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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Google and Mozilla to dethrone H.264; Want To Buy Some Novell Patents?

Psst, Want To Buy Some Patents? Just $450m | Here come the open source rookies!

Network World Linux and Open Source

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Can Google and Mozilla dethrone H.264 on the Web?
Joe Brockmeier: Google has announced it be pushing WebM and Theora for the HTML5 video element in Chrome and Chromium project potentially ushering in a years-long standards format war. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Brocade

Enterprises Focus on Performance, Coverage, Reliability
802.11n is rapidly becoming the technology of choice for wireless networking. A new survey reveals the challenges 802.11n poses, deployment trends, and the factors driving forward-thinking organizations to migrate. Read now!

WHITE PAPER: Websense, Inc.

Buyers Guide to Data Loss Prevention Solutions
This guide provides a list of recommended features and capabilities for buyers to consider when purchasing a DLP solution. Buyers can also use this guide to develop requests for proposals, as well as to help differentiate one vendor's products from another during demonstrations and proof-of-concepts. Read More

Psst, Want To Buy Some Patents? Just $450m
Alan Shimel: Microsoft-Apple led consortium withdraws offer to buy Novell patents, now what? Read More

Here come the open source rookies!
Phil Odence: Black Duck (my company) just announced its list of open source "Rookies of the Year" for the third year running. Read More


WHITE PAPER: PacketMotion

Remote Office Security
This white paper covers how PacketSentry's distributed architecture makes it easy to apply security controls in international offices so that central IT Security staff can quickly and effectively mitigate many of these risks, without depending on remote IT staff or log sources. Read now!

Solving the Apple App Store Incompatibility with the GPL
Stephen Walli: What's needed is a little legal linguistic grease to enable the two orgs and their differing goals to slide by one another. Here's an idea. Read More

Intel demonstrates first open source MeeGo tablet at CES
Julie Bort: MeeGo is off to a quiet start, but hope runs high that it could be a real Andoid challenger by year end. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Brocade Communications Inc.

The Converged Network of the Future
Discover how enterprises can realize greater scalability, seamless mobility, and reduce management complexity in increasingly virtual and cloud-oriented IT infrastructures when robust FCoE based converged networking solutions play a role in network evolution. Read now!

Salesforce.Com & DimDim: Shame on You!
Alan Shimel: SaaS leader shows once again that it is no friend of open source. Read More

Apple, Linux welcomes you to 1998!
Joe Brockmeier: A lot of people are buzzing about Apple's Mac App Store, but I'm nonplussed. I've had the same features on Linux since the late 90's. Read More

Verizon iPhone impact on Android may be a wash
Some analysts say the iPhone 4G on Verizon Wireless will cannibalize Google Android smartphone sales across various carriers including AT&T early on, while others disagreed. Read More

Visit Open Source Subnet for more news and blogs
This newsletter includes the latest blogs from Open Source Subnet. Open Source Subnet features the latest headlines, opinions, discussion, podcasts and book giveaways on open source technologies for enterprise users. Follow Open Source Subnet on Twitter @OSSubnet. Read More



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SLIDESHOWS

The weirdest, wackiest and stupidest sci/tech stories of 2010
It's hard to pick the weirdest and wackiest tech stories of 2010 considering there is so much nuttiness to choose from. But we'll give it a shot. Here we take a look at a number of stories that gave us pause in 2010.

2010's most popular iPad apps
As the iPad celebrates its first birthday, it should raise a glass to Apple's App Store, which has provided users with an array of innovative applications. Late last week, Apple released a list of the 10 most popular iPad applications, with productivity apps making up the bulk.

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