Saturday 22 November, 2008

Stories about: KDE

  • KDE 4.1: The desktop

    KDE 4.1 release ups free desktop ante

    After six months of development since the release of the much publicized 4.0, the KDE project has unveiled version 4.1 which includes many new bug fixes and feature enhancements.
  • KDE 4.1 sports new desktop effects

    KDE 4.1 release candidate now available

    The KDE project has announced the first release candidate of the pending 4.1 release due out at the end of July.
  • OpenSUSE - improving the Linux desktop experience

    New OpenSUSE tool used for Open-Xchange Server edition

    The open source Open-Xchange e-mail and groupware server just got easier to deploy on various popular flavors of Linux.
  • OpenSUSE - improving the Linux desktop experience

    Linux examined: OpenSUSE 11.0

    A few weeks ago, the OpenSUSE Project announced the release of OpenSUSE 11.0, the "community" edition of SUSE Linux, Novell's commercial Linux distribution. Like most recent distributions, OpenSUSE is made up of the usual suspects, including GNOME and KDE-based desktops, Live CD and full DVD installation options, and an online repository of software that can be installed using a GUI tool.
  • A FOSS manifesto: We don't need no stinkin' users!

    They make it so easy! Just when I think I've run out of story ideas for lampooning the FOSS movement, along comes some idiot with a taste for shoe leather to re-energize my rant engine.
  • Move your business from Windows to Linux

    Windows Vista debuted to muffled applause, followed by lackluster sales. Up until June 30, cash-strapped businesses looking to avoid the cost of upgrading to new Vista-compatible hardware could still purchase trusty Windows XP. Now, however, Windows XP is available only as a costly "downgrade" from Windows Vista--if you buy a copy of Vista, you can install the 6-year-old XP operating system using the Vista license.
  • Hacking tools: A new version of BackTrack helps ethical hackers

    Version 3.0 of BackTrack has been released. BackTrack is a Linux-based distribution dedicated to penetration testing or hacking (depending on how you look at it). It contains more than 300 of the world's most popular open source or freely distributable hacking tools.
  • Insurance company bets health on open source

    I've been writing about the use of open source software in business for nearly a decade and during that time I discovered the level of interest in free software to be somewhere between non-existent to various point solutions for routine or mission-critical tasks. It was therefore with pleasant surprise that I was invited to report on the activities of an independent Sydney-based health insurance company, IMAN International Pty Ltd, which has committed to an end-to-end open source strategy and is reaping measurable results.
  • OpenSUSE 11.0 hits the streets

    OpenSUSE Linux, a community Linux distribution backed by Novell, chalked up its latest milestone today with the release of version 11.0, which promises to make Linux more appealing on the desktop.
  • Open Enterprise Interview with Ryan Bagueros, North-by-South

    Like the future, open source is already here, it's just unevenly distributed. In particular, Latin America is emerging as a real hotbed of not only free software coding, but free software uptake by governments - to an extent that puts the UK's pathetic bumblings in this area quite to shame.
  • The drop-down listing of possible addresses that appears when you start typing in an URL has been enhanced to be easier to read and show more information.

    Firefox 3 fixes what's broke

    The Mozilla Foundation is celebrating the arrival of Firefox 3 with a worldwide party -- and an attempt to set a new world record for the most downloads ever of a single software program. OK, so that's silly and extremely geekish, but what the heck? Why not kick up a fuss?
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