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Friday, February 16, 2007

The IBM PC, Microsoft, UNIX and open standards...
(posted at 11:05PM GMT)

For the last couple of days, I have had both the misfortune of encountering the release version of Windows Vista Ultimate and the good fortune to download and install the incredibly over-featured and rather clever Beryl (a fork of Compiz).

Beryl is to UNIX what Aero is to Vista - except that Beryl pulls the rug out from under Aero's feet and does so much more with less powerful hardware.

For one thing, it uses OpenGL rather than DirectX - meaning that any card with a reasonably-implemented OpenGL stack can use it.

The cool stuff includes a fully active Alt-Tab switcher (instead of a static thumbnail which you typically get when task-switching in Windows, you get a *live* thumbnail of each and every window - updated in realtime), a fully active window preview when hovering your cursor over the taskbar item associated with that window, a multiple desktop metaphor which uses a transparent cube that is rotated using the mouse - you can see every single window on every single desktop all at the same time and yes, all the windows are updated in realtime while rotating the cube.

As a Mac owner, I think I can also quite safely say that the eye candy on a UNIX box running X now easily surpasses anything else out there for a PC-compatible machine.

(I must say that running Internet Explorer 6 in WINE under Beryl is totally trippy though!)

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Replacing people with shell scripts...
(posted at 10:14PM GMT)

After playing with a few OSS toys for the last couple of months, I have been considering how I can re-engineer certain procedures within Spilsby Internet Solutions to make things a little bit more efficient for customers and allow me to spend more time working on developing some of the newer services I have in the pipeline.

I am now 'eating my own dog food' - the install of Asterisk which serves the business now answers with an automated and reasonably helpful IVR menu that also ties in with the ticketing system.

On the development side of things, I have nearly finished building the alpha version of the self-installing, centrally-managed Asterisk software solution in a box; the only problem I'm running into is the fact that CentOS 4.4 doesn't really support some of the newer motherboards on the market (especially the stuff which uses an Intel 965 chipset) and CentOS 5 will be out at some indeterminate time after Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5, which is pencilled in for a release on 28th February 2007.

I could base it on Fedora Core 6 - indeed, this is what the alpha version is currently running on - mainly because it is 'close enough' to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.

On a more humourous note, I had the misfortune of encountering a Checkpoint FireWall-1 NG box - it has been many years since I had to admin one of these but while I have forgotten relatively little about the things since I left Centrinet, the memories of all the little things that come together to make one really broken firewalling product quickly came back to me when the stupid thing wouldn't unload its' security policy.

While I sing the praises of OpenBSD's pf with Linux's netfilter coming a very very close second, it still amazes me that one former employer sticks by Checkpoint through thick and thin while my previous employer seems to be of the belief that the 'S' in Microsoft's ISA Server actually stands for 'Security' (it does but would you ever associate the word 'security' with Microsoft ?).

Getting back to current events though, I think I've finally licked AJAX... it is definitely one of those things that can puzzle and perplex for hours... then in less than ten seconds, your brain finally clicks and it all makes perfect sense.

 
slashdot

NVIDIA To Acquire Run:ai

Veteran PC Game 'Sopwith' Celebrates 40th Anniversary

Flame-Throwing Robot Dog Now Available Under $10,000

US Breaks Ground On Its First-Ever High-Speed Rail

US Bans Noncompete Agreements For Nearly All Jobs

Generative AI Arrives In the Gene Editing World of CRISPR

Try Something New To Stop the Days Whizzing Past, Researchers Suggest

Oracle Is Moving Its World Headquarters To Nashville

Change Healthcare Finally Admits It Paid Ransomware Hackers

What Comes After OLED? Meet QDEL

The Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses Have Multimodel AI Now

HashiCorp Reportedly Being Acquired By IBM

Ex-Amazon Exec Claims She Was Asked To Ignore Copyright Law in Race To AI

Linux Can Finally Run Your Car's Safety Systems and Driver-Assistance Features

iPhone Sales Drop 19% in China

the register

Oracle changes its tune with HQ move to Music City

Tesla misses the mark on all fronts in quarter of chaos

Euro cloud group blasts Broadcom over VMware licensing maneuvers

European Parliament votes to screw repair rights in consumer toolkits

Law prof predicts generative AI will die at the hands of watchdogs

Strong electric car sales expected for 2024, but charging grid needs work

Rapidus US chief says AI chip crunch, supply chain paranoia make for an ideal growth climate

Graph databases speaking the same language after ISO gives GQL the nod

If Britain is so bothered by China, why do these .gov.uk sites use Chinese ad brokers?

Japanese and Singaporean devs battle over gamified crowdsourced telco maintenance app

China's mega-telcos are spending billions on AI servers

Senate passes law forcing ByteDance to sell off TikTok – or face a US ban

US government reportedly ponders crimping China's use of RISC-V

White House tweaks HIPAA to shield medical files of those seeking reproductive care

Intel Foundry ticks another box in quest to fab mil-spec chips for US DoD

Using its own sums, AMD claims it's helping save Earth with Epyc server chiplets

Waymo robotaxi drives down wrong side of street after being alarmed by unicyclists

Banned Nvidia GPUs sneak into sanction-busting Chinese servers

Miles of optical fiber crafted aboard ISS marks manufacturing first

Seagate joins the HDD price hike party, blames AI for spike in demand

SpaceX workplace injury rates are rocketing

Miracle-WM tiling window manager for Mir hits 0.2.0

GM shared our driving data with insurers without consent, lawsuit claims

iPhone sales dive 19.1% in China as Huawei comeback hits Apple in the high end

Microsoft shrinks AI down to pocket size with Phi-3 Mini

Digital Realty wants to turn Irish datacenters into grid-stabilizing power jugglers

Microsoft really does not want Windows 11 running on ancient PCs

SAP cloud swells its topline, but profits slide

Mandiant: Orgs are detecting cybercriminals faster than ever

UnitedHealth admits IT security breach could 'cover substantial proportion of people in America'

Voyager 1 regains sanity after engineers patch around problematic memory

Leicester streetlights take ransomware attack personally, shine on 24/7

Silicon Valley roundabout has drivers in a spin

Don't rent out that container ship yet: CIOs and biz buyers view AI PCs with some caution

Over a million Neighbourhood Watch members exposed through web app bug

Meta comms chief handed six-year Russian prison sentence for 'justifying terrorism'

European Commission to suspend TikTok's new rewards program, open second probe

Misconfigured cloud server leaked clues of North Korean animation scam

Australia secures takedown order for terror videos, which Elon Musk wants to fight

Japan to draw up routes for roads dedicated to robot trucks

Old Windows print spooler bug is latest target of Russia's Fancy Bear gang

Protest group says Google has fired more staff over sit-ins opposing work for Israel

Tokyo wags finger at Google for blocking Yahoo Japan!from using ad tech

FBI and friends get two more years of warrantless FISA Section 702 snooping

Ex-CEO of 'unicorn' app startup HeadSpin heads to jail after BS'ing investors

Huawei wants to take homegrown HarmonyOS phone platform worldwide

Tesla slashes vehicle and self-driving-ish software prices as shares plummet

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman invests in solar power firm Exowatt to fuel AI datacenters

Tiny11 Builder trims Windows 11 fat with PowerShell script

Europol now latest cops to beg Big Tech to ditch E2EE

 

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