Old Articles: <Older 201-210 Newer> |
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InternetNews August 11, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
China Gets a Linux Boost The world's most populous country is set to become another center of gravity for the Linux universe with an Open Source Development Labs office in Beijing. |
InternetNews August 4, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
Mozilla: Dollars for Security Bugs The open source browser project puts up a bounty for the discovery of 'critical' security flaws. |
InternetNews August 4, 2004 Jim Wagner |
CA Dangles Dough for Attention In a desperate ploy to get programmers to work on its relatively little-known database, CA offers $1M to developers creating migration tools. |
InternetNews August 3, 2004 Jim Wagner |
IBM Tosses Embedded Database to Apache Big Blue will continue to develop Cloudscape, a simple database targeting Web-based or embedded device database needs within small businesses, after releasing it as open source. |
InternetNews August 3, 2004 Michael Singer |
Red Hat, Sun Spark Middleware Turf War Instead of going directly to Sun for the Java code they used to make their new application server, Red Hat went overseas to a French-owned open source organization. |
InternetNews August 2, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Beehive Enjoys Endorsement Windfall BEA officials say they're finally seeing a payoff from going open source with their Beehive framework. |
InternetNews July 30, 2004 Michael Singer |
Middle Ground Sought for Open Source Java BEA's proposal to split control of the Java namespace and brand is drawing keen interest even from Sun. |
InternetNews July 30, 2004 Michael Singer |
Microsoft Popular with Some in Open Source Crowd Despite its denunciation of Linux, the Redmond giant has thousands of fans of its 'Shared Source Initiative' at SourceForge.net. |
InternetNews July 29, 2004 Clint Boulton |
CA Open Sources DB at LinuxWorld Computer Associates acquired Ingres in 1994. Now they might get some use out of it by unleashing the source code for version 3. |
InternetNews July 28, 2004 Clint Boulton |
BEA Opens Up to Developers Beehive code and Apache XMLBeans will help simplify Java and XML development. |
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