Old Articles: 1-10 Newer> |
|
Salon.com September 12, 2000 Andrew Leonard |
How Big Blue fell for Linux When open-source developers and IBM took gambles on each other, free software showed it can flourish in the heartland of corporate computing. |
Salon.com May 14, 1999 Andrew Leonard |
How much do I hear for this perl script? How much do I hear for this perl script?: New O'Reilly venture creates an auction scheme for open-source software projects. |
Macworld October 2000 David Pogue |
EditDV 2.0 Digital video-editing software ranges from Apple's free iMovie to its $1,000 Final Cut Pro. If your needs fall somewhere in between those extremes, you have two choices: Adobe Premiere or the newly enhanced EditDV, an increasingly popular powerhouse for pros and semipros. |
RootPrompt.org August 3, 2000 Noel |
The Coroner's Toolkit Wietse Venema and Dan Farmer the authors of SATAN have written a package called The Coroner's Toolkit that is designed to help a System Administrator do forensic analysis on their cracked Unix box.... |
Salon.com July 18, 2000 Rachel Chalmers |
Even better than Slashdot? Advogato is the latest step forward in the evolution of online open-source community. |
Salon.com June 22, 2000 Andrew Leonard |
Do-it-yourself giant brains! From punch cards to Linux, hackers love to tinker and share. Even Bill Gates can't stop them. |
PC World May 1, 2000 Matthew Newton |
Is Linux Right for You? We put Linux on a test PC, and in eight weeks it never crashed. But are you any closer to ditching Windows than you were six months ago? Here's what you need to know before you decide. |
Linux Journal May 2000 David Watt |
A Real-Time Data Plotting Program How to program using the Qt windowing system in X. Each of Qt's functional components is packaged as a C++ class... |
Linux Journal April 2000 Brian R. Marshall |
The Generation Gap An examination of the issues involved with the use of open-source software components in closed-source applications. |
Fast Company November 1999 William C. Taylor |
Inspired by Work What's most intriguing about "open-source" software isn't what it does -- it's how it gets created. Eric S. Raymond, open-source evangelist, explains why and how these programmers do their work -- and what that means for the rest of us. |
1-10 Newer> Return to current articles. |