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open source, open genomics, open creation
03 April 2008
Meet the New Governor: Open Source
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Everyone knows that government is dull - dull, but very, very important. So a couple of recent moves in this dull but important world seem ...
2 comments:
Your Private Second Life
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It's been an open secret for some time that IBM has been creating intranet-based virtual worlds, but this seems to be the first official...
You Know Open Source Has Really Arrived...
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...when the two main political parties in the UK are squabbling over who is truer to the open source spirit: David Cameron embraced Linux, ...
Happy Birthday, Open Data
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The received wisdom is that open source begat open access, which begat open data, and in broad outline that's true enough. But in one r...
Open Enterprise Interview: Jeff Haynie
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On Open Enterprise blog .
Cracking a Hard(ware) Problem
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It is a sad but true fact that hardware issues - whether or not a particular bit of kit is supported - still dog GNU/Linux, and remain a maj...
The Russian Experiment
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I've always thought that Russia offered very fertile ground for free software. It has some of the best hackers in the worlds (not to me...
Attack of the Copyright Were-Rabbit
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There is a counter-reformation movement afoot in the world of copyright. The purpose of the movement is to chill the willingness of countrie...
British Library = National Disgrace
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I've noted before that there's something rotten at the heart of the British Library, which insists on locking down knowledge in Mic...
5 comments:
02 April 2008
Signs of the (Digital) Times
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Readers of this blog will know that I am fascinated by the analogue/digital divide, and how the passage from one to the other causes all sor...
UK Copyright: Winners and Losers
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I often spout about copyight in this blog, but I enjoy the luxury of ignorance. If you want a really balanced account of the situation in t...
Cheeky Bulgars
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How dare they? The Bulgarian government organised a meeting with Open Source companies and developers on 21 March in Sofia. Nikolay Vassile...
Uighur Splittists?
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Where will it all end? Like Tibetans in Tibet, Uighurs have historically been the predominant ethnic group in Xinjiang, which is officially...
Why the Post Office Thinks It's 1998
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You may find it hard to believe the Post Office is closing down vast numbers of its local branches that everyone wants to use, but I think I...
4 comments:
Whatever Happened to Standards?
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On Open Enterprise blog .
2 comments:
Linux: Too Much of a Good Thing?
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The transformation of the Linux Foundation from a rather sleepy, peripheral player into one of the main voices for open source has been fasc...
37 comments:
01 April 2008
OK, So Adobe Supports GNU/Linux – But How Much?
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On Open Enterprise blog .
4 comments:
You Must Be Joking
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They can't be serious: This is a proposal for an integrated National Operational Deterrence and Intelligence Surveillance System ...
In Praise of Journalistic Scum
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On Open Enterprise blog .
oCERT – A Dead Cert for Security
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On Open Enterprise blog .
Teaching Blackboard a Lesson About Patents
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On Open Enterprise blog .
2 comments:
Now the Fun Begins
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Sad - but just the end of the beginning....
The Mighty Atom
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Here's another reason why ultraportables are going to take off.
Sophie – A Wise Move for Open Source
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On Open Enterprise blog .
The Problem Isn't Infringement, it's Indifference
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One of the interesting side-effects of the increasing number of artists making their work freely available with great success is that it dem...
2 comments:
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