |
Bank Systems & Technology January 7, 2005 Ivan Schneider |
Branching Out to Linux Banco Popolare Milano has been using Linux in its production environment since 2002. Initially, it was used as the platform for hosting the bank's institutional Web sites. Now, Linux has been moving into mission-critical applications in both the front office and the back office. |
Bank Systems & Technology January 7, 2005 Ivan Schneider |
Application Envy On the continuum between having no third-party applications available on Linux to having every single application that a bank may need, it's still the "early days." |
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